United States Artists
Founded | 2005 |
---|---|
Type | Philanthropic arts organization |
Focus | American artists |
Location |
|
Area served | United States |
Method | Awards unrestricted grants of $50,000 to 50 artists per annum[2] |
Key people | Deana Haggag, CEO[1] |
Endowment | Initial seed funding of (US) $22.6M[3] provided by Ford Foundation, Rockefeller Foundation, Prudential Foundation, and Rasmuson Foundation[4] |
Website | http://unitedstatesartists.org |
United States Artists (USA) is an independent nonprofit and nongovernmental philanthropic organization based in Chicago and dedicated to supporting the work of living American artists by the granting of cash awards, called USA Fellowships.[5] It was founded in 2005 with initial funding from the Ford Foundation, the Rockefeller Foundation, The Prudential Foundation, and the Rasmuson Foundation, and the first set of 50 fellowships were announced in 2006.[6] The organization is governed by a Board of Directors and receives additional funding from several major American foundations, corporate partners, and private citizens.
Contents
1 Mission
2 Selection process
3 Grants
4 USA Fellows
5 References
6 External links
Mission
The organization's stated mission is "to invest in America's finest artists and illuminate the value of artists to society."[7] In addition, the organization asserts that "USA Fellowships honor and award an artist’s unique vision as a whole rather than funding a particular project. Artists at different career levels, from emerging to established, are eligible."[8]
Selection process
Prerequisites for consideration include that the artist be 21 or older, a US citizen or legal resident. In addition, nominees must be accomplished artists, must have acquired art training, formal or informal, must have tried to derive income from those skills, and must have been "actively engaged in creating artwork and presenting it to the public." To be considered for a grant, an artist must first be nominated by at least one of a group of "nominators" chosen by the organization. This is an anonymous group of arts scholars, critics, and artists from various disciplines; they operate independently of one another. The nominators submit names of artists they believe should be considered for an award.[8]
Once nominated artists have been notified of their nomination, they are then directed to apply for the grant in order to be considered. The awards are announced once a year. The Fellows announcement is made in December of each year.
Grants
Grants are awarded annually to artists working in nine disciplines:
- Architecture & Design
- Crafts
- Dance
- Literature
- Media
- Music
- Theater & Performance
- Traditional Arts
- Visual Arts
USA Fellows
List of United States Artists (USA) Fellowship recipients
References
^ United States Artists Official Website. About
^ Stephanie Strom, "New Charity to Start Plan for $50,000 Artists' Grants", The New York Times, September 5. 2006 ]
^ Stephanie Strom, "An Artist's Grant that Even Pays For Glasses", The New York Times, October 7, 2007
^ United States Artists Official Website. Common Questions
^ Editorial, "Art for our sake," The Boston Globe, September 25, 2006
^ Patrick Cole, "Seminole Filmmaker, Guitarist Awarded $50,000 Grants" (Update1), Bloomberg.com, December 4, 2006.
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^ ab "United States Artists » Connect". www.unitedstatesartists.org. Retrieved 2018-01-19.
External links
- United States Artists website
- United States Artists grant recipient videos
- Nicholas Tamarin, "United States Artists Awards $50,000 Grants," Interior Design
- Mario Rosario Jackson, Florence Kabwasa-Green, Daniel Swenson, Joaquin Herranz, Kadija Ferryman, Caron Atlas, Eric Wallner, Carole Rosenstein: Investing in Creativity: A Study of the Support Structure for U.S. Artists. The Urban Institute, May 2, 2006. [1]