East Bay Center for the Performing Arts

For General Support

  • Amount
    $360,000
  • Program
  • Date Awarded
    3/17/2008
  • Term
    36 Months
  • Type of Support
    General Support/Organization
Overview
Since 1968, the East Bay Center for the Performing Arts (EBCPA) has been the primary artistic and cultural resource for the low-income, multi-ethnic community of Richmond and surrounding communities. EBCPA aims to provide opportunities for a quality education in the arts regardless of background, age, disability, previous experience, or ability to pay. The Center offers a wide array of dance, music, theater, and film/video classes and reaches more than 15,000 people annually, mostly inner-city families – including 1,500 youth in a formal arts education curriculum and 60 high-schoolers in a very intensive "Diploma" program. EBCPA has developed training programs in the art forms most significant to the immigrant and minority populations of its communities, at a level of depth and quality comparable to the best schools for mainstream performing art forms. The Center is many things to its community, including an important artistic training ground for youth, a cultural safe haven for youth living in a troubled community, and a resource for youth development through the arts. Under the direction of Richmond native, Jordan Simmons, since WHAT YEAR, the HOW MANY FACULTY are prepared for their 40th Anniversary season and to take on the challenge of renovating the space they’ve occupied since 19WHAT YEAR. Over the course of the grant period EBCPA will leverage a $1 million grant from the Hewlett Foundation, a $2 million dollar grant from the City of Richmond Redevelopment Agency to undertake a $10 million campaign to renovate their facilities at the historic Winters Building in Richmond’s downtown Iron Triangle neighborhood. During construction the organization will conduct classes and performances at the Richmond Civic Auditorium. Hewlett has supported EBCPA since 19WHAT YEAR and with continued funding it will be able to maintain and improve the crucial arts instruction and mentoring it provides to Richmond youth during a time of tremendous organizational transition.
About the Grantee
Address
339 Eleventh Street, Richmond, CA, 94801-3105, United States
Grants to this Grantee
for general operating support  
East Bay Center for the Performing Arts an arts education provider located in Richmond’s Iron Triangle neighborhood. It offers year-round curriculum for youth ages three to 18, including 65 weekly group courses, private instruction, recitals, social and emotional support services for students and families, and an intensive young artist diploma program. Its in-school and after-school education programs reach 4,000 students in West Contra Costa Unified School District. Each year, the organization also reaches another 15,000 people through community events and public performances that reflect a broad array of art forms, and often feature the stories of local students, families, and communities. Support for East Bay Center for the Performing Arts advances the Performing Arts Program’s Youth strategy through the Program Delivery substrategy.
for the 2021 50 Arts Commissions for folk and traditional arts  
In recognition of the Hewlett Foundation’s 50th anniversary, the Hewlett 50 Arts Commissions initiative supports the creation and premiere of 50 exceptional works of performing arts. This grant will support the East Bay Center for the Performing Arts in commissioning, developing, and presenting “Hogbetsotso — Day of Crossing Over,” a work by choreographer and drummer C.K. Ladzekpo. The work will reenact the Anlo-Ewe people’s historic flight from servitude in Togo, and ultimately from European coastal raiders, to freedom in Ghana. The performance will include dance, music, regalia, and ceremonies for the renewal of justice.

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