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Hawaii State Foundation On Culture and The Arts JULY 2024 Newsletter
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State Foundation on Culture and the Arts JULY 2024 Newsletter
JULY 2024
“Local & Liminal”
Over a year ago, a group of local photographers set out to explore the liminal spaces in Hawaiʻi. Join us for the opening reception of this new exhibit during the Capitol Modern First Friday event on July 5th! The exhibit is in the POD (Passion On Display) space on the first floor and will be available for viewing through August 31st. Free admission.
Presented by the Friends of the Hawaiʻi State Art Museum.
SFCA Art in Public Places
Artworks from SFCA Art in Public Places Collection featured in exhibit at the King Kamehameha V Judiciary History Center
King Kamehameha V Judiciary History Center: “Our new exhibit, ʻImi i Ka Pono—to search for that which is right and just—showcases the pursuit of justice throughout Hawaiʻi over the last 250 years. Selected artworks from the State Foundation on Culture and the Arts' Art in Public Places Collection, highlight a variety of perspectives and approaches, contrasting narratives of beauty and struggle, empowerment and inequity.”
View artworks in exhibit on the SFCA website
Image: Mari Matsuda, “E Aloha E” woodcut print on paper, 2023. SFCA Art in Public Places Collection.
6 artworks by University of Hawaiʻi students acquired
The Hawaiʻi State Foundation on Culture and the Arts (SFCA) has purchased six artworks by University of Hawaiʻi system students Mari Matsuda, Enrico Battan, Erik Sullivan, and Saxony Charlot. Five of the artworks were from the “Still Standing” University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa (UHM) Master of Fine Arts thesis exhibition, and one from the 2023 “Hawaiʻi Nei Art Exhibition” at Wailoa Center on Hawaiʻi Island. Read more and view the artworks on the SFCA news page: sfca.hawaii.gov/art-in-public-places-6-artworks-by-university-students-acquired.
6 artworks by university students acquired
SFCA Arts Education Programs
Photo: student self-portraits in progress. Photo credit: Donkey Mill Art Center.
Photo: Finished portraits on display at the Volcano Art Center main gallery. Photo credit: Donkey Mill Art Center.
SFCA Artists in the Schools Spotlight: Volcano School of Arts & Sciences PCS
Text and photos: Donkey Mill Art Center (DMAC). DMAC is an SFCA Artistic Teaching Partner and did the Artists in the Schools (AITS) residency at Volcano School of Arts and Sciences Public Charter School on Hawaiʻi Island. AITS is an SFCA program serving Hawaiʻi public and charter schools, supported by public funding from the SFCA and private funding from Hawaiʻi Community Foundation.
“At Volcano School of Arts & Sciences (VSAS) second, third, and fourth graders explored symbolism and metaphor through Hawaiian mythology and sensory participation. Students learned about plant fibers and natural colorants to understand a Hawaiian heritage art form, developing relationships with the life source of their art supplies and broadening their appreciation of place-based historical art forms that are both practical and beautiful.
Fourth-grade teacher Hannah Proffitt shared, “The most worthwhile aspect of the Artist in the School (AITS) residency for the participating classroom teachers was the infusion of creativity into the curriculum. By integrating Hawaiian culture, tradition, language, and art into their lessons, teachers found innovative ways to engage students and enhance learning experiences. This residency provided teachers with valuable resources and techniques to inspire student interest and participation. Moreover, it offered teachers professional development opportunities to explore new teaching methodologies and incorporate diverse perspectives into their classroom practices. Ultimately, the AITS residency empowered teachers to foster a more dynamic and inclusive learning environment, enriching both their own teaching repertoire and their students’ educational journey.”
The residency culminated with a hōʻike of student work at Volcano Art Center’s main gallery space. Teachers, parents, administrators, and community members gathered to hear student stories of what was learned and created. Beautiful mahalo rituals were shared and exchanged along with joyful tears, smiles, and laughter.”
Read the full article and view additional photos on the DMAC website: donkeymillartcenter.org/artists-in-the-schools-2024.
DMAC Artists in the Schools
Photo: participants in the Kūpuna Clay program sharing their projects. Photo courtesy Rayna Galati/Create With Clay.
