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Artist Grants - United States Artists


Shen Wei, late last month at the National Stadium in Beijing. Photo: Shiho Fukada for The New York Times 



Before the Games Begin, He Has Moves to Make

By Julie Bloom
The New York Times | Published: July 6, 2008


THIRTEEN years ago Shen Wei was a dancer, a choreographer and a founding member of the Guangdong Modern Dance Company, the first of its kind in China. He was a rising star in his nation but craved to know more about Western dance than he could learn there. In 1995 a fellowship from the Louis-Nikolais Dance Lab brought him to New York, where he has lived ever since. Now a citizen of the United States, he is returning to his native country as a principal choreographer of the opening ceremonies of the XXIX Olympiad, one of several nonresident artists invited to design and stage the three-and-a-half-hour event.
Given China's reputation for insularity, the decision by members of the Beijing Organizing Committee for the Olympic Games to look outside China for the ceremony's artists is notable.
"I'm surprised that they asked me to join the team," Mr. Shen said. "I left China a long time ago." More 


12.12.07 Gwendolyn Magee

12.10.07 USA - Grants 2007

12.05.07 12 Californians Given USA Fellowships

11.29.07 Ohio Artists Among
Winners


11.24.07 Local Talent Tapped For Exhibit

11.22.07 Congratulations, Part I 
11.21.07 Seattle Artist Maggie Orth Awarded $50,000 Grant 

11.20.07 Alaska Artists Win National Grants

11.20.07 Artistic Exposures

11.19.07 USA Fellows Announced 


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USA Fellow Story:Michael Joo

In Michael Joo’s epic three-screen video installation Circannual Rhythm (pibloktok) (2003), fact and fiction are purposefully entangled: a man treks alone through desolate tundra, following the path of the trans-Alaskan pipeline; Inuit villagers excavate the...


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Donor Profile:Eli and Edythe Broad

"We have learned a lot from listening and talking to artists. They see thngs differently. Their work is what's going on. They may not be able to predict the future, but they make statements that say where it's going, and it often does."

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