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Trust Transfer Project

Aug 05, 2021

Trust Transfer Project

The Trust Transfer Project is an initiative which aims to support artists in Springfield, MA who are using their work to spread public health information, stop the spread of COVID-19, and increase vaccination rates. Built in collaboration by the Community Music School of Springfield and Springfield Cultural Partnership, the Trust Transfer Project places a spotlight on artistic expression as a key component of building community trust. The project awards funding to Black and Latinx artists in Springfield’s South End and Metro Center neighborhoods, who then create public works of art that include evidence-based messaging about COVID vaccines and stopping the spread. Health messages are communicated in a variety of languages and through varied artistic mediums.

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30 May, 2023
Since the onset of COVID-19, artists and cultural organizations have played a critical role in helping to share essential public health information within their communities. CONTRA-TIEMPO is one of 30 organizations funded by the CDC Foundation to harness the power of the arts to engage audiences and participants of all ages to build confidence in COVID-19 and flu vaccines. Through this project, CONTRA-TIEMPO partnered with artists in 4 different states: Arizona, California, Georgia, and Florida. Through a collaborative creative process led by Artistic Director and Choreographer Ana Maria Alvarez and Filmmaker and Director Tiffany Judkins, Black and Latinx artists from across the country sharing their stories and experiences about the vaccine, exploring the fundamental question of: Who did you get vaccinated for? “Throughout our communities, an understandable distrust of governmental, medical and public health institutions exists. Through this series of dance films, we will explore the contradictions and nuances of what it means to work, parent, lead and connect inside of the pandemic and what led our collaborators to make the decision to get vaccinated. So many of the stories we are hearing are rooted in a deep belief in the collective good. It has given me a lot of hope for the future,” said Ana María Álvarez, Founding Artistic Director CONTRA-TIEMPO Activist Dance Theater. Move To Vaccinate uplifts voices of artists who are making a difference in their respective communities and moving money back into the hands of artists of color, who have been disproportionately impacted by the pandemic. Community Partners include (this list continues to grow throughout the life of the project): MUCE: Miami Urban Contemporary Experience (link to https://www.muce305.org)Ashlee Katrice Thomas (Cultural Liaison for Miami)Dorvilier Olivier (Miami) Kara Janelle (Cultural Liaison for Atlanta)Outcrowd (Phoenix) Paqo Colorado (Phoenix) Ruby Morales (Cultural Liaison for Phoenix) Amen Santos (Los Angeles) Brasil Brasil Cultural Center (Los Angeles)Funding for this effort is made possible through a subaward from the CDC Foundation and is part of a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) financial assistance award totaling $2,500,000.00 with 100 percent funding from CDC/HHS. The contents are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily represent the official views of, nor an endorsement by, CDC/HHS or the U.S. Government. About CONTRA-TIEMPO: CONTRA-TIEMPO is a bold, multilingual Los Angeles-based activist dance theater company that creates communities where all people are awakened to a sense of themselves as artists and social change agents who move through the world with compassion and confidence. They create a new physical, visual and sonic vocabulary that collages Salsa, AfroCuban, hip-hop, and contemporary dance with theater, compelling text, and original music to bring dynamic multi-modal experiences to the concert stage. While their performances are consistently electrifying, what sets the company apart most is their unique relationship to their own community. CONTRA-TIEMPO takes an uncompromisingly radical approach to the ways in which artists function within communities and create their work. They intentionally engage diverse audiences, cultivate dancer leaders, and center stories not traditionally heard on the concert stage, using their engagement process to inform and continuously re-fuel their creative process, and vice-versa.
30 May, 2023
Since the onset of COVID-19, artists and cultural organizations have played a critical role in helping to share essential public health information within their communities. CONTRA-TIEMPO is one of 30 organizations funded by the CDC Foundation to harness the power of the arts to engage audiences and participants of all ages to build confidence in COVID-19 and flu vaccines. Through this project, CONTRA-TIEMPO partnered with artists in 4 different states: Arizona, California, Georgia, and Florida. Through a collaborative creative process led by Artistic Director and Choreographer Ana Maria Alvarez and Filmmaker and Director Tiffany Judkins, Black and Latinx artists from across the country sharing their stories and experiences about the vaccine, exploring the fundamental question of: Who did you get vaccinated for? “Throughout our communities, an understandable distrust of governmental, medical and public health institutions exists. Through this series of dance films, we will explore the contradictions and nuances of what it means to work, parent, lead