Museum Without Walls Spotlight: Kūpuna Clay program at Palama Settlement
SFCA Artistic Teaching Partner Rayna Galati shared photos from the Kūpuna Clay program she did at Palama Settlement recently. Rayna shared that registration for the class was full, with a waitlist, in under two hours after opening.
This program was part of the Museum Without Walls program, a collaboration of the SFCA with Hawaiʻi Community Foundation. Hawai‘i Community Foundation (HCF) has awarded $72,800 to 10 arts education programs to provide inclusive arts education opportunities in the fine arts to all age groups, from keiki to kūpuna.
Read more about Museum Without Walls on the SFCA website news page: sfca.hawaii.gov/over-72k-in-grants-to-support-arts-education-across-hawaii.
HCF Museum Without Walls
SFCA Grants and Community Programs
SFCA Grantee Spotlight: Ke Kumu Hawaiʻi Gallery Talks at Capitol Modern
Embark on a journey into Hawaiian heritage with “Nā Akua Ākea: The Vast and Numerous Deities”, an exhibition curated by Lloyd Kumulāʻau Sing and May Haunani Balino-Sing of Ke Kumu Hawaiʻi. This exhibition showcases the artistry of Kumulā‘au and Haunani Balino-Sing alongside their dedicated students, who have spent a year exploring ancestral memories and weaving techniques. The Sings received an SFCA Folk and Traditional Arts Apprenticeship Mentoring grant for ulana ʻieʻie in 2021. Since then, they have mentored cohorts on Hawaiʻi Island (Kona and Hilo) and Oʻahu, in addition to an earlier cohort on Maui.
SFCA Folk and Traditional Arts Apprentice Mentoring grants are intended to support advanced sustained training and mentoring of next-generation cultural practitioners, especially cultural practitioner teachers, in order to build cultural capacity living cultures in Hawaiʻi.
Focused on revitalizing ulana ʻieʻie, traditional Hawaiian basketry, the “Nā Akua Ākea” exhibition integrates ancestral images, demigods, goddesses, shapeshifters, and ʻaumakua, offering a captivating visual and spiritual experience. Sponsored by The National Organization for Traditional Artists Exchange (NOTAE), the exhibition features contributions from guest artisans using both traditional and contemporary mediums.
Gallery Talks at Capitol Modern
• July 5, First Friday (6:00, 7:00, and 8:00 PM)
• Tuesday July 9 (11:00 AM - 1:00 PM)
• Friday July 12 (11:00 AM - 1:00 PM)
• Tuesday July 30 (11:00 AM - 1:00 PM)
• August 2, First Friday (5:00 - 9:00 PM)
Free admission, no reservations needed. All ages welcome.
Ke Kumu Hawaiʻi: Nā Akua Ākea
SFCA Grantee Spotlight: Kumu Hula Auliʻi Mitchell Hula Kiʻi presentation at Capitol Modern
“Up Close and Personal with Hula Kiʻi” talk story presentation by Kumu Hula Auliʻi Mitchell. Friday, July 19, 12:00 - 1:00 p.m. at Capitol Modern. Free admission.
Kumu Hula Auliʻi Mitchell received an SFCA Folk and Traditional Arts Apprentice Mentoring grant in 2020. With that grant, apprentices Meleanna Meyer and Kaʻaiʻohelo MacAfee learned to carve the kiʻi, make the kapa attire, and learn the moʻolelo to perform with the kiʻi.
SFCA Folk and Traditional Arts Apprentice Mentoring grants are intended to support advanced sustained training and mentoring of next-generation cultural practitioners, especially cultural practitioner teachers, in order to build cultural capacity living cultures in Hawaiʻi.
This talk is part of the Hula Preservation Society (HPS) Hula Kiʻi Community Education Series July 19-21, 2024, on the island of Oʻahu. Additional events in the series:
• “Meet and Greet the Cast of Wai Ola”. Come and meet the artists that bring the stage production at Tenney Theatre to life, including Kumu Mahealani Uchiyama and Hālau Ka Ua Tuahine; storyteller, SFCA Artistic Teaching Partner, and Kumu Kiʻi Mauli Ola Cook, and HPS Executive Director and Kumu Hula, Maile Loo-Ching. Saturday, July 20, 10:30 - 11:30 a.m. at Capitol Modern. Includes performances by Hālau Ka Ua Tuahine on the front lawn. Free admission.
