Carson Grant

Carson Grant

Carson Grant 2015
Born Carson Ferri-Grant
Pawtucket, Rhode Island, USA
Occupation Actor and artist
Years active 1970-present
Awards Guild of Italian American Actors: Italian American Heritage Award 2007
Website http://www.carsongrant.com

Carson Grant is an American actor and artist. Grant has created characters and stories in visual mediums as drawings, paintings, in films and on stage.

Pursuing acting and art career

1970s

Grant moved to New York City in 1970 to study acting technique with Lee Strasberg. He joined the professional acting unions: Screen Actors Guild, American Federation of Television and Radio Artists and Actors' Equity Association; and was represented by the William Morris Agency, who created the stage name 'Carson Grant'. He trained with Wally Harper, who coached his baritone voice, and Phil Black who trained him with modern jazz and fencing.

Grant performed various acting roles with New York City Opera and began his film acting career in films as Man on a Swing, The Front and Death Wish. He portrayed 'Romeo' in Romeo and Juliet at New Jersey Shakespeare in the Park and was young 'Thomas Jefferson' in The Last Ballot in the WNET 13 Bicentennial series.

Grant painted large oil canvases and constructed many art installations in alternative exhibition spaces as part of the East Village, Manhattan 1970s Art Movement, participating in Colab, Charas PS64 - El Bohio, ABC No Rio, Fashion Moda; and many group art shows in the East Village, the Westside, and the Bronx in alternative spaces. Leo Castelli recognized Grant's installation of living sand sculptures 'Coney Island Bathing Beauties' shown in the "The Coney Island Art Show 1980," and his triptych 'In Life Turmoil' in the "Time Square Show" 1980 organized by Collaborative Project Inc. Colab. Grant had a cobalt blue 'graffiti tag' of a pine tree coastline with his initials CFG, and on a midnight graffiti session, he had painted ten foot high cobalt blue iris flowers stretching the block-long 100 foot wall on the Lower East Side Con Edison plant, at Avenue C and 14th Street, titled "Open your Irises", in protest of the pollution produced by the energy plant. Influenced by Robert Rauschenberg's use of art for social change, Grant's one-man exhibition was called "Nature-Nuclear" at the 1979 Jack Morris Gallery, NYC, where he constructed a large climb-up-into 'scarred Mother Earth Uterus' post-nuclear, with her distorted next-generation traveling down her maimed fallopian tubes into her contaminated womb (30' x 40'. The work, encouraged the viewer to consider alternative energy sources to protect our environment.[1][2][3]

During this decade, he helped establish the 'Westside Arts Coalition' with a group of multi-discipline Upper West Side artists at Symphony Space to help establish exhibition spaces and affordable arts studios. In 1981, as the WSAC group marched to Lincoln Center to protest President Ronald Reagan's budget cuts to the Arts, Grant's photographs appeared on the front page of the Westsider Newspaper,.[4][5] In 1981, he organized a 'not-for-profit' art group called 'EAU' Environmental Artists United which created educational art exhibitions merging art and environmental conservation, which received grants from America the Beautiful Fund and Avon Foundation. Grant exhibited his artwork in alternative spaces throughout the boroughs, as one of the artists in the New York City 1970's and 1980's Art Movement.

Graduating as a Psi Chi Honors Sociey recipient in Psychology and elected Psi Chi president at CUNY - Hunter College BA program, Grant's master thesis on the Therapeutic Validity of Drama/Art Therapy, earned him an MA (Summa Cum Laude) at University of Connecticut. He pursued postgraduate work at Columbia University. Grant presented his research at Georgetown's Drama Therapy Association 1985 convention.

Art installations and digital media

1980s

Grant attended and taught at Pratt School of Art and Design, New York City to enhance his knowledge of computer graphics and digital editing. He worked as a computer graphic artist, animator and editor using AT&T- NASA software, creating formats for the premiere of CD-ROM and DVD and Internet technology, for companies such as Fusion, Advanced Graphics, Exhibit Technologies, Carabineer, and Ogilvy & Mather Advertising.

Painting on the computer tablet, Carson created animations for the 1991 Sony's Time Square Video Screen, present-day Panasonic panel hung on the One Times Square building, for the Ayer advertising campaign "Breakthrough with the Unexpected" animation of an egg cracking to release a butterfly [6] and also projects for IBM, Intel, Kodak, DeBeers, Shell, American Express, and National Geographic's Global Access Interactive Gallery in Washington, DC.

1990s

For the SIGGRAPH - 1990 Convention, Texas, to honor John F. Kennedy's memory, Grant constructed the suspended 3D hologram sculpture (100' x 100') titled Harmony Mountain inside the second floor of the old Dallas Union Train Station, where a viewer could walk around and under the mountainous shape. In the artist's words, "The installation's purpose was to harness viewers' peaceful thoughts and funnel them through the five pointed Texas Star Vortex (20' diameter) which was hung between the two massive exterior columns on the balcony over looking the historically tarnished Dallas Dealey Plaza and Texas School Book Depository. Grant was honored with the SIGGRAPH Vision in Art Award.

