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Originally founded in 1999 The Creative Company was branded as a design and post production firm. In 2012 we rebranded and continued our search for new challenges by expanding our services and increasing our market reach. We have a staff of highly skilled, award-winning designers, developers and data strategists. Internet Archive is unable to release any contact information for patrons. However, it may be worth your while to post a review for the item in question - this automatically contacts the uploader's account, notifying them that their upload has been reviewed. You could pose queries/requests for information therein. 16710 Model: GMT-Master II Amongst our most requested watches, this 16710 GMT-Master II is in outstanding, all original condition. Sporting its classic 'sub-like' black bezel and complete with the full complement of original Rolex box, warranty certificate, tags, Japanese sticker, and booklets, and powered by the trusty automatic 3185 calibre movement, this rugged Rolex pilot's.

Arts Endowment grantee Mark Morris Dance Group's performance of The Hard Nut, Morris' reinvention of The Nutcracker. Photo by Peter DaSilva

Veterans and civilians perform in A Long Journey Home, a production created for Arts Endowment grantee DIAVOLO | Architecture in Motion's Veterans Project. Photo by George Simian

Serial number on citizen watch. Watch Serial Number- as mentioned before, we often assume the model is a serial number which is a unique, one-of-a-kind number Chronometer Certificate- while definitely valuable to the watch, the number on the certificate will not help you search for or identify a particular watch. The serial number is a unique identifier for the category of your watch, its model year, and the specific number of your watch in the production run. View our serial number guide below to learn details about your watch. We encourage you to register your watch through our watch registration page to ensure your watch is covered under warranty. A serial number is unique to each TAG Heuer timepiece. Serial numbers play a crucial role in demonstrating both authenticity and ownership. IT IS LOCATED ON THE BACK OF YOUR WATCH There are two numbers engraved on the caseback of your watch. A serial number is a unique number attached to one specefic watch. A unique serial number makes it possible to trace back the origin of any watch and identify model, calibre and year in which it was produced. Use your serial number to identify the production year of your watch by using a serial number matrix below. Note: - The serial numbers.

Alexander Calder's La Grande Vitesse, the initial project of the NEA's Public Art Initiative in 1967, helped revitalize the ailing downtown in Grand Rapids, Michigan. Photo courtesy of the Grand Rapids Public Library.

National Endowment for the Arts grantee BANDALOOP's film Crossing. Photo by Braden Mayfield

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Regional arts organization New England Foundation for the Arts' National Dance Project supported the first touring production of Descent by the art ensemble Kinetic Light. Photo by Robbie Sweeny

How to Turn Anything into Something Else (2012) by the Miss Rockaway Armada on 207 North Broad Street, part of the Mural Arts Philadelphia program, supported by the Arts Endowment. Photo by Steve Weinik, courtesy of Mural Arts Philadelphia

Minnesota's state champion Isabella Callery (Anishinaabe) became the 2019 Poetry Out Loud National Champion. Photo by James Kegley

NEA Jazz Masters Bobby Hutcherson and Kenny Barron performing at the 2012 NEA Jazz Masters Tribute Concert. Photo by Michael G. Stewart

2017 National Heritage Fellow Chilkat weaver Anna Brown Ehlers (middle) with her friend Jacqueline Pata (left) and daughter Marie Ehlers (right) displaying her art form at the concert. Photo by Tom Pich

The Alliance for Media Arts + Culture's Arts2Work, an Arts Endowment grantee, is the first federally registered national apprenticeship program in media arts and creative technologies. Photo by Wide Angle Youth Media, with Sakinah Bowman

Supporting the Arts in Your Community

The National Endowment for the Arts supports exemplary arts projects in communities nationwide through grantmaking, initiatives, partnerships, and events.

