Creative Capital is a 501(c)3 nonprofit organization based in New York City that supports artists across the United States through funding, counsel, gatherings, and career development services. Since its founding in 1999, Creative Capital has committed over $50 million in project funding and advisory support to 631 projects representing 783 artists and has worked with thousands more artists across the country through workshops and other resources. One of the "most prestigious art grants in the country," their yearly Creative Capital Awards application is open to artists in over 40 different disciplines spanning the visual arts, performing arts, moving image, literature, technology, and socially-engaged art.
Their stated mission is to “amplify the voices of artists working in all creative disciplines and catalyze connections to help them realize their visions and build sustainable practices.”
History
During the "culture wars" of the 1990s, the
National Endowment for the Arts's (NEA) cut funding for individual artists. In response, Arch Gillies of the
Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts
Andy Warhol (; born Andrew Warhola Jr.; August 6, 1928 – February 22, 1987) was an American visual artist, film director, and producer who was a leading figure in the visual art movement known as pop art. His works explore the relationsh ...
spearheaded the creation of a new organization that would directly fund individual artists. Creative Capital began in 1999 with
Ruby Lerner
Ruby Lerner is an American arts executive. She ran Creative Capital, an arts foundation, from 1999 to 2016. Under her leadership, Creative Capital committed $40 million in financial and advisory support to 511 projects representing 642 artists. Sh ...
as Founding Director. The announcement of the organization appeared on the front page of ''
The New York Times
''The New York Times'' (''the Times'', ''NYT'', or the Gray Lady) is a daily newspaper based in New York City with a worldwide readership reported in 2020 to comprise a declining 840,000 paid print subscribers, and a growing 6 million paid ...
'', noting that Creative Capital would "actively advocate freedom of expression" and "support artists who challenge convention."
In its first year, Creative Capital launched by selecting 75 artists to receive the Creative Capital Award. In 2002, the organization launched their first Artist Retreat at Skowhegan School of Painting. This in-person meeting of artists and professionals became a core part of Creative Capital's model, allowing for an exchange of ideas and as well as a platform to spark new connections within the community.
Creative Capital has supported many artists whose projects have become well recognized in their fields and beyond, including
Paul Beatty’s ''
The Sellout'',
Yance Ford
Yance Ford () is an African-American transgender producer and director.
Life and career
Ford graduated from Hamilton College in 1994.
Beginning in 2002 he worked as a series producer at PBS for ten years.
In 2011 he was named one of '' Filmm ...
’s ''
Strong Island'',
Bill Morrison’s ''
Decasia
''Decasia'' is a 2002 American collage film by Bill Morrison, featuring an original score by Michael Gordon. In 2013, ''Decasia'' was included in the annual selection of 25 motion pictures for preservation in the United States National Film Re ...
'', Bandaloop's ''Crossing'',
Sam Van Aken’s ''
Tree of 40 Fruit
A Tree of 40 Fruit is one of a series of fruit trees created by the Syracuse University Professor Sam Van Aken using the technique of grafting. Each tree produces forty types of stone fruit, of the genus ''Prunus'', ripening sequentially from July ...
s'',
Jae Rhim Lee’s ''Infinity Burial Project'',
Maggie Nelson’s ''
The Argonauts'', as well as early works by artists like
Taylor Mac,
Sanford Biggers,
Laura Poitras, and
Jeffrey Gibson.
In 2019, Creative Capital celebrated their 20th anniversary, announcing a yearly award and retreat cycle. In partnership with the ''
Los Angeles Review of Books'', Creative Capital invited several writers to examine projects from each award cycle year in the organization's first two decades.
Creative Capital Awards
Through an open application process, Creative Capital identifies and selects artists from all disciplines to receive the Creative Capital Award. The award gives each project access to $50,000 in direct funding allocated at key intervals in project development, combined with additional mentorship and advisory services.
While there were a total of 12 award cycles from 2000 to 2019, in 2019 for their 20th anniversary, Creative Capital announced a new annual award cycle.
