On Funding for the Arts in the United States
By Reihan Salam
National Review Online
October 13, 2011
Holly Sidford has written a report for the National Council for Responsive Philanthropy titled “Fusing Arts, Culture, and Social Change.” Its central finding is that foundation giving to the arts tends to flow towards large cultural organizations:
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Yet, the majority of arts funding supports large organizations with budgets greater than $5 million. Such organizations, which comprise less than 2 percent of the universe of arts and cultural nonprofits, receive more than half of the sector’s total revenue. These institutions focus primarily on Western European art forms, and their programs serve audiences that are predominantly white and upper income. Only 10 percent of grant dollars made with a primary or secondary purpose of supporting the arts explicitly benefit underserved communities, including lower-income populations, communities of color and other disadvantaged groups. And less than 4 percent focus on advancing social justice goals. These facts suggest that most arts philanthropy is not engaged in addressing inequities that trouble our communities, and is not meeting the needs of our most marginalized populations. |
If we begin from the premise that philanthropy is in many cases a kind of consumption — the purchase of social esteem, the exchange of economic capital for cultural capital, etc. — this makes perfect sense.
Read the full commentary.