2000s

Grant participated as a visual artist in many group art exhibitions in New York City as a curator, a contributing painter and photographer.[7] As a film actor, Grant has portrayed more than 400 film characters in commercial and independent films as of 2012.[8]

In 2010, Carson Ferri-Grant painted a 32 ft x 14 ft mural of a Buzzard Bay estuary, on the third floor exterior of the old Ocean Spray Cranberry Factory in East Wareham, Cape Cod, Massachusetts, which helped draw the artistic community to this location, as the Buzzard Bay Theater Company and 3065 Music Club.[9][10]

In 2011, Carson Ferri-Grant curated an exhibition "Fall: Rising Above 9-11" for the West Side Arts Coalition, New York City. He asked the contributing artists to create original art work of their feelings about 9-11 for the tenth anniversary. ,[11][12]

Returning to acting

Carson Grant accepting GIAA Italian American Heritage Award 2007

In 1998, Italian director Edoardo Amati asked Grant to portray his lead character in the film Master Shot.

In 2008, Carson Ferri-Grant was elected Vice President of GIAA (Guild of Italian American Actors) and represented GIAA delegate on the 4 A's (Associated Actors and Artistes of America) meetings chaired by President Theodore Bikel.

As a film actor, Grant has portrayed more than 400 film characters in commercial and independent films as of 2012. In 2013 performed at Symphony Space, NYC in 50 year tribute to JFK in gala event "November 21, 1963: The day before".[13][14][15][16]

Awards and memberships

Grant has won a number of artistic and civic awards, including the Rhode Island Scholastic Gold Key Art Award (1962), Avon Foundation grant 1981, America The Beautiful Fund grant (1981), ACM SIGGRAPH: Vision in Art Award (1990), and the GIAA Italian American Heritage Award (2007).[17] The latter was awarded for contributing to the positive portrayal of Italian American culture via his role in the film God Bless America.

In 2008, Carson Ferri-Grant, was honored with a membership into the National Society of the Sons of the American Revolution through the Rhode Island Chapter.[18] In 2009 Carson Ferri-Grant was included in the Marquis "Who's Who in American Art", and "Who's Who in America", and in 2010 was honored for inclusion in Marquis "International Who's Who".

References

  1. Dalton, James. "How Does a Man Imagine Post Nuclear." Pawtucket Times. p.17. November 30, 1979
  2. Knutsen, Elise. "Cyborg-Loving Uterus Artist." New York Observer. Manhattan Transfers p.1. November 16, 2011
  3. Del Percio, Stephen. "Environmental Artist sells LEED." Green Building NYC p.1. November 28, 2011
  4. "Artists march to Lincoln Center rally on Reagan's Budget Cuts to the Arts", 'The Westsider Newspaper', NYC, August 1981, p. 1
  5. Prytyskacz, Jean. "Focus on an Artist." Westside Arts Coalition Newsletter. Spring 2007, p.5
  6. Taylor, Cathy. "Gratis Ads Light Great White Way." Adweek. p.21. February 25, 1991,
  7. Prytyskacz, Jean. "Focus on an Artist." Westside Arts Coalition Newsletter. Spring 2007, p.5.
  8. Internet Movie Data Base.
  9. Rebhan, Jaime. "Dressing up an old Cranberry Factory". Wareham Week. October 11, 2010, Vol 10, Issue 10, p.1.
  10. Smith, Andrea. "Beauty now playing in Wareham".The Wareham Observer. September 2, 2010, Vol. 4, Iss. 50, p.13.
  11. McCormack, Ed. "A Memorial Group Show that Raised the Spirits." Gallery & Studio Magazine. November 2011, p.9.
  12. Knutsen, Elise. "Cyborg-Loving Uterus Artist." New York Observer. November 16, 2011, p.1.
  13. Internet Movie Data Base.
  14. Davis, Leesa. "Who Got the Part: Carson Grant." Backstage. November 9, 2006, p. 18.
  15. Van Schalkwyk, Cindy. "Native Son's Heart is in the Arts." Warren Times Gazette, RI, p 1. Jan 11, 2007.
  16. Smith, Steve. "The Quiet Before the Shots." NY Times Music p 1, Nov 11, 2013.
  17. Fiorletta, Carlo. "Film Festival 2007." Guild of Italian American Actors Newsletter. p.1. October 2007.
  18. Vest, Stephen M. Spring 2008, "Welcome New Members Compatriots", The SAR Magazine, Vol. 102, No.4, p.46.

External links

Wikiquote has quotations related to: Carson Grant
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Carson Grant.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, August 18, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.