Philanthropic Model and Artist Services
Creative Capital calls for artists to submit their project ideas through a free and open application for the Creative Capital Awards. After selecting artists for the awards, the organization applies a venture philanthropy model to help those artists develop their projects with funding, professional development, and advisory services, including artist coaching, communications and promotion, strategic planning, and legal and financial counsel. The award gives artists access to a series of gatherings, like the Artist Retreat, designed to connect them with a community of artists and professionals who can help realize and present their work at venues and organizations all over the world.
Creative Capital's approach centers on the idea that time and advisory services are as important to the creative process as money. As awardees' funded projects develop, Creative Capital staff meet with them to set goals and chart progress. Creative Capital provides funding at benchmark moments for each project, including initial funding, support to build the artist's personal and professional capacity, follow-up support for project production, funding for the project's premiere, and support for the project's expansion after its premiere. Of this type of support,
Sheryl Oring, a Creative Capital Awardee, has said, "For mid-career artists like me, Creative Capital can help make the difference between whether we keep making art or give up."
Creative Capital Award recipients
Notable awardees include
Performing Arts
Performing arts works funded by Creative Capital often blur the genres, including musical performance, theater, comedy, puppetry, dance, jazz, and multimedia installation. Notable projects include James Scruggs's ''3/Fifths'', Robin Frohardt's ''The Plastic Bag Store'', Kyle Abraham's ''Dearest Home'', Nick Cave's ''Drop'', Taylor Mac's ''The Lily’s Revenge'', and Young Jean Lee's ''Lear''.
*
Nick Cave
Nicholas Edward Cave (born 22 September 1957) is an Australian singer, songwriter, poet, lyricist, author, screenwriter, composer and occasional actor. Known for his baritone voice and for fronting the rock band Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds, C ...
*
Raja Feather Kelly
*
Vijay Iyer
*
Meredith Monk
*
Taylor Mac
*
Du Yun
*
Ralph Lemon
*
Jane Comfort
*
John Jasperse
*
James Luna
James Luna (February 9, 1950March 4, 2018) was a Payómkawichum, Ipi, and Mexican-American performance artist, photographer and multimedia installation artist. His work is best known for challenging the ways in which conventional museum exhibiti ...
*
Richard Maxwell
*
Richard Move
*
Basil Twist
*
Kristina Wong
*
Michelle Ellsworth
*
Brian Harnetty Brian Harnetty (born May 10, 1973) is an American interdisciplinary artist and composer who uses sound and listening to foster social change. His work brings together sound archives, performance, ecology, and place, and is focused on local and regio ...
*
Jesse Bonnell
Jesse Bonnell is an American artist whose work combines installation, video, photography, drawing and performance. He is a co-founder and director of Poor Dog Group, a Los Angeles-based collective dedicated to contemporary performance. His work ger ...
*
Branden Jacobs-Jenkins and
Carmelita Tropicana
Visual Arts
Visual arts projects that have received Creative Capital Awards include installation, painting, sculpture, photography, and public art. Notable funded projects include
Abigail DeVille
Abigail DeVille (born 1981) is an artist who creates large sculptures and installations, often incorporating found materials from the neighborhoods around the exhibition venues. DeVille's sculptures and installations often focus on themes of th ...
’s ''The Bronx: History of Now'',
Richard Pell’s
Center for PostNatural History
The Center for PostNatural History is a storefront museum in Pittsburgh's Garfield neighborhood. In contrast to typical natural history museums, it is focused on the collection and exposition of organisms that have been intentionally and herita ...
,
Jennie C. Jones
Jennie C. Jones (born 1968 in Cincinnati, Ohio) is an African-American artist living and working in Brooklyn, New York. Her work has been described, by Ken Johnson, as evoking minimalism, and paying tribute to the cross-pollination of different ...
’ ''Counterpoint'',
Critical Art Ensemble’s ''GenTerra'', and
Lead Pencil Studio
Lead Pencil Studio is the working name of the art and architecture collaborative founded in 1997 by Annie Han and Daniel Mihalyo. Lead Pencil Studio pursues collaboration in installation art, site-specific art and functional architecture. They ar ...
s’ ''Maryhill Double''.
*
Janine Antoni
*
Cassils
*
Mariam Ghani
*
Narcissister
Narcissister is an American, Brooklyn-based, feminist performance artist, born of Moroccan Jewish and African-American descent. Narcissister's work tends to focus on race, gender, and sexuality, using her slight anonymity to explore such topics ...