Grants

The National Endowment for the Arts awards grants to nonprofit organizations, creative writers and translators, state arts agencies, and regional arts organizations in support of arts projects across the country.
Go to the Grants section »

Impact

See the impact of the Arts Endowment on your state, and how the agency's work in research, accessibility, and other areas has had a major impact in the arts and culture of the country.
Go to the Impact section »

Violinist and Social Entrepreneur Aaron Dworkin

Working for inclusion, diversity and excellence in classical music

Chairman's Corner

A weekly podcast with Chairman Mary Anne Carter on issues
in the arts community. Listen

Some Facts about the National Endowment for the Arts

The National Endowment for the Arts is an independent federal agency that funds, promotes, and strengthens the creative capacity of our communities by providing all Americans with diverse opportunities for arts participation.

Percentage of Arts Endowment funding is awarded directly to the states through their state and regional agencies, reaching millions more people in thousands of communities.

Amount leveraged by private and other public funds for every $1 of direct Arts Endowment funding.

Direct grant-matching support for Arts Endowment projects each year.

Some Facts about the National Endowment for the Arts

The National Endowment for the Arts is an independent federal agency that funds, promotes, and strengthens the creative capacity of our communities by providing all Americans with diverse opportunities for arts participation.

Recommended for grant awards annually.

Percentage of Arts Endowment grants take place in high-poverty neighborhoods.

Percentage of Arts Endowment grants reach low-income audiences of underserved populations.

Some Facts from the National Endowment for the Arts

These facts are based on the most recent data (2017) from the Arts and Cultural Production Satellite Account (ACPSA), which is produced jointly by the National Endowment for the Arts' Office of Research & Analysis and the Bureau of Economic Analysis, U.S. Commerce Department. The ACPSA tracks the annual economic impact of arts and cultural production from 35 industries, both commercial and nonprofit.

Amount the arts and cultural industries contribute to the U.S. economy.

Percentage of the nation's Gross Domestic Product is accounted for by arts and cultural industries. Ultimate typernitrotypecheats.

Americans work in the arts and cultural industries.

Some Facts about the National Endowment for the Arts

The National Endowment for the Arts is an independent federal agency that funds, promotes, and strengthens the creative capacity of our communities by providing all Americans with diverse opportunities for arts participation.

The Arts Endowment's annual cost to each American.

The Arts Endowment's percentage of the federal budget.

Amount awarded by the Arts Endowment since its beginning in 1965.

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Some Facts about the National Endowment for the Arts

The National Endowment for the Arts is an independent federal agency that funds, promotes, and strengthens the creative capacity of our communities by providing all Americans with diverse opportunities for arts participation.

Attend a live arts event supported by the Arts Endowment annually.

Concerts, readings, and performances are supported annually.

Exhibitions are supported annually as well.

Some Facts from the National Endowment for the Arts

These facts are based on the most recent data (2017) from the Survey of Public Participation in the Arts (SPPA), a national survey conducted in partnership with the U.S. Census Bureau that has allowed cultural policymakers, arts managers, scholars, and journalists to obtain reliable statistics about American patterns of arts engagement.

The state's residents attend live performing arts events at a higher rate than U.S. adults as a whole—with 62 percent for North Dakota residents versus 48.5 percent of U.S. adults.

Outperforms the national rate of attending art exhibits, with 33.5 percent of this state's residents doing this activity versus 23 percent of Americans overall.

Their literary reading rates (upwards of 60 percent) far exceed the U.S. as a whole (44 percent).

Driver for hp printer c4280. Illustrator Zahra Marwan moved to the United States from Kuwait as a child. She has some of her illustrations hanging in her studio at the Harwood Art Center.(Greg Sorber/Albuquerque Journal)

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — Zahra Marwan relies on her vivid memories to inspire her artwork.

Normally, the Albuquerque-based artist is influenced by her travels and daily interactions with others.

For the past nine months, she's mostly remained at home – rarely traveling to her art studio at Harwood Art Center.

................................

'I miss the casual experiences of talking to strangers,' she says. 'The stories I do hear these days are from my mother who is living in Kuwait. I also find inspiration in the things I read throughout the day.'

As points of inspiration became more of a challenge, it didn't stop Marwan from creating new pieces of art regularly.

A self portrait with her husband, Florian Goussin, hangs in Zahra Marwan's studio in the Harwood Art Center.