• “Wai Ola, ʻAukele and the Waters of Life, A Celebration of Hula Kiʻi” stage production at Tenney Theatre. Saturday July 20, 7:00 - 8:15 p.m. and Sunday July 21, 2:00 - 3:15 p.m. Tickets can be purchased via Eventbrite: Wai Ola tickets.
• Hula Kiʻi exhibit at Capitol Modern, curated by HPS, on view through December 2024. Free admission.
Photo: Kumu Hula Auliʻi Mitchell with carved figure. Photo credit: Hula Preservation Society.
HPS Hula Kiʻi Continuing Education Series
Calls for Artists, Jobs, Grants, and Other Opportunities
A list of federal, state, and other arts and culture grants/opportunities. Questions regarding a particular opportunity should be directed to the organization listed with the opportunity. Inclusion here should not be interpreted as an endorsement.
A longer list is on the SFCA website news page: sfca.hawaii.gov/jobs-calls-for-artists-grants-and-other-opportunities-july-2024.
• Kahilu Theatre now hiring Development Director to drive fundraising efforts and support Kahilu’s long-term financial sustainability. Kahilu is a multidisciplinary arts organization, located in the historic town of Waimea (Kamuela) on Hawaii Island. Application deadline July 15, 2024. For additional information and to apply, please visit the Kahilu Theatre website: kahilu.org/jobs/.
• 14th Annual “Abstract Only!” call for artists. Submissions due by July 5, 2024. Exhibit at Wailoa Center (Hilo, Hawaiʻi Island) August 2 – September 26, 2024. For more information, please visit the call on Call For Entry: artist.callforentry.org/festivals_unique_info.php?ID=13281.
• DLNR DOFAW “Nā manu nahele origami project” call for submissions, open to Hawaiʻi grade school students. Learn more on the Dept. Of Land and Natural Resources, Division of Forestry and Wildlife (DLNR DOFAW) website: dlnr.hawaii.gov/dofaw/manu/origami.
• Manini Gallery “HERE: Pride Month Portrait Exhibition” call for artists. Exhibit will be at The Manifest in Chinatown, Honolulu. Submissions open until August 1, 2024. The SFCA Board of Commissioners has approved an Art Acquisition Selection Committee (AASC) visit to this exhibit. Learn more on the Manini Gallery website: beacons.ai/manini.
• 2024 HIFF Deep Blue Shorts Competition eligible films must have a subject matter about emerging technology in water power, or stories about the people involved with the technology. Submissions due by July 31, 2024. For more information, please visit the HIFF website: hiff.org/the-deep-blue-shorts-competition.
• 2024 Pacific States Biennial North American printmaking exhibition call for artists. Open to all artists 18 years or older presently residing anywhere on the North American continent, its islands, and outlying US territories. Entry deadline: August 18, 2024. For more information, visit the call information on Call For Entry: artist.callforentry.org/festivals_unique_info.php?ID=13097.
• National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) NEH Media Projects applications close August 14, 2024. This program supports collaboration between media producers and scholars to develop content grounded in humanities scholarship and prepare documentary films and television, radio programs, and podcasts that engage public audiences with humanities ideas in creative and appealing ways. NEH makes Media Projects awards at two levels: Development and Production. For more information, please visit the NEH website: neh.gov/program/media-projects.
• NEH Public Humanities Projects application close August 14, 2024. This program supports projects that bring the ideas and insights of the humanities to life for general audiences through in-person, hybrid, or virtual programming. Projects must engage humanities scholarship to analyze significant themes in disciplines such as history, literature, ethics, and art history. For more information, please visit the NEH website: neh.gov/grants/public/public-humanities-projects.
• NEH Public Scholars applications close August 28, 2024. This program is open to individuals and offers grants to individual authors for research, writing, travel, and other activities leading to the creation and publication of well-researched nonfiction books in the humanities written for the broad public. It encourages non-academic writers to deepen their engagement with the humanities by strengthening the research underlying their books, and it encourages academic writers in the humanities to communicate the significance of their research to the broadest possible range of readers. For more information, please visit the NEH website: neh.gov/grants/research/public-scholar-program.