*
My Barbarian
*
Lorraine O'Grady
Lorraine O'Grady (born September 21, 1934) is an American artist, writer, translator, and critic. Working in conceptual art and performance art that integrates photo and video installation, she explores the cultural construction of identity – pa ...
*
Wu Tsang
Wu Tsang (born 1982 in Worcester, Massachusetts) is a filmmaker, artist and performer based in New York and Berlin, whose work is concerned with hidden histories, marginalized narratives, and the act of performing itself. In 2018, Tsang received a ...
*
Sanford Biggers
*
Liz Cohen
*
Theaster Gates
*
Simone Leigh
*
William Pope.L
*
Xenobia Bailey
*
LaToya Ruby Frazier
LaToya Ruby Frazier (born 1982) is an American artist and professor of photography at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. From Braddock, Pennsylvania, Frazier began photographing her family and hometown at the age of 16, revising the soc ...
*
Kerry Skarbakka Kerry Skarbakka is an American artist and an assistant professor of photography at Oregon State University. He is most known for his photographed images of himself apparently falling. One of his well-known images shows him apparently about to fall f ...
Moving Image
Creative Capital Projects in moving image include narrative and documentary film, short, episodic, and experimental film, animation, and video art. Notable projects include Penny Lane's documentary, ''NUTS''!, Barbara Hammer's ''Resisting Paradise'', Sam Green's ''The Weather Underground'', as well as Yance Ford's ''Strong Island'', and Daniel Sousa's ''Feral'', both of which were nominated for Academy Awards.
*
Natalia Almada
*
Sam Green
*
Sonali Gulati
*
Barbara Hammer
*
Nina Menkes
*
Elisabeth Subrin
*
Jake Yuzna
Jake Yuzna is an American film director, screenwriter, and curator. His debut feature Open was the first American film to win the Teddy Jury Prize at the Berlin Film Festival and in 2005 Yuzna become the youngest recipient of funding from th ...
*
Jem Cohen
Jem Alan Cohen (born 1962) is an Afghan-born American filmmaker based in New York City. Cohen is especially known for his observational portraits of urban landscapes, blending of media formats ( sixteen-millimetre, Super 8, videotape) and collab ...
*
Caveh Zahedi
Caveh Zahedi (; born April 29, 1960) is an American film director and actor.
Early years
Zahedi was born in Washington, D.C., to Iranian immigrant parents. He studied philosophy at Yale University. Upon graduation, Zahedi moved to Paris, Fr ...
*
Travis Wilkerson
Travis Wilkerson is an American independent film director, screenwriter, producer and performance artist. Named the "political conscience of 21st century American independent cinema," by ''Sight & Sound'' magazine, Wilkerson is heavily influenced ...
*
Penny Lane
*
Natalia Almada
*
Yance Ford
Yance Ford () is an African-American transgender producer and director.
Life and career
Ford graduated from Hamilton College in 1994.
Beginning in 2002 he worked as a series producer at PBS for ten years.
In 2011 he was named one of '' Filmm ...
Literature
Creative Capital began funding literature projects in 2005, including poetry, fiction, nonfiction, and hybrid literary works. Notable projects include Paul Beatty's ''The Sellout'', Maggie Nelson's ''The Argonauts'', and Bernadette Mayer's ''The Helens of Troy, New York''.
*
Jeffery Renard Allen
*
Jesse Ball
*
Paul Beatty
*
Percival Everett
*
Tonya Foster
Tonya Monique Foster, usually credited as Tonya M. Foster, is an American poet, essayist, and educator from New Orleans. A 2020–2021 Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study Fellow and recipient of a 2020 Creative Capital Award, she holds the Geo ...
*
Kenny Fries
*
Christian Hawkey
Christian Hawkey (born 1969), is an American poet, translator, editor, activist, and educator.
Life and work
Hawkey was born in Hackensack, New Jersey. He is the author of several books of poetry, including ''Sonne from Ort'', ''Ventrakl,'' ''C ...
