Burt McMurtry Arts Initiatives Fund

Office of the Vice President for the Arts

Burt McMurtry Arts Initiatives Fund

The Burt McMurtry Arts Initiatives Fund offers support to faculty-initiated interdisciplinary projects that test new directions and possibilities in the arts at Stanford. 

Applications Open on March 1, 2024 for 2024-25 Cycle

Grant Recipients

2024-25

Jenn Brophy and Helen Dang

JENN BROPHY AND HELEN DANG | From Petri Dish to Palette: Exploring Bacterial-based Paint

This interdisciplinary project, spearheaded by Helen Dang (Science Program Manager, Bioengineering) and Jenn Brophy (Assistant Professor, Bioengineering), aims to showcase the potential of synthetic biology in the arts. By utilizing bioengineering techniques, the project seeks to transform bacteria into a bio-machine that produces fluorescent protein "pigment" for use in painting on cotton canvas. Through this endeavor, the project aims to raise awareness within the Stanford community about synthetic biology's role in the arts. This project will result in a workshop and gallery exhibition, inviting contemplation on synthetic biology, sustainability, and art materials.

A person with shoulder length hair looking at the camera. They are wearing a blue shirt.

TAKAKO FUJIOKA | Improvisational Rap Art, Lyrics Database, and Rhyme-Rhythm Analysis

Rap music is popular worldwide and is practiced in various languages. Quantitative research on rap improvisation may hold an important key to understanding human cognitive processes of combining language rhymes and musical rhythms into the rap/hip-hop music style, and elucidating universally-shared and language-specific systems. However, it currently requires more freely available databases and tools to conduct such analyses, as commercially available rap music contains non-improvisational rap performance. At the same time, the Stanford campus has low visibility of rap/hip-hop music activities despite the popularity of the art form and its important connection to diversity in American society. Thus, the proposed project will combine the desire to pursue the scientific research goal of collecting and analyzing improvisational rap performance data and the desire to involve rap practices in students’ lives at Stanford and the surrounding local community. The whole project aims to organize three workshop+concert events featuring rap arts, collect audio recordings of improvisational rap performance in different languages for the database, and conduct quantitative analyses on rhyme and rhythm in rap to examine manners of music-language interactions. The project leader Takako Fujioka will work with Music graduate students and DJs and rappers in the Bay Area for this project and collaborate with Dr. Keith Cross (scholar, artist and educator, former Ph. D. student in Stanford Education, former U Hawaii professor) to continue rhyme and rhythm investigation.

A person in a long, dark coat leans against a white wall

LOCHLANN JAIN | An Apocrypha of Drowning

In Europe, drowning emerged as a notable form of accidental death in the mid-18th century. “Apparently drowned” bodies, teetering between life and death, presented objects of fear, revulsion, and fascination and the advocates faced intense religious and scientific resistance. In the complex project of making drowning into a public health issue that could be solved, the minting, awarding, and presenting of lifesaving medals took center stage: saving someone from drowning would become a heroic act. The medals were expensive to mint, and their aim was to induce lifesaving action while also seducing the middle and upper classes to the value the cause; the Society; and not incidentally, the very project of the new Enlightenment science.

I have designed and cast in silver five medals that investigate the paradoxes I have unearthed in my scholarly research on drowning. I have spent this year building dioramas related to the questions raised by medal-making as a social ritual and to display and configure the source materials used in their design. The next phase of the project will involve photographing, editing, printing, and mounting of this work for the final show. 

Brent Salter and Amalia Kessler
Brent Salter and Amalia Kessler (Photo Credit: Adam R. Talcott)

BRENT SALTER and AMALIA KESSLER, Stanford Center for Law and History

Reclaiming Artistic Legacies in the Performing Arts

This interdisciplinary project is part of an ongoing collaboration between legal scholars and leaders in the theater community that was created in response to the discovery of ways in which performing artists’ legacies have been treated in the law and artistic practice. The project—which will initially be a series of workshops—aims to better understand how power over artistic legacies in the performing arts has been asserted, particularly in cases of creators from marginalized communities. We are making these inquiries through artists who have made extraordinary contributions to the performing arts, but to this point have mostly been studied from a social-historical perspective. We contribute to this conversation through a study of artistic practices and customs, history, law, and issues of economic justice in the arts. As a provocation for the discussion, we initially draw on publicly available legal documents and archival materials that we now want to share and scrutinize with a broader group of experts and the public. The artists involved in this project are also using the archival source materials to develop a theatrical work to illuminate the issues relevant to the advocacy, engagement, and education agendas of the larger project. The workshop will provide the space to develop the artistic work (a key stage in the dramaturgy and proof of concept). Thus, an important outcome is a deeper engagement with artistic communities concerning the development of artistic projects to advance social justice causes.

2023-24

Headshot_Dieter

KATIE DIETER | Reimagining Black Diasporic Identity through the Arts

Headshot_Fendorf

SCOTT FENDORF | A Theatrical Inquiry into Environmental Justice Implications of California Wildfires

Headshot_Murphy-Shigematsu

STEPHEN MURPHY-SHIGEMATSU| Grief and Culture

Headshot_Seetah

KRISH SEETAH | Can Art Express Our Loss for Biodiversity?

2022-23

Gigi Otalvaro Headshot

GIGI OTÁLVARO | Kinesthetic Delight: Playful Mindfulness in the Museums

Rose Salseda Headshot

ROSE SALSEDA | El Centro: The Heart of Stanford’s Latinx Art Legacy

2021-22

logo

ELIZABETH HADLY| Hearing the Anthropocene: A Synergy of Science and Music to Reveal Recent Human Impacts to Nature

logo

MICHAEL RAU | The Future of Digital-Performance-Making: A Convening

logo

RICHARD MEYER | Anita Steckel: Feminist Art and Sexual Politics

2020-21

logo

KIM BEIL | Talking in the Library: Conversations on Photobooks

logo

LOCHLANN JAIN | The Lung is a Bird and Fish

logo

JAMIE MELTZER | ChocolateHeads Dance and Documentary Film Workshop

logo

BISSERA PENTCHEVA | En-chanted Images of Ste. Foy at Conques

2019-20

logo

HIDEO MABUCHI | Intermateriality:Redox

logo

DIANE FRANK | Dances in Conversation w/ Jim Campbell & the Architecture of the Anderson

logo

YOUNG JEAN LEE | iPads and iPens for Playwriting

Didn't find what you were looking for?

Reach out with questions:

Ellen Oh Headshot

Ellen Oh

Director of Interdisciplinary Arts Programs

ellenoh@stanford.edu

Edi Dai

Edi Dai

Program Associate

edidai@stanford.edu