Marwan's point of view as an artist is part of what helped her get recognized by the city of Albuquerque as a recipient of its Creative Bravos Awards.

'I was surprised,' she says of the award. 'Of course it's an honor to be recognized in the city that you love and have made your home.'

Marwan immigrated to New Mexico with her parents from Kuwait in the late-1990s. The family made their home in Rio Rancho.

She studied the visual arts in France, and continues various pursuits to further educate herself.

When her parents went back to Kuwait, Marwan decided to stay in Albuquerque and make it her home.

She has collaborated with several institutions and individuals including: The National Hispanic Cultural Center, The National Institute of Flamenco Arts, Éditions du Seuil and the Institut du Monde Arabe in Paris, Bloomsbury Publishing in New York, and Sharaf Studio along with Oloom Magazine in Kuwait.

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Marwan is one of eight recognized by the city and first lady Elizabeth Kistin Keller.

Albuquerque's Jordan Caldwell was an apprentice with the Apprenticeships for Leaders in Mosaic Arts (ALMA) before becoming an artist.

The Creative Bravos Awards began more than 30 years ago and have since recognized the creative work of more than 270 artists, programs, organizations, businesses and events that make a significant impact on the lives of area residents, neighborhoods and communities.

'While we are sad we can not gather to celebrate the creative contributions of this year's winners, we look forward to sharing their stories with the community in a virtual setting,' says Keller. 'Each recipient has impacted the community and has a hand in making Albuquerque a truly special place to live and work.'

Lucia Martinez, left, a student at Albuquerque High School and a youth producer for Generation Justice, attends a rally at UNM in support of HB172 which bans corporal punishment in all New Mexico schools in 2011. (Pat Vasquez-Cunningham/Journal)

According to the city, a series of videos featuring the recipients will begin to broadcast at 7 p.m. Monday, Jan. 11, on One Albuquerque Media's YouTube, Facebook and Comcast channel 16. A video will be released at 7 p.m. each day from Jan. 11 through Jan. 19.

'Local creatives, artists and makers have been severely impacted by the pandemic,' says Dr. Shelle Sanchez, director of Cultural Services. 'This year, more than ever, it's important for us to shine light and support those who make creative contributions to the community.'

Contact the creative archives

Sanchez says the Creative Bravos Awards help inspire others, though getting a group of those to be recognized was a little more challenging.

'It was harder to get our community engaged the way we have in previous years,' Sanchez says. 'We still have to celebrate the good things that happened in 2020 and these artists and organizations kept moving forward.'

Patrons enjoy an interactive game at Electric Playhouse in February 2020.

Sanchez says the 2020 group of recipients is also diverse.

'Zahra is still at the beginning of her career and she's going to launch big time in the coming year,' Sanchez says. 'For the Bravos, we try to look at diversity in all of those ways – in terms of the art form, in terms of the creative economy.'

Joining Marwan as a recipient for the 2020 Creative Bravos Awards are:

Apprenticeships for Leaders in Mosaic Arts (ALMA)

ALMA supports and nurtures artists of all ages in creating artworks of exceptional quality and becoming artistic entrepreneurs. The artists of ALMA developed an apprenticeship model and over the past 20 years have created handmade tile mosaic artworks in collaboration with youth and adults in the community. ALMA is the Creative Bravos Legacy Recipient.

Albuquerque Poet Laureate Organizing Committee

The Albuquerque Poet Laureate Program (APLP) celebrates poetry by recognizing a resident poet who makes meaningful connections, honors, and serves our diverse community, elevates the importance of the art form, and shares poetry with Albuquerque residents. The committee named Mary Oishi, as Albuquerque Poet Laureate in 2020 for a two-year term.

Electric Playhouse

Electric Playhouse's unique brand of active entertainment and flexible digital environment create an engaging space for visitors of any age. Electric Playhouse produces immersive and interactive experiences.