Arts and Culture Calendar
Image: promotional graphic for the “Imagining Kīpuka: Young Artist Exhibition” at the Donkey Mill Art Center on Hawaiʻi Island.
This arts and culture calendar features SFCA grantees, partners, and Hawaiʻi state and local government programs and events. A longer list of events is on the SFCA website news page: sfca.hawaii.gov/ arts-and-culture-calendar-july-2024.
Questions regarding a particular program or event should be directed to the organization listed with the opportunity. Inclusion here should not be interpreted as an endorsement.
• “He Ehu, He Pōhaku” Of Mist and Stone: Annual Hawaiʻi Contemporary Exhibit at the East Hawaiʻi Cultural Center (Hilo, Hawaiʻi Island) exhibit on view through July 26, 2024. Performances and panel discussion July 20, 4:00 – 6:45 p.m. For more information, please visit the EHCC website: ehcc.org/content/he-ehu-he-pohaku.
• "Hōʻike Haumāna Ākea" student show at the Hōʻikeākea Gallery, Leeward Community College (Pearl City) through July 27, 2024. For more information, visit the gallery website: Leeward.hawaii.edu/hoikeakea.
• Hula Kiʻi Community Education series with the Hula Preservation Society. For more information, please visit the Hula Preservation Society website: HulaPreservation.org/hula-ki%ca%bbi-community-education-series.
• Prince Lot Hula Festival July 20, 9:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. Performances, culture and education demonstrations, Native Hawaiian market. Frank F. Fasi Civic Grounds (downtown Honolulu). For more information, please visit the festival website at PrinceLotHulaFestival.org.
• Prince Lot Hula Pre-festival "Meet, Greet, Eat...Talk Story and Hula" with Nā Kumu Hula Michael Pili Pang, Vicky Holt Takamine, and Robert Uluwehi Cazimero at the PAʻI Arts and Cultural Center July 6, 2024, 11:00 a.m. - 1:00 p.m. For more information, please visit the festival website at PrinceLotHulaFestival.org.
• Pawʻina: a party for dog-lovers featuring local vendors, July 6, 2024, 10:00 a.m. – 2:00 p.m. on the Frank F. Fasi Grounds in downtown Honolulu. For more information, please visit the Honolulu MoCA website: HonoluluMoCA.org/paw%ca%bbina.
SFCA in the media
Hawaiʻi Public Radio, June 24, 2024
Gifts given to Gov. Green during FestPAC will be put on public display
“The SFCA is tasked with photographing, processing and cataloging all items gifted by Pacific countries to the state, according to the foundation's executive director Karen Ewald. The SFCA is also conducting condition reports, including provenance documentation for each gift.”
HawaiiPublicRadio.org/local-news/2024-06-24/festpac-gifts-public-display-josh-green.
Hawaiʻi Public Radio, June 11, 2024
Pacific Art adorns the halls of Capitol Modern for FestPAC
“Hawaiʻi's public art museum unveiled exhibits dedicated to the 13th Festival of Pacific Arts and Culture last week. Pacific artwork adorns the halls of Capitol Modern in downtown Honolulu. Some highlight the artistry of Pacific Islanders in the diaspora, while others showcase contemporary art from Native Hawaiian artists.” Listen to or read the piece on the HPR website: HawaiiPublicRadio.org/local-news/2024-06-11/pacific-artworks-adorn-capitol-modern-festpac.
Solomon Islands Broadcasting Corporation, June 10, 2024
Solomon officials witness unveiling of 50-year old FestPAC history
“The Pacific Community (SPC) unveiled the PILINA Exhibition at the Hawaii State Art Museum, marking a significant milestone in the 50-year history of the Festival Pacific Arts and Culture (FestPAC).” Read the full article on the SIBC website: www.sibconline.com.sb/solomon-officials-witness-unveiling-of-50-year-old-festpac-history.
KITV Island News, June 10, 2024
Hula kiʻi exhibit and celebration opens at Hawaii State Art Museum
“The new hula celebration and art exhibit, as part of FestPAC, is set to open at the Hawaii State Art Museum today on Oahu.”
View the video on the KITV website: www.kitv.com/video/news/hula-kii-exhibit-and-celebration-opens-at-hawaii-state-art-museum/video_8c48ab37-46e2-5397-b98a-028038c5b6e6.html.
