The Sedona City Council unanimously approved the recommendations of the Arts and Culture Grant Review Committee on Tuesday, Dec. 9 — award the Sedona International Film Festival and the Sedona Arts Center each $100,000 in the city’s first disbursement of the recently created Arts and Culture Grant Program.
“We have two very fine organizations,” Councilman Pete Furman said. “I don’t like the process. We developed a competitive grant process. [But] it’s not really competitive. I would prefer that we do contracts for services for these two fine organizations.”
Council approved the creation of the grant program 5-2 during its Sept. 9 meeting, with Furman and Councilman Brian Fultz opposed. Subsequently, the Arts and Culture Grant Committee reviewed applications on Nov. 17, forwarding recommendations to council.
ACOG eligibility is limited to Sedona-based 501(c)(3) nonprofits focused on arts and culture with annual budgets of $1 million or more. Qualifying organizations must offer year-round programming for residents, expend awarded funds within the fiscal year, submit outcome reports and forgo other city grants during the same period.
SIFF and SAC were the only applicants that satisfied these requirements.
“We are really honored that the city has recognized us and the Sedona Arts Center for the value and the arts and the culture that we bring daily to this community,” SIFF Executive Director Patrick Schweiss said. “This is a huge step in support for arts and culture on behalf of the city, for two very well established longtime organizations.”
Among SIFF programs that ACOG will support are: The Sedona Professional Theatre Company that brings professional actors and directors to the Mary D. Fisher Theatre, the “Movies on the Move” outdoor screening program, a new live music series with four dates and the continuation of the annual festival’s closing night free concert.
A portion of the funds from this grant are earmarked to help support four programs at the upcoming festival taking place from Sunday, Feb. 22 to Monday, March 2: “Marilyn Monroe at 100: A Celebration” with film screenings and a live tribute; “Right In the Eye: Movie Concert on Georges Méliés’ Films” featuring a small live orchestra from France; “From Broadway with Love: Part II” with Megan Hilty.
Finally “‘Eisenhower: This Piece of Ground:’ Live one-man stage production starring Tony Award-winner John Rubenstein as Dwight D. Eisenhower,” SIFF”s grant application reads. This production would be staged as the preevening kick-off event of the festival, in celebration of launching of the Sedona Professional Theatre Company.
ACOG is “something that Patrick Schweiss and I have both been working toward for the past year and a half, just laying all the groundwork to make it happen,” SAC CEO Julie Richard said. “We really need this funding, and it is going to go a long way in helping to support our programming.”
The $100,000 will go towards supporting SAC’s Creative Aging program, the The Sedona Entrepreneurial Artist Development Program a two-day program in March that teaches business skills to artists, Gallery 928 a summer art apprenticeship program for teens, and the “Faces” exhibit series.
SAC and SIFF originally applied for and were awarded $30,000 and $27,300, respectively, under the city’s Small Grants Program, on June 24.
With the creation of ACOG, those funds will be redistributed to other area nonprofits under the Small Grants Program: The Sedona Symphony, $19,500; Low-Income Student Aid, $6,065; Chamber Music Sedona, an additional $4,500; the Sedona Chamber Ballet, $4,500; Gardens for Humanity, $4,500; the Sedona-Oak Creek District Educational Foundation, $3,225; Piano on the Rocks, $2,500; the Rotary Club of Sedona, $2,000; the Sedona Arts Festival, $2,000; St. Vincent de Paul, $2,000; the Sedona Sister Cities Association, $1,000; the International Hummingbird Society, $1,000; and Wisdom Age Metaverse, $5,000.
Editor’s Note: This story has been updated to accurately state Sedona City Council’s prior vote in September.
