Emergency Working Artist Project Grant FY21
Emergency Working Artist Project Grant FY21
Red Betty and the Murder Farm, a fiction novella to be released in ebook and paperback format
Tara Makinen: former-Executive Director of Itasca Orchestra and Strings, musician; Tammy Mattonen: Executive Director of Itasca Orchestra and Strings, visual artist, co-founder of Crescendo Youth Orchestra; Kathy Neff: musician, Director, Fine Arts Academy at the University of Minnesota-Duluth; Ron Piercy: jeweler, gallery owner; Emily Swanson: arts administrator at Oldenburg Arts and Cultural Community; Kris Nelson: artist, teacher; Roxann Berglund: musician; Bill Payne: Professor of Theater at the University of Minnesota-Duluth
Tara Makinen: former-Executive Director of Itasca Orchestra and Strings, musician; Kris Nelson: artist, teacher; Classie Dudley: ARAC Equity Fellow; Christine Marcotte: writer
ACHF Arts Access
This funding will help me release a book that is polished, professional and worthy of publication. The funding will enable me to turn down freelance work so that I have time to professionally edit the book. It will likewise enable me to purchase the rights to a book cover made by a professional artist and customize that cover. Finally, and perhaps most importantly, this funding will give me the ability to market my work. If nobody knows that I have written and released this book, I'll be unable to sustain myself as a working artist. I've learned during my first two professional projects that a successful marketing campaign is integral to any artistic endeavor. My ability to execute this project is best highlighted by the successful completion of my feature film, Gravedigger Dave's Halfway House, and my nonfiction book, The Horror Anthology Handbook. Both of these projects were grant-funded, delivered successfully to their target audience, well reviewed and well covered in the press, profitable, and helped advance my career as an independent artist. Red Betty and the Murder Farm, as my next endeavor, will represent an expansion of my skills, and expansion of my core audience, and hopefully another financial success.I will know if I've been successful if my book makes it into the world in a form that is polished, professional, and well-written. Good reviews and widespread press coverage will be an added bonus, and going off the successes of my prior projects, I am confident that I'll be able to make this happen for Red Betty and the Murder Farm. Of course, external validation is no match for an artists internal feeling that they have done a good job, but it certainly helps an artist know that they are headed down the right path.
I wrote in my proposal that I wanted to release a book that was well-written, and had a professional presentation. In my proposal I wrote that one way I'd know I'd achieved that would be through press coverage and reader reviews. I'm pleased to write that all of those things came to fruition during the grant period. The book has received excellent professional reviews in publications like Duluth News Tribune and Wicked Horror, and has high star ratings on websites like Good Read and Amazon from readers. I'm extremely proud of this book, as it's the most well-received artistic project I've release thus far.