Radio Taiwan International, May 24, 2024
Delegation of aboriginal artists to represent Taiwan at 13th Pacific Arts Festival
“Not only was artist Yosifu a member of Taiwan’s delegation, but he is one of a few international artists specially selected by the event organizers in Hawai’i. He is expected to display three of his works, “Courage”, “Driftwood” and “Can’t Speak” at the event. “Can’t Speak”, a piece that comments on the harmful past of language and cultural erasure, will also be displayed at the Hawai’i State Art Museum. For him, it is a display of the power of minorities when they stand together and speak out.” Full piece on the Radio Taiwan International website: en.rti.org.tw/news/view/id/2011191.
University of Hawaiʻi Hilo Stories, June 6, 2024
UH Hilo environmental science major Saxony Charlot’s artwork chosen for state’s Art in Public Places Collection
“A colorful oil painting of koa bugs by an environmental science student at the University of Hawaiʻi at Hilo has been acquired by the Hawaiʻi State Foundation on Culture and the Arts to be added to its Art in Public Places Collection.
“Koa Bug Colorways,” a painting by Saxony Charlot depicting six endemic Koa bugs (Coleotichus blackburniae) among thick foliage, was originally displayed at the Hawaiʻi Nei Art exhibition in Hilo in 2023.” Read the full article on the UH Hilo website: hilo.hawaii.edu/chancellor/stories/2024/06/06/saxony-charlot-art-in-public-places.
University of Hawaiʻi News, June 4, 2024
UH student art graces public spaces
“Artworks by talented haumāna (students) from the University of Hawaiʻi have found a new home for public viewing. The Hawaiʻi State Foundation on Culture and the Arts (SFCA) has acquired six pieces, adding them to its Art in Public Places Collection.” Read the full article and view photos of the artworks on the University of Hawaiʻi news page: hawaii.edu/news/2024/06/04/uh-student-art-in-public-spaces.
KHON2 Living808, June 3, 2024
Ke Ao Lama: Celebrating the Enlightened World of Native Hawaiian Creativity
Paid advertisement. Paid for with public funding by the SFCA.
“The State Foundation on Culture and the Arts is excited to announce the opening ceremony for “Ke Ao Lama: Enlightened World,” a captivating collection of exhibits that highlight Native Hawaiian thought and creativity. This eagerly anticipated event will take place on Friday, June 7, at 5 p.m. at Capitol Modern, setting the stage for a series of programs that celebrate the rich cultural heritage of the Pacific.” View video on the Living808 website: khon2.com/living-808/ke-ao-lama-celebrating-the-enlightened-world-of-native-hawaiian-creativity.
SFCA Board of Commissioners
SFCA Board approves 33 artworks, 11 exhibit visits
The SFCA Board of Commissioners approved the purchase of thirty-three artworks for the SFCA Art in Public Places Collection on May 15, 2024. This included five from the “Still Standing” MFA exhibit at the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa and one from the “2023 Hawaiʻi Nei” exhibition at Wailoa Center.
The SFCA Board of Commissioners Art in Public Places Committee has begun scheduling more frequent meetings this year, in part to speed up the process of approving exhibit visits, artwork purchases, and artwork loans.
Recent purchases and gifts are listed on the SFCA website: sfca.hawaii.gov/art-in-public-places-program/#recent-adds.
SFCA Board approves visits to exhibits on Hawaiʻi Island, Maui, Oʻahu
Art Acquisition Selection Committee (AASC) visits provide important support for artists and arts organization venues statewide. The SFCA Board of Commissioners has approved Acquisition Award Selection Committee (AASC) visits to these exhibits:
• “Budding Flowers: A Group Show”, Arts and Letters Gallery Nuʻuanu (Honolulu, Oʻahu)
• “Flowers 4 My Friends: Re/Marks on Color”, Kahilu Exhibits at Kahilu Theatre (Waimea, Hawaiʻi Island)
• “2024 Abstract Only!”, Wailoa Cultural Center (Hilo, Hawaiʻi Island)
• “All That Gather Under the Sun”, East Hawaiʻi Cultural Center (Hilo, Hawaiʻi Island)
• “Molding Change”, Hawaiʻi Theatre Center (Honolulu, Oʻahu)
• “Satoru Abe: 100 New Paintings” The Art Gallery, University of Hawaiʻi-Manoa (Honolulu, Oʻahu)
• “Altered Earth” Schaefer International Gallery, Maui Arts and Cultural Center (Kahului, Maui)
• “Bitter/Sweet” Hōikeākea Gallery, Leeward Community College (Pearl City, Oʻahu)
• “Small Clusters: Work 5”, Arts and Letters Gallery Nuʻuanu (Honolulu, Oʻahu)
• “HERE: Contemporary Queer Portraiture from Hawaiʻi”, The Manifest (Honolulu, Oʻahu)
• “Art Kauaʻi 2024”, Kauaʻi Society of Artists Gallery (Līhuʻe, Kauaʻi)
Approved exhibit visits are also posted to the SFCA website: sfca.hawaii.gov/art-in-public-places-program/#aasc-visits.
