Last Call: Early Conference Registration Rate Ends August 31
The deadline to take advantage of the early registration discount for the 2017 GIA Conference is Thursday, August 31. Beginning September 1, conference registration for GIA members will increase to $650.
Register today to secure your discounted rate.
Detroit Artists at the GIA Conference
Each IDEA LAB at the GIA Conference will start the day with thought-provoking inspiration – an opportunity to hear directly from innovative, Detroit-based artists and thought leaders. The Monday morning plenary will feature presentations by Erik Howard, photographer and co-founder of Young Nation in southwest Detroit; Devon Akmon, director of the Arab American National Museum; and a joint presentation by performance artist and community organizer ill Weaver/Invincible and Building Movement Project founder Linda Campbell.
Learn more and register for the 2017 GIA Conference.
Next Webinar: Arts Funding Programs for ALAANA Artists and Arts Organizations
The next GIA webinar, Arts Funding Programs for ALAANA Artists and Arts Organizations will be held on Tuesday, September 26, 2:00pm EDT / 11:00am PDT. The explicit goal of Grantmakers in the Arts’ statement of purpose [http://www.giarts.org/racial-equity-arts-philanthropy-statement-purpose] on racial equity in arts philanthropy is “to increase arts funding for ALAANA (African, Latino/a, Asian, Arab, and Native American) artists, arts organizations, children, and adults.” This webinar will feature programs by two public funders and one private funder that each direct their funding support to artists and
arts organizations from historically underfunded identity groups within their geographic focus areas. Bushra Junaid from Ontario Arts Council, Dana Payne from Pennsylvania Council on the Arts, and Tracie D. Hall from The Joyce Foundation will discuss how their programs developed, whom they serve, and how their programs are strategically used to help close the racial gap in arts philanthropy.
Related Reading: Acknowledging Race in Granting to Individuals
In 2016, Sustainable Arts Foundation announced its commitment to award at least half of its grants to artists of color. In the latest issue of the GIA Reader, codirectors Caroline and Tony Grant write about their efforts to examine and change its grantmaking practices with a racial equity lens. Read “I Once Was Blind: Acknowledging Race in Granting to Individuals.”
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Hurricane Harvey, the first major hurricane to make landfall in the U.S. since 2005, has led to catastrophic and deadly flooding across an enormous swath of Texas. Our thoughts and prayers are with those affected by Harvey in Houston and across the region…
ArtsReady offers resources and recommendations for preparing for Hurricane Harvey: Hurricane Harvey is anticipated to be the strongest storm to hit coastal Texas in decades, and may cause damage in many area…
The Walton Family Foundation has made a $120 million gift to the University of Arkansas to establish its School of Art with an interdisciplinary approach to learning…
A blog post by Media Impact funders highlights the importance of diversity and representation in media outlets following recent racist violence, and what funders are doing to support diversity in the newsroom…
A recent article in the Stanford Social Innovation Review highlights the practice of shared gifting, “a grantmaking approach that allows nonprofit leaders to award grant dollars to other nonprofit organizations”…
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