Archives Contact Number

Generation Justice

Lead artists and apprentices with Apprenticeships for Leaders in Mosaic Arts (ALMA) put the finishing touches on a mosaic mural titled 'Tree of Life,' on the south wall of the East Convention Building in Downtown Albuquerque in August 2019. (Roberto E. Rosales/Albuquerque Journal)

Established in 2005, Generation Justice is a multiracial, multicultural project that trains youth to harness the power of community and raise critical consciousness through leadership development, civic engagement, media production and narrative shift in the areas that most impact New Mexicans – racial justice, health, education, early childhood development, and economic security.

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Some Facts about the National Endowment for the Arts

The National Endowment for the Arts is an independent federal agency that funds, promotes, and strengthens the creative capacity of our communities by providing all Americans with diverse opportunities for arts participation.

Attend a live arts event supported by the Arts Endowment annually.

Concerts, readings, and performances are supported annually.

Exhibitions are supported annually as well.

Some Facts from the National Endowment for the Arts

These facts are based on the most recent data (2017) from the Survey of Public Participation in the Arts (SPPA), a national survey conducted in partnership with the U.S. Census Bureau that has allowed cultural policymakers, arts managers, scholars, and journalists to obtain reliable statistics about American patterns of arts engagement.

The state's residents attend live performing arts events at a higher rate than U.S. adults as a whole—with 62 percent for North Dakota residents versus 48.5 percent of U.S. adults.

Outperforms the national rate of attending art exhibits, with 33.5 percent of this state's residents doing this activity versus 23 percent of Americans overall.

Their literary reading rates (upwards of 60 percent) far exceed the U.S. as a whole (44 percent).

Driver for hp printer c4280. Illustrator Zahra Marwan moved to the United States from Kuwait as a child. She has some of her illustrations hanging in her studio at the Harwood Art Center.(Greg Sorber/Albuquerque Journal)

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — Zahra Marwan relies on her vivid memories to inspire her artwork.

Normally, the Albuquerque-based artist is influenced by her travels and daily interactions with others.

For the past nine months, she's mostly remained at home – rarely traveling to her art studio at Harwood Art Center.

................................

'I miss the casual experiences of talking to strangers,' she says. 'The stories I do hear these days are from my mother who is living in Kuwait. I also find inspiration in the things I read throughout the day.'

As points of inspiration became more of a challenge, it didn't stop Marwan from creating new pieces of art regularly.

A self portrait with her husband, Florian Goussin, hangs in Zahra Marwan's studio in the Harwood Art Center.

Marwan's point of view as an artist is part of what helped her get recognized by the city of Albuquerque as a recipient of its Creative Bravos Awards.

'I was surprised,' she says of the award. 'Of course it's an honor to be recognized in the city that you love and have made your home.'

Marwan immigrated to New Mexico with her parents from Kuwait in the late-1990s. The family made their home in Rio Rancho.

She studied the visual arts in France, and continues various pursuits to further educate herself.

When her parents went back to Kuwait, Marwan decided to stay in Albuquerque and make it her home.

She has collaborated with several institutions and individuals including: The National Hispanic Cultural Center, The National Institute of Flamenco Arts, Éditions du Seuil and the Institut du Monde Arabe in Paris, Bloomsbury Publishing in New York, and Sharaf Studio along with Oloom Magazine in Kuwait.

Marwan is one of eight recognized by the city and first lady Elizabeth Kistin Keller.

Albuquerque's Jordan Caldwell was an apprentice with the Apprenticeships for Leaders in Mosaic Arts (ALMA) before becoming an artist.

The Creative Bravos Awards began more than 30 years ago and have since recognized the creative work of more than 270 artists, programs, organizations, businesses and events that make a significant impact on the lives of area residents, neighborhoods and communities.

'While we are sad we can not gather to celebrate the creative contributions of this year's winners, we look forward to sharing their stories with the community in a virtual setting,' says Keller. 'Each recipient has impacted the community and has a hand in making Albuquerque a truly special place to live and work.'

