More

Arts Funding Is Supporting A Wealthy, White Audience: Report

Arts Funding Report

By BRETT ZONGKER   10/10/11 01:17 PM ET   AP

WASHINGTON -- Billions of dollars in arts funding is serving a mostly wealthy, white audience that is shrinking while only a small chunk of money goes to emerging art groups that serve poorer communities that are more ethnically diverse, according to a report being released Monday.

The report from the Washington-based National Committee for Responsive Philanthropy, a watchdog group, shows foundation giving has fallen out of balance with the nation's increasingly diverse demographics. The report was provided to The Associated Press before its release.

A large portion of funding goes to more traditional institutions such as major museums, operas and symphonies. But recent surveys show attendance at those institutions is declining, while more people are interested in community-based arts groups.

"We've got the vast majority of resources going to a very small number of institutions," said Aaron Dorfman, executive director of the National Committee for Responsive Philanthropy. "That's not healthy for the arts in America."

According to the study, the largest arts organizations with budgets exceeding $5 million represent only 2 percent of the nonprofit arts and culture sector. Yet those groups received 55 percent of foundation funding for the arts in 2009. Only 10 percent of arts funding was explicitly meant to benefit underserved populations. However, the study's author acknowledged the report may not account for every dollar granted to help reach diverse audiences at larger institutions.

The study is meant to encourage funders to provide grants for a broader range of groups so programs can be more relevant and effective.

Otherwise, the "pronounced imbalance restricts the expressive life of millions of people," the study said.

The study cites 2010 census data that shows non-white populations have grown in every region of the country since 2000, adding that "our population never has been so diverse." More than a third of the country is comprised of people of color. In four states, white people are no longer the majority.

But philanthropy hasn't kept pace with the change.

"It is a problem because it means that – in the arts – philanthropy is using its tax-exempt status primarily to benefit wealthier, more privileged institutions and populations," wrote the report's author, Holly Sidford.

The study was released Monday at a conference of Grantmakers in the Arts in San Francisco.

The National Committee for Responsive Philanthropy has made waves in recent years by challenging foundations to devote more resources to serve disadvantaged groups. It also examined health and education philanthropy. An upcoming report will address environmental funding.

Current arts funding patterns have roots that date back to the 19th century, the report found. Early cultural philanthropists focused on building institutions to preserve the Western European high arts to validate America's position as a world power and serve an elite audience.

Funding patterns have been slow to change, even though attendance at such institutions is down. At the same time, government funding for the arts has been declining, especially at the state and local level, because the financial downturn.

Beyond funding, the nation's increasing diversity also means more artists are creating new aesthetics outside of the traditional European tradition, with more artists focusing on social justice issues and society's inequities, the report found.

"Just as funders got behind abstract expressionism in the 1950s and 60s ... there are aesthetic developments in the arts that funders need to keep pace with, and this is one of them," Sidford said.

Still, the study is not meant to discourage funding for traditional symphonies, operas or museums. Rather, Dorfman said funders should make sure they are supporting projects at those institutions that will be inclusive of a broader audience.

At the Nathan Cummings Foundation in New York, the report's message ties in with the foundation's mission for the past 20 years to fund diverse arts programs that address social justice issues. Maurine Knighton, who leads the foundation's arts and culture programs, said changing the way foundations give grants is possible but will take time.

"You are dealing with shifting demographics that are fairly recent," and foundations will have to make a deliberate effort to catch up, Knighton said. "It's just a different way of considering how to be most effective with our grant dollars."

The Ford Foundation, a major arts funder that launched a $100 million initiative last year to develop spaces for diverse arts groups, has funded a dance center in New York's Chinatown, the New York Latino cultural center El Museo del Barrio, and community arts projects in Seattle, New Orleans, and elsewhere.

"There is no question that investing in a diverse array of arts and culture institutions is an important direction for funders," Darren Walker, the foundation's vice president for education, creativity and free expression, said in an e-mail. "In a country that is diversifying as fast as ours, it's even more important to lift up artistic voices that can help us understand who we are and who we are becoming."

Some other foundations were reluctant to comment.

Michael Kaiser, president of the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts and an expert in turning around struggling arts organizations of all sizes, said many large foundations seek to fund diverse groups. Kaiser said diverse arts groups he consults with often need to diversify their funding sources.

"The biggest issue for arts organizations of color is that they have been overly reliant on foundation and government funding," he said. Such groups "really need more individual donors, not just foundation donors."

___

Online:

___

FOLLOW HUFFPOST CULTURE

WASHINGTON -- Billions of dollars in arts funding is serving a mostly wealthy, white audience that is shrinking while only a small chunk of money goes to emerging art groups that serve poorer communit...
WASHINGTON -- Billions of dollars in arts funding is serving a mostly wealthy, white audience that is shrinking while only a small chunk of money goes to emerging art groups that serve poorer communit...
Filed by Gazelle Emami  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 72
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3  Next ›  Last »  (3 total)
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
antaeus
Marriage Equality Is Here
10:39 AM on 12/08/2011
And what is the aggregate amount of public dollars blown--er, invested--on bloated sports venues across the country, including claims on city infrastructure and services?
10:06 AM on 12/02/2011
It has been so all my 60 year old life, the elite arts were a tuxedo affair with wealthy people pretending to like art.

