Three Nonprofits Are Teaming Up to Pay Artists to Create Images That Combat Widespread Misinformation About Coronavirus

Three organizations focusing on visual media have come together
to launch an open call for artworks that can fight against a
rising tide of misinformation related to the coronavirus
pandemic.

The initiative, titled
Artists Against the
Infodemic
, aims to
“harness the power of visuals” to “improve public communication and
news delivery surrounding COVID-19,” according to organizers, who
are
 soliciting images
to promote public-health advice and fight the
 pernicious effects of racism and
xenophobia.

“For some people, this pandemic
is still an abstract concept, and we need people to understand the
very real consequences and encourage a community and public-health
mindset,” says Peter DiCampo,
cofounder of the Everyday Project, which launched the initiative
with the nonprofits 
Catchlight and Dysturb. All three organizations
fund progressive efforts in photojournalism and other forms of
visual storytelling.

The project takes its inspiration from World Health
Organization Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus,
who said at a conference in
February
 that “we’re not just fighting an epidemic; we’re
fighting an infodemic. F
ake
news spreads faster and more easily than this virus, and is just as
dangerous.”

“To effectively fight this
infodemic, we need images that go beyond hazmat suits and empty
grocery store shelves—images that sow discord and division at a
time when we need cooperation the most,”
 Mailliet Storm, the CEO of
Catchlight, tells Artnet News. “We believe artists are uniquely
placed to convey important information that directly affects
communities in their own ways. And that role will remain important
as key messages will change throughout this crisis.”

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OPEN CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS! See link in our bio! In
partnership with @catchlight.io and @dysturb, we are excited to
announce the launch of Artists Against an #Infodemic, a
collaborative visual journalism initiative to fight misinformation
about COVID-19, and an open call for artists to participate. We are
seeking submissions for visual art and storytelling that addresses
key public health messages in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Formats can include: photography, video, cartoons/comics, graphic
design, paintings, drawings, memes, and more. We will work with the
selected artists to package the material for distribution on social
media and for display in public spaces as murals and/or
projections. This is a paid opportunity for artists! With
initial funding from Stanford University’s John S. Knight
(@jskstanford) Journalism Fellowships, and led by JSK alumni
from The Everyday Projects, @catchlight.io,
and @dysturb, experts @chenpamela, a 2020 JSK fellow, and
@jdistew, an Infectious Diseases physician and scientist, with
partners spanning six continents, the collaboration will utilize
the power of visuals to challenge misinformation and
disinformation, and improve public communication and news delivery
surrounding COVID-19, in places where information challenges are
most prominent. See the link in our bio to submit your work today!
Photo: @ashgilbertson


A post shared by Everyday Everywhere (@everydayeverywhere) on
May 4, 2020 at 7:17am PDT

Submissions can be sent in just about any visual form, including
photography, video, graphic design, illustration, and painting.
Artists will receive $500 for each artwork chosen, and proposals
will be reviewed on a rolling basis starting this week.

In conceiving the initiative,
the organizers set their sights on two
issues, 
DiCampo
says
.

“One is that freelance
photojournalists and artists are being hit very hard financially.
And the other is that healthcare messages will continue to evolve
and need to reach vulnerable populations,” he says. “So we designed
this project to help satisfy both needs.” 

The organizations will begin
their campaign by getting public-health notices out 
in
Seattle, New York, Paris, Nairobi, and the San Francisco Bay
Area through public art installations, paste-ups, projections,
posters, and flyers, as well as on social media. But artists
sending images for consideration need not be in those areas.

Initial funding for
the project came through a $30,000 grant from the John S.
Knight 
Journalism
Fellowship at Stanford University.

The post Three Nonprofits Are Teaming Up to Pay Artists to
Create Images That Combat Widespread Misinformation About
Coronavirus
appeared first on artnet News.

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