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Scottsdale Museum of Contemporary Art

Grant Cycle
Fall 2023
Amount
$80,000
Type of Grant
Exhibition Support
Website
smoca.org ↗
"Cybele Lyle: Floating Seeds Make Deep Forms.” Installation View. Photo by Aaron Rothman.
"Cybele Lyle: Floating Seeds Make Deep Forms.” Installation View. Photo by Aaron Rothman.
"Cybele Lyle: Floating Seeds Make Deep Forms.” Installation View. Photo by Aaron Rothman.
"Cybele Lyle: Floating Seeds Make Deep Forms.” Installation View. Photo by Aaron Rothman.
Cybele Lyle Artist Talk at SMoCA. Photo by David Blakeman.
Alison Bremner, ‘Wat’sa with Pearl Earring, 2014. Digital photograph, 25 x 18 inches, courtesy of the artist.
Tyrrell Tapaha, Áshkii Gáamalii : The Boy Who Lives in Two Worlds, 2021. Diné-style tapestry, handspun vegetal-dyed Navajo Churro, Brown Sheep, Navajo-raised Alpaca, 12 1/98 x 15 ⅜ inches, courtesy of the artist and Alvaro D. Marquez
Terran Last Gun, Unfamiliar View, 2023. Ink and colored pencil on antique “Journal Day Book Chicago, IL” ledger sheet (dated 1903), 13 1/2 x 8 1/4 inches, courtesy of the artist
Norman Akers, Watchful Eye, 2023. Oil on canvas, 78 x 68 inches.

Established in 1999, the Scottsdale Museum of Contemporary Art (SMoCA) is the only museum dedicated to contemporary art in the greater Phoenix, Arizona metro area. As an artist-centered institution within a city experiencing both demographic shifts and national attention around the inflammatory rhetoric of its politicians, SMoCA is a critical outlet for civic dialogue.

Carolina Aranibar-Fernandez: Rastros Invisibles [Invisible Traces] features a series of new, large-scale installations by the Bolivian-born, San-Francisco based artist that demonstrate the impact of the mining and trade industries that extract natural resources and exploit the labor of primarily Black, Brown, and Indigenous people. Combining deep research and intensive handmaking processes, Aranibar-Fernández translates the complex global movements of resources into delicately rendered impressions of cartography and topography that represent the traces of exchange and power.

Cybele Lyle: Floating Seeds Make Deep Forms is the artist’s first solo museum exhibition, and will feature a site-specific, multimedia installation that proposes the deserts of the southwest as liminal, queer, regenerative places. This exhibition is the first solo exhibition by a woman in the fifteen-year history of the museum’s Architecture+Art series.

The exhibition Exploding Native Inevitable traveled to SMoCA in August 2025. Curated by Dan Mills and artist Brad Kahlhamer, the exhibition includes work by artists Norman Akers, Nizhonniya Austin, Alison Bremner, Jaque Fragua, Raven Halfmoon, Elisa Harkins, Sky Hopinka, Terran Last Gun, Fox Maxy, New Red Order, Mali Obomsawin, Sarah Rowe, Duane Slick, and Tyrrell Tapaha; SMoCA added four regional Indigenous artists to the exhibition and curated public programs.

n February of 2025, the museum will present transfeminisms, the most expansive feminist show since 2007.  The exhibition will debut in London at Mimosa House before arriving at SMoCA. The American artists represented in the exhibition are predominantly artists of color from immigrant and/or LGBTQ+ communities.The organizers utilize the term “transfeminisms” to signal the diverse array of feminist and activist practices flourishing today.

See Also

Foundation

Over $4 Million in Grants Awarded to 50 Arts Organizations by The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts

10 January 2024

Diedrick Brackens, ark of bulrushes (installation view), 2021.
Exhibition Support

Scottsdale Museum of Contemporary Art
Scottsdale, AZ

1928

August 6, 1928. Andy Warhol was born Andrew Warhola in Pittsburgh to Julia and Andrej Warhola, Carpatho-Rusyn immigrants and devout Byzantine Catholics who had fled poverty and war in current-day Slovakia.

The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts
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