and connect inside of the pandemic and what led our collaborators to make the decision to get vaccinated. So many of the stories we are hearing are rooted in a deep belief in the collective good. It has given me a lot of hope for the future,” said Ana María Álvarez, Founding Artistic Director CONTRA-TIEMPO Activist Dance Theater. Move To Vaccinate uplifts voices of artists who are making a difference in their respective communities and moving money back into the hands of artists of color, who have been disproportionately impacted by the pandemic. Community Partners include (this list continues to grow throughout the life of the project): MUCE: Miami Urban Contemporary Experience (link to https://www.muce305.org)Ashlee Katrice Thomas (Cultural Liaison for Miami)Dorvilier Olivier (Miami) Kara Janelle (Cultural Liaison for Atlanta)Outcrowd (Phoenix) Paqo Colorado (Phoenix) Ruby Morales (Cultural Liaison for Phoenix) Amen Santos (Los Angeles) Brasil Brasil Cultural Center (Los Angeles)Funding for this effort is made possible through a subaward from the CDC Foundation and is part of a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) financial assistance award totaling $2,500,000.00 with 100 percent funding from CDC/HHS. The contents are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily represent the official views of, nor an endorsement by, CDC/HHS or the U.S. Government. About CONTRA-TIEMPO: CONTRA-TIEMPO is a bold, multilingual Los Angeles-based activist dance theater company that creates communities where all people are awakened to a sense of themselves as artists and social change agents who move through the world with compassion and confidence. They create a new physical, visual and sonic vocabulary that collages Salsa, AfroCuban, hip-hop, and contemporary dance with theater, compelling text, and original music to bring dynamic multi-modal experiences to the concert stage. While their performances are consistently electrifying, what sets the company apart most is their unique relationship to their own community. CONTRA-TIEMPO takes an uncompromisingly radical approach to the ways in which artists function within communities and create their work. They intentionally engage diverse audiences, cultivate dancer leaders, and center stories not traditionally heard on the concert stage, using their engagement process to inform and continuously re-fuel their creative process, and vice-versa.
08 Aug, 2022
Out of Hand Theater’s Vaccine Confidence Program, Time Has Chosen Us, is a community engagement program that is inspired by the message from the late Congressman John Lewis that “we may not have chosen the time, but the time has chosen us”. It is our time to come together against the pandemic. Time Has Chosen Us brought together artists, doctors and a public health evaluation team to create a cinematic narrative and educational film developed from one-on-one interviews and insights from community focus groups around concerns and barriers that citizens of Southwest and North Central Georgia, and parts of East Alabama, faced when accessing the COVID vaccine. These areas were chosen because of their low vaccination rates within the community, and because they contained a majority population of African-American citizens. This reflected Out of Hand's mission of combining theater and film with information and conversation to advance social justice and anti-racism. Many of the community members in this area, no
08 Aug, 2022
The UGA Willson Center for Humanities and Arts, along with College of Education professor Melisa Cahnmann-Taylor and representatives from the UGA Arts Council, is working to help increase vaccine confidence through community participation in the arts. To incentivize community engagement, we hosted a contest offering $1000 in cash prizes to any TikTok users creating such videos, the criteria being: presenting accurate information (25%), attracting viewership (25%) and original, entertainment value (50%). To increase participation and visibility, we hosted three TikTok tables on campus where we recorded brief interviews, asking passersby "how do you feel about vaccines?" Between February 1st to April 1st, 2022, 394 videos were posted on our #bestshotuga TikTok page, 278 of which were new, nonrepetitive content. 124 of the videos (45%) were interviews (46 on February 12th; 57 on March 14th; and 21 on March 21st). Less than 3% of videos were made by creators who were not funded artists or solicited at campus...
21 Feb, 2022
In honor of Hispanic Heritage Month and those who selflessly lend their well-respected voices to advocate for critical issues surrounding health, we are excited to launch Inmunidad Comunidad, a Spanish-language extension of Community Immunity – our rap anthology about vaccines.
21 Feb, 2022
David Hassler, director of the director of the Wick Poetry Center in Kent State's College of Arts and Sciences, which is in collaboration of the Global Vaccine Poem Project, says "We know that poetry is a powerful tool to connect us across division, to remind us of both of our individuality and our shared humanity". The Global Vaccine Poem uses creative healing through poetry to encourage all people to re­flect on both the pandemic and their vaccination, and to imagine a safe and thriving future. The project is an effort to support both large-scale vaccination efforts and personal, individual responses to the historic challenges brought on by COVID-19.
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