Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Ford Foundation to award an unpreceden­ted $ 160million tominority arts groups

- GeoffEdger­s

Eduardo Vilaro, the artistic director and chief executive of New York’s BalletHisp­ánico, has tried to ignore the slights. Well- heeled patrons who wouldn’t join his board because they favored older, Whiter organizati­ons. Theater managers telling him they couldn’t present the company because they had already programmed a “minorityth­emed” group.

And like so many self- described institutio­ns of color, Ballet Hispánico has a tiny endowment, about $ 1 million. New York City Ballet, just a cab ride away in Manhattan, has$ 220million­inthe bank, according to itsmost recent audit. With so little saved up, Ballet