The art crowd is dependent on this wealthy people thing. Ask Vermeer of Michelangelo or Leonardo Da Vinci. It appeals to the vanity of the rich to have Dali paint a portrait for them. Banks like art in the lobby it makes them look smarter.

I agree with other comments here though. The rich do not support living artists very well, they like more the "established" stuff, it is a safer investment for someone who knows nothing.

It is true in movies and books and painting and sculpture and you name it. The rich control publishing and film and all. It is only a white thing in America, go to India and the rich are Indian. No? In Uganda the rich are black with nice art.

Part of this is OK. Part is terrible. It is not worthy of a study, as it has always been so. I encourage rich Americans to widen their support to include the unknown artists and all sorts of things, you know be creative with money. Why not?
10:33 AM on 11/15/2011
What a pity! A country is as rich as its art culture...art is one of the cheapest and easiest ways to educate and create.
11:12 PM on 10/30/2011
I would like to suggest a scenario: Arts Org X gets $5000 (because who's really giving adequate $ anymore). Should they produce a show that A: Ultimately serves a upper class audience, but they can get $50/ticket for and produce the show in an adequate theatre and in the end they will have enough money left over to cover production costs (including artists fees) or B: Produce the show where the audience needs a price break and can only afford $5/ticket so they have to choose a venue that is 'cheap' enough to support that. They end up NOT covering production costs, no one gets paid and in fact, they are in debt. Unless foundations are giving adequate sums, it's not cost effective to produce shows for 'the community'. This is coming from an artist who HAS produced FREE concerts for the 'community', but went poor doing it. It's more cost effective to produce art that is for the upper class (white or purple), that way artists (who are already poor and struggling) get their pay and the organization can produce another production.
02:27 PM on 10/28/2011
the title really bothers me. what the .... does being WHITE have to do with it? i am a non wealthy white person and i am sick of hearing people hate on "white people" . i'm not the only one, its just that many other "white" people are too afraid to say something.
01:35 AM on 10/26/2011
BRETT ZONGKER could have provided much better information. How large is the "decline" he refers to? How much programming by elite arts organizations is now directed toward the neglected sector of our population (in my experience, quite a lot).
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
edejan
01:37 PM on 10/13/2011
Like everything else in our plutocratic society, money goes to support people with money.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
kinogod
word farmer
07:34 PM on 10/12/2011
Don't be cynical -- the upper crust just love to be tangentially connected to the hoipaloi
07:54 PM on 10/11/2011
Yes..NY Liberals who read New Yorker magazine benefits
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
twoshoes4u
04:03 PM on 10/11/2011
It's them dirty, weathy White People again!
02:48 PM on 10/11/2011
Let them eat....cake.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
atexasdem
Pointing out the foolishness of republican voters.
03:02 AM on 10/11/2011
Perhaps if the starving masses would spend some money on hundred dollar concerts and art shows instead of wasting it on feeding their children and searching for housing they could participate in "cultural events". They do need to buy some better clothes though.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
lhanderson86
07:24 PM on 10/12/2011
I've been to several small art shows where the entrance fee was a can of food for a food drive. I wish galleries and museums would do this more often.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
atexasdem
Pointing out the foolishness of republican voters.
08:02 PM on 10/12/2011
A couple of years ago in my community the XXXXX Center for the Visual and Performing Arts was finally dedicated after multiple delays. Proudly named for the billionaire family who drove and contributed to the project. The XXXXX Center will be the focal point for world class entertainment from around the world.
Today the Center sits empty subsidized by scarce city dollars to ensure the building complex does not further deteriorate. It seems those city councilmen who praised the
multimillion dollar project forget that world class entertainment costs world class dollars. With admission prices beginning at $100 and up few people could afford to attend concerts and events. Ongoing attempts to find a private buyer have been fruitless.
Our Center is very typical of why these Centers fail. People just can't afford them.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Kym Lewis
Along the way a switch got flipped.
02:54 AM on 10/11/2011
Could it be because they are the ones interested in it.
07:58 AM on 10/11/2011
God, I hate to admit it but there is a lot of truth in that statement. The arts are an enrichment that you have to see a reason for before you can indulge in them. We are making a great assumption that many of those in under affected areas would choose to participate in the arts if given the opportunity. I just don't know if that is true.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
HockeyMom
I was here before SP and will be long after her.
11:10 AM on 10/11/2011
Oh make me laugh. Well "they" don't eat good food so they must not like it, or why make good cars available to the poor people because I never see any of them driving good cars, or why pay for health insurance when they never go to a Dr anyway.

This is a justification of you being a cracker.
05:37 PM on 10/11/2011
The poorest cultures throughout the world practice art forms.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cameron d
Don't blame me, I voted Smitherman.
01:23 AM on 10/11/2011
Whaaaaaa? Get out of town!
photo
jokamachi
You're doing it wrong.
12:06 AM on 10/11/2011
I miss Mapplethorpe and his bullwhip. I hope someone had the sense to clean it off since he died...