Lucia Martinez, left, a student at Albuquerque High School and a youth producer for Generation Justice, attends a rally at UNM in support of HB172 which bans corporal punishment in all New Mexico schools in 2011. (Pat Vasquez-Cunningham/Journal)

According to the city, a series of videos featuring the recipients will begin to broadcast at 7 p.m. Monday, Jan. 11, on One Albuquerque Media's YouTube, Facebook and Comcast channel 16. A video will be released at 7 p.m. each day from Jan. 11 through Jan. 19.

'Local creatives, artists and makers have been severely impacted by the pandemic,' says Dr. Shelle Sanchez, director of Cultural Services. 'This year, more than ever, it's important for us to shine light and support those who make creative contributions to the community.'

Sanchez says the Creative Bravos Awards help inspire others, though getting a group of those to be recognized was a little more challenging.

'It was harder to get our community engaged the way we have in previous years,' Sanchez says. 'We still have to celebrate the good things that happened in 2020 and these artists and organizations kept moving forward.'

Patrons enjoy an interactive game at Electric Playhouse in February 2020.

Sanchez says the 2020 group of recipients is also diverse.

'Zahra is still at the beginning of her career and she's going to launch big time in the coming year,' Sanchez says. 'For the Bravos, we try to look at diversity in all of those ways – in terms of the art form, in terms of the creative economy.'

Joining Marwan as a recipient for the 2020 Creative Bravos Awards are:

Apprenticeships for Leaders in Mosaic Arts (ALMA)

ALMA supports and nurtures artists of all ages in creating artworks of exceptional quality and becoming artistic entrepreneurs. The artists of ALMA developed an apprenticeship model and over the past 20 years have created handmade tile mosaic artworks in collaboration with youth and adults in the community. ALMA is the Creative Bravos Legacy Recipient.

Albuquerque Poet Laureate Organizing Committee

The Albuquerque Poet Laureate Program (APLP) celebrates poetry by recognizing a resident poet who makes meaningful connections, honors, and serves our diverse community, elevates the importance of the art form, and shares poetry with Albuquerque residents. The committee named Mary Oishi, as Albuquerque Poet Laureate in 2020 for a two-year term.

Electric Playhouse

Electric Playhouse's unique brand of active entertainment and flexible digital environment create an engaging space for visitors of any age. Electric Playhouse produces immersive and interactive experiences.

Archives Contact Number

Generation Justice

Lead artists and apprentices with Apprenticeships for Leaders in Mosaic Arts (ALMA) put the finishing touches on a mosaic mural titled 'Tree of Life,' on the south wall of the East Convention Building in Downtown Albuquerque in August 2019. (Roberto E. Rosales/Albuquerque Journal)

Established in 2005, Generation Justice is a multiracial, multicultural project that trains youth to harness the power of community and raise critical consciousness through leadership development, civic engagement, media production and narrative shift in the areas that most impact New Mexicans – racial justice, health, education, early childhood development, and economic security.

A.G. Joe Stephenson

Stephenson has worked extensively as a muralist, graphic and scenic artist in Jamaica West Indies, New York, Los Angeles and Berkeley, California. After relocating to Albuquerque in 1987, he has worked with various Albuquerque arts organizations including La Companía de Teatro de Albuquerque, Working Classroom Inc., The Vortex Theatre, the University of New Mexico, Albuquerque Civic Light Opera Association (now Musical Theatre Southwest).

Jordan Caldwell

Otilio Ruiz formed the children's group, Voces De Coronado.Courtesy of the NM Department of Cultural Affairs

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Caldwell creates art to introduce people to his view of the world and how he feels. His ambition is to depict the cold, beautiful, isolated world he lives in, but to also acknowledge that others live in the same world. Caldwell is the Emerging Creative Bravos Recipient.

Otilio Ruiz

Ruiz was born in 1969 in the town of Pacho Nuevo, Veracruz in Mexico. He started singing at the age of five and he picked up his first instrument at the age of 11. He began his career in education in 2004 at the Bernalillo Public Schools. By 2009, he had transferred to *Albuquerque Public Schools as an elementary teacher at Coronado School where he has had the opportunity to form a children's group, Voces De Coronado.





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