Coalition of
Arts Funders Launches Emergency Artist Relief Fund
Academy of
American Poets, Artadia, Creative Capital, Foundation for Contemporary Arts,
MAP Fund, National YoungArts Foundation, and United States Artists
spearhead $10 million relief campaign for artists
affected by COVID-19.
A coalition of national arts grantmakers,
consisting of Academy of American Poets, Artadia, Creative Capital, Foundation for
Contemporary Arts, MAP Fund, National YoungArts Foundation, and United States
Artists, announces the launch of Artist Relief, which will provide rapid, unrestricted $5,000 relief grants to assist artists
facing dire financial
emergencies due to the impact of COVID-19; serve as an informational
resource; and co-launch the COVID-19
Impact Survey for Artists and Creative Workers, designed by Research
Partner Americans for the Arts, to better identify and address the
needs of artists moving forward.
Grant
applications open today at artistrelief.org.
An unprecedented national, multidisciplinary
partnership between seven arts grantmakers and a consortium of foundations,
Artist Relief is an ambitious effort to support the country’s individual
artists in the midst of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.
The fund will launch with $10 million,
consisting of $5 million in seed funding from The Andrew
W. Mellon Foundation matched with $5 million in initial
contributions from an array of foundations across the United States. Organizers
will continue to fundraise beyond the launch of the grant program to assist
with the rapidly escalating needs of the country's artists.
“In hard times like these, we turn to the arts
to illuminate and help us make meaning and find connection. Without immediate
intervention, individual artists and the arts ecosystem of which they are the
foundation could sustain irreparable damage,” noted Elizabeth Alexander, President
of The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation and a poet and memoirist. “As artists
confront these new fiscal realities, we are proud to support this vital effort
to address artists’ urgent needs. We call on others to join us in supporting
artists so they may continue to be our lights, chroniclers, and connectors
throughout this crisis and beyond.”
According to Artists and
Other Cultural Workers: A Statistical Portrait, a study
published in 2019 by the Office of Research & Analysis (ORA) at the
National Endowment for the Arts (NEA), there are 2.5 million working artists in
the United States. To meet the needs of as many artists as possible, donations
to Artist Relief can be made at artistrelief.org.
“Now is the time for institutions to come
together, each bringing its own strengths, to support the country’s artistic
communities in the challenging months that lie ahead. We hope this coalition
will directly impact artists who have lost income sources and opportunities and
are in dire need,” said Sarah Arison,
Board Chair, National YoungArts Foundation.
“As a foundation that was established by one
of the most recognized artists of the 20th century, the Warhol Foundation is
committed to directing its resources towards the many artists, recognized and
unrecognized, facing financial hardship at this time. We are proud to be a part
of the group of prominent funders and artist-endowed foundations supporting
Artist Relief’s efforts to address the needs of the nation’s artists in this
moment of crisis," said Joel Wachs,
President of The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts.
The fund will operate through the next six
months, as organizers
monitor the impact of the pandemic. Practicing artists living in all fifty
states, territories, and Tribal Nations, working in any discipline, are
eligible to apply for the $5,000 grant. Applicants must be 21 or older, able to
receive taxable income in the United States regardless of their citizenship
status, and have lived and worked primarily in the United States over the last
two years. Due to expected demand, Artist Relief recognizes it will not be able
to fund every applicant. Artists demonstrating the most severe financial needs
will be prioritized, with an emphasis on funding widely across disciplines and
geographies. Applications will be reviewed and assessed for eligibility and
need in collaboration with cultural nonprofits across the country, who will
assist in the determination and selection process.
“As an artist, Artadia Board Member, and
grantee of many of the coalition partners, I am relieved that these nonprofits
have taken on this ambitious task. The economic security of most artists is
already so precarious, and this crisis could have an irrevocable toll on our
community. There needs to be immediate intervention and I’m proud that so many
nonprofits, philanthropists, and partners are chipping in to do what they can,”
said Nick Cave, artist and Artadia Board
Member.
“Art is an antidote. We need its power of healing in our world right now,” said Meredith Monk, composer, performer, and interdisciplinary artist and 2020 Foundation for Contemporary Arts John Cage Award recipient, MAP Fund recipient, and recipient of other coalition awards. “These seem like impossible times, and they would be, if it weren’t for artists and those who support them.”
“Art is an antidote. We need its power of healing in our world right now,” said Meredith Monk, composer, performer, and interdisciplinary artist and 2020 Foundation for Contemporary Arts John Cage Award recipient, MAP Fund recipient, and recipient of other coalition awards. “These seem like impossible times, and they would be, if it weren’t for artists and those who support them.”
Artist Relief is an emergency initiative,
relying on the support of a growing number of foundations and individual
donors, and will continue to evolve as the needs of the country’s artists shift
over the coming months.
Tax-deductible
donations can be made at artistrelief.org; 100 percent of donations will be applied directly to aid.
In addition to the grant program, Artist
Relief will also administer the COVID-19
Impact Survey for Artists and Creative Workers, developed by Americans for the Arts,
to collect information that will be useful to the field in better understanding
artists’ needs in both the immediate and longer terms. Additionally, coalition
member Creative Capital will
maintain a publicly available database of resources to support the
professional, social, and mental wellbeing of artists.
“As the COVID-19 crisis unfolds, it is
becoming increasingly clear that the only way forward is to work together to
tackle this massive challenge. United States Artists is proud to have organized
with our colleagues to launch this effort in service of artists across the
country. We hope this initial $10 million investment is just the beginning of a
fund that will reach as many artists as possible during this difficult time,”
said Ed Henry, Board Chair, United
States Artists.
Artist Relief launches with a generous $5
million seed gift from The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, to match an initial $5
million in funding generously provided by the following foundations: 7|G
Foundation, Adolph and Esther Gottlieb Foundation, Amazon Literary Partnership, The
Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Arison Arts Foundation, Doris Duke
Charitable Foundation, Emily Hall Tremaine Foundation, Ford Foundation, Helen
Frankenthaler Foundation COVID-19 Relief Effort, Jerome Foundation, Joan Mitchell Foundation, Kraus
Family Foundation, LeRoy Neiman and Janet Byrne Neiman Foundation, Metabolic
Studio, Mike Kelley Foundation for the Arts, Pritzker Pucker Family Foundation,
Richard Salomon Family Foundation, Robert Rauschenberg Foundation, The Sue
Hostetler and Beau Wrigley Family Foundation, Teiger Foundation, The Wallace
Foundation, and The Willem de Kooning Foundation.
ABOUT
COALITION PARTNERS
Academy
of American Poets — The Academy of American Poets is a national
membership-based organization that supports American poets at all stages of
their careers and fosters the appreciation of contemporary poetry.
Artadia —
Artadia is a national non-profit organization that identifies innovative visual
artists and supports them with unrestricted financial awards and connections to
a network of opportunities.
Creative Capital — Creative Capital supports
innovative and adventurous artists across the country through funding, counsel,
gatherings, and career development services.
Foundation
for Contemporary Arts — Founded in 1963 by John Cage and Jasper
Johns, and still led by artists, the Foundation for Contemporary Arts (FCA)
encourages, sponsors, and promotes innovative work in the arts made by
individuals working in dance, music/sound, performance art/theater, poetry, and
the visual arts.
MAP Fund — The MAP Fund invests in artistic
production in live
performance, as the critical foundation of imagining, and ultimately
co-creating, a more equitable and vibrant society.
United States Artists — United States Artists
is an independent nonprofit and nongovernmental philanthropic organization
dedicated to supporting artists and cultural practitioners—in all disciplines
and across the country—with unrestricted awards.
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