Deadline extended for New Works applications

'A Place in Time' featuring Kenyettá Dance Company was one of the winning proposals in the 2021-22 inaugural round of New Works commissions at the Center for the Performing Arts. (Photo provided)

Three proposals will receive support for June 2023 premiere performances

Indiana-based artists and organizations are invited to submit proposals for New Works, an annual commission program now in its second year at the Center for the Performing Arts.

Three winning proposals will receive $2,500 each in funding, along with rehearsal time and technical support, to premiere their works onstage during a special public event at the Center’s Palladium concert hall on June 10, 2023.

New Works is an initiative by the Center for the Performing Arts to promote and sustain local artists and arts communities in an inclusive way by supporting the creation of new works across all performing arts disciplines, including but not limited to music, theater and dance.

The core theme of the proposed works must align with one or more of the Center’s organizational Core Values: Integrity, Excellence, Innovation, Collaboration and Inclusion. Artists of color, indigenous artists, artists in the LGBTQ+ community, artists with disabilities, and women artists are strongly encouraged to apply. There is no application fee.

The application deadline has been extended to Sept. 23. Awards will be announced in January 2023. Further details and application instructions are available at TheCenterPresents.org/NewWorks. Questions can be emailed to NewWorks@TheCenterPresents.org.

In its inaugural 2021-2022 season, New Works supported the development of three performance works: Fly High, a music and choreography piece by Monika Herzig and Zackary Herzig with Peter Kienle; A Place in Time, a contemporary ballet piece by Nicholas A. Owens and Lalah Ayan Hazelwood with Kenyettá Dance Company; and Women’s Work, a short play by Callie Burk-Hartz and Alicia LaMagdeleine with Betty Rage Productions. Video of the performances, which premiered June 4 at the Center’s Tarkington theater, is viewable on the Center’s YouTube channel.