Upcoming SFCA Board of Commissioners Meetings
Image: detail from “Big Island" painting by John Wisnosky, gifted to the SFCA Art in Public Places Collection by Mimi Wisnosky.
• July 17, 2024: Art in Public Places Committee Meeting, 10:00 - 11:00 a.m.
• September 18, 2024: General Board Meeting
Meeting schedule is also posted to the SFCA website calendar: sfca.hawaii.gov/events.
Decisions about grants, artwork purchases, and more are made by the State Foundation on Culture and the Arts (SFCA) Board of Commissioners. Meetings are currently being held virtually on Zoom, and the public is invited to attend. Appointed by the state governor, the Board of Commissioners oversees the Executive Director, provides input, and approves spending. Commissioners are volunteers and do not receive compensation for their duties.
Individuals may submit written testimony on posted agenda items in advance of the meeting via email to HawaiiSFCA@hawaii.gov or by mail addressed to the State Foundation on Culture and the Arts, 250 South Hotel Street, 2nd Floor, Honolulu, HI 96813. Individuals interested in signing up to provide oral testimony on posted agenda items at the meeting may submit their name, email, and phone number to HawaiiSFCA@hawaii.gov. Individuals may provide oral testimony at the meeting via the above-listed video conferencing link or by calling the above listed telephone number. Testimony presented during the meeting will be limited to three minutes each.
Agenda items for General Meetings may include approval of artwork acquisition recommendations and Acquisition Award Selection Committee (AASC) art exhibit visit recommendations.
Agendas and minutes are also posted on the SFCA Board of Commissioners page.
SFCA Office
The SFCA office is open by appointment. SFCA is operating in a hybrid model of teleworking where all staff are available by email or telephone. If you aren’t sure who to contact, email HawaiiSFCA@hawaii.gov or call (808) 586-0300 and leave a voice message, including your name and telephone number.
Copyright (C) 2024 Hawaii State Foundation on Culture and the Arts. All rights reserved.
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The mission of the Hawaii State Foundation on Culture and the Arts is to promote, perpetuate, preserve and encourage culture and the arts, history and the humanities as central to the quality of life of the people of Hawaii. HSFCA funding is provided by the State of Hawaii and the National Endowment for the Arts.
Hawaii State Art Museum
The Hawai'i State Art Museum is dedicated to presenting the largest and finest collection of works by Hawai'i artists that celebrate the diverse artistic and cultural legacy of Hawai'i.
OUR MISSION
To promote, perpetuate, preserve and encourage culture and the arts, history and the humanities as central to the quality of life of the people of Hawai`i. HSFCA funding is provided by the State of Hawai`i and the National Endowment for the Arts. The HSFCA is administratively attached to the Department of Accounting and General Services.
HOURS:
The musuem is open from Tuesday to Saturday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Closed State and Federal Holdays. Always free admission. For pre-recorded information call 586-0900.
The Hawai'i State Art Museum is open Tuesday to Saturday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Admission is free. For pre-recorded summary information on the museum, call (808) 586-0900. For current museum program information, call the HSFCA Art in Public Places Program at (808) 586-0305. To arrange an educational tour of the museum, call (808) 586-9958.
For information on the HSFCA; the Hawai'i State Art Museum; HSFCA grants, programs, and services; Hawai'i arts and culture events; and USA and worldwide arts opportunities, visit the HSFCA website, www.hawaii.gov/sfca.
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