Humanities New York is pleased to announce that 20 organizations across the state have received grants totaling $474,428 as part of the Post-Incarceration Humanities Partnership (PIHP): a cohort-based program that supports organizations that incorporate the humanities into their work of serving formerly incarcerated individuals and their families. 

“PIHP helps create space for dialogue and reflection about the experience of re-entry and incarceration, work that is complementary to but ultimately distinct from social services and criminal-justice reform,” Director of Grants Joe Murphy explained, underscoring the program’s unique value. He continued: “By making the humanities more accessible to returning citizens and their families, each organization in the PIHP cohort is helping to center ‘the human’ in public discourse about incarceration and re-entry across New York State.” 

In addition to receiving funding, grantees join a cohort that meets on a regular basis to share work and exchange ideas, knowledge, and experience. Of the 20 awarded grantees, 16 are entering their second and third years in the program. The opportunity to listen and learn from peers makes for a whole that’s greater than the sum of its parts; involved organizations show trajectories that hold promise for humanities-based interventions beyond state lines. 

Part and parcel of the initiative is continuous growth. Returning grantees report on how they’ll build upon work that’s essentially just begun. For example: with a 2023 grant and in partnership with Syracuse University, Center for Community Alternatives published two full volumes of Mend: a journal of prose, art, and poetry. This year, they’ll expand to multimedia and provide additional resources to contributors who are interested in pursuing more outlets. 

On a broader level, PIHP itself evolves to address gaps as they surface through the open lines of communication intrinsic to involvement. A common theme among new recipients is a focus on youth and family indirectly impacted by the justice system. 

“What started as a loose network of grantees is quickly congealing into a statewide community dedicated to the needs and interests of justice-impacted New Yorkers,” Murphy said. 

With that, we warmly welcome the following  organizations joining the PIHP cohort this year: 

Artistic Noise

Visualizing Truth to Power: Documenting Our Lived-Experiences Through Art

Project Director: Calder Zwicky

New York, New York

Amount Awarded: $20,024

Drama Club

Hood Cycle: Lean In–How to Jail–Roll Out

Project Director: Josie Whittlesey

Queens, New York

Amount Awarded: $25,000

The Love Quest Foundation on behalf of Woman Unsilenced

The Sisteration Room

Project Director: Lonett Williams

Amount Awarded: $15,716

Parole Preparation Project on behalf of Archive-Based Creative Arts

Archive-Based Creative Arts

Project Director: Michelle Lewin

Amount Awarded: $25,000

Society of Fellows and Heyman Center for the Humanities; Columbia University

Artmaking Is a Practice of Freedom

Project Director: Mia Ruyter

Amount Awarded: $20,450


We also wish to congratulate and thank organizations who have recommitted to PIHP and are entering their second and third years in the program:

All Kings

Nature Quest

Project Director: Raul Espinoza 

Project Summary: A three-day “rites of passage” experience for formerly incarcerated men, in which an inner journey of healing is framed as a search for identity and purpose.

Amount Awarded: $24,488

Art Start

See Me Because

Project Director: Danny Arenas

Project Summary: See Me Because will provide a platform for justice-involved youth to craft multimedia projects and explore complex personal narratives in an immersive public exhibition to initiate dialogue and advance youths’ self-actualization efforts. 

Amount Awarded: $25,000

Bard College

Bard Prison Initiative: Bringing Holistic Reentry to the Capital Region

Project Director: Sayra Havranek

Project Summary: The Bard Prison Initiative will further strengthen its holistic, person-centric reentry supports for returning citizens in Upstate New York and the Capital Region, an effort founded and led by a formerly incarcerated BPI alumnus.

Amount Awarded: $25,000

Center for Community Alternatives

Project Mend: Writing and Publishing Beyond Prison

Project Director: Ron Boxx

Project Summary: Project Mend focuses on writing and publishing as a means by which formerly incarcerated individuals and their families in Syracuse, New York have the potential for transformation through reimagining themselves, their communities, and their futures.

Amount Awarded: $25,000

Civic Ensemble

ReEntry Theatre Program

Project Director: Julia Taylor

Project Summary: Civic Ensemble’s ReEntry Theatre Program will use humanities-based tools of story sharing and group dialogue to explore current themes and questions relevant to the local reentry community. 

Amount Awarded: $25,000

Correctional Association of New York

In Transition: The Landscape and Living Histories of Incarceration

Project Directors: Yassmin Fashir and Toindranauth Ramdeo

Project Summary: In Transition: The Landscape and Living Histories of Incarceration examines the changing landscape of places, relationships, and understandings of history affected by incarceration using community-centered prison monitoring and dialogue.

Amount Awarded: $25,000

Echoes of Incarceration

The “Emerging Adult Justice” Dialogues

Project Director: Jeremy Robins

Project Summary: Echoes of Incarceration seeks to complete a groundbreaking series of short films on “Emerging Adult Justice,” and launch a public events series examining our country’s approach to the critical demographic of 18-25 year olds in the justice system.

Amount Awarded: $24,400

Artists Alliance on behalf of One Whales Tale

I Wish I Knew How…

Project Director: Ellpetha Tsivicos

Project Summary: A creative arts and healing program led by formerly incarcerated individuals that seeks to create a place to share, grow, and build a creative practice framed by post-incarcerated life.

Amount Awarded: $24,950

Herstory Writers Workshop

Herstory Behind and Beyond Bars

Project Director: Erika Duncan

Project Summary: Through an online curriculum for use in carceral settings, Herstory will expand its network of writing circles behind and beyond bars, in partnership with human rights organizations, academic institutions, and allies within the court system.

Centereach, New York

Amount Awarded: $25,000

Music on the Inside

Reentry Mentorships

Project Director: Alina Bloomgarden

Project Summary: Music on the Inside Reentry Mentorships match returning citizens one to one with dedicated professional musicians on their instrument to provide music instruction, new influences and encouragement in reentry.

New York, New York

Amount Awarded: $25,000

New York Foundation of the Arts on behalf of Incorrigibles

Bearing Witness to the Incarcerated Girls of New York

Project Director: Alison Cornyn

Project Summary: Incorrigibles, a documentary project born of the stories and lives of incarcerated girls from 1900 to today, connects women incarcerated in their teens with youth in Hudson today to bear witness to one another’s oral histories & to reinterpret the past.

Brooklyn, New York

Amount Awarded: $19,400

One Breath Rising

Time Out of Joint

Project Director: Joy Rosenthal

Project Summary: “Time Out of Joint” is an innovative educational project which hires educated former prisoners, working side-by-side with other seasoned educators to teach high school and college workshops about Shakespeare, prison education, and racism.

Amount Awarded: $25,000

Reentry Theater of Harlem

Rite of Passage for Returning Citizens

Project Director: Alexander Anderson

Project Summary: Reentry Theater of Harlem is dedicated to using rites of passage to support returning citizens as they heal from the shame, stigma and trauma of incarceration and strive to live healthy, meaningful and fulfilling lives.

Amount Awarded: $25,000

Voice Buffalo

Street Certified

Project Director: Tyrell Ford

Project Summary: Street Certified engages formerly incarcerated and/or justice-impacted people in critical reflection to support restoration, healing, transformation, accountability, and self-liberation toward a culture of dignity for all.

Amount Awarded: $25,000


The Post Incarceration Humanities Partnership is generously funded by The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.

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