*
Ben Marcus
*
Bernadette Mayer
*
Eileen Myles
*
Maggie Nelson
*
Rebecca Solnit
*
Deb Olin Unferth
Emerging Fields
Since 2000, Creative Capital has funded projects under a particular discipline they call “emerging fields,” which includes disciplines not typically classified as art. As of 2019, the category has been broken out into more specific categories, such as technology, social practice, software, architecture & design. Some notable artists funded in this category include:
* Jae Rhim Lee
*Sam Van Aken
*
DesertArtLAB
*
Futurefarmers
Amy Franceschini (born 1970, in Patterson, California) is a contemporary American artist and designer. Her practice spans a broad range of media including drawing, sculpture, design, net art, public art and gardening.
She was a 2010 Guggenheim ...
*
The Yes Men
*
Angel Nevarez and Valerie Tevere
Angel Nevarez and Valerie Tevere are a pair of American artists that have been collaborating on video, sound, performance and installation projects since 2001. Several of their projects have been produced under the collective name neuroTransmitte ...
*
Tale of Tales
*
Liz Glynn
*
KCHUNG Radio
*
Tanya Aguiñiga
Tanya Aguiñiga (born 1978, in San Diego, California) is a Los Angeles–based artist, designer, and activist.
Early life and education
Although she was born in the United States, Aguiñiga spent her childhood living in Tijuana, Mexico. Fr ...
*
Zach Blas
*
Porpentine and
Peter Burr
*
Heather Dewey-Hagborg
*
Eva and Franco Mattes
*
Laura Parnes
*
Evan Roth
*
Shana Moulton
Shana Moulton is a New York based media artist who explores contemporary anxieties through her filmic alter ego, Cynthia. Combining an unsettling, wry humor with a low-tech, Pop sensibility, Cynthia's interactions with the everyday world are both ...
and
Nick Hallett
Artist Retreat
After each new round of awards is announced, Creative Capital hosts a retreat for the artists, as well as people connected to Creative Capital in various ways who act as consultants, workshop leaders or observers. In various workshops and meetings with consultants, artists are advised on how to plan the coming years of their artistic careers as well their personal goals.
Creative Capital hosts a variety of events for awardees to meet each other and others within the artistic community. Critic
Paddy Johnson wrote, "These conferences offer grantees an amazing opportunity to connect with other artists and a wide range of curators, distributors, and artistic directors through mixers, meetings with consultants, and artist presentations. They also ask grantees to return to the conference every couple of years, which keeps them in touch with a constantly expanding network of creative art folk."
Awardees are also asked to present their Creative Capital Award project ideas as a work-in-progress to a live audience of curators and presenters. These presentations are uploaded to YouTube and can be viewed by the public.
Workshops and Resources
In 2003 Creative Capital started producing workshops, offering all artists access to online and in-person workshops to help them with skills such as communication and marketing, strategic planning, self-management, fundraising, and community building. Many of the programs are developed and led by Creative Capital Awardees, using the affordable workshop model to give them a platform to share their expertise. The workshops have been described as a "crash course in self-management, strategic planning, fundraising and promotion."
During the pandemic in 2020, Creative Capital provided online resources including free artist workshops. The organization was also a member of
Artist Relief
Artist Relief is an emergency initiative founded in 2020 by a coalition of national arts grantmakers to offer financial and informational resources to artists across the United States in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.
History
Artist Relief ...
, an emergency coalition of national arts grantmakers to support artists during the COVID-19 crisis.
References
External links
Creative-Capital.org*
ttps://www.nytimes.com/2000/01/13/arts/new-york-artists-win-majority-of-a-foundation-s-first-grants.html New York Times article on the first round of Creative Capital granteesLA Times article on Creative Capital's impactFast Company article on Creative Capital's use of venture philanthropy99u interview with President of Creative Capital, Ruby Lerner*
ttp://www.artinamericamagazine.com/news-opinion/news/2011-01-28/funding-the-arts-pay-to-play/ Funding the Arts: Pay to Play– Art in America
The Cult Appeal of the Creative Capital RetreatCreative Capital: April 30–June 6, 2010– exhibition
A Spark for Good Art: Creative Capital doesn’t just fund projects, it builds careers
{{Authority control
Arts organizations based in New York City
Arts organizations established in 1999
1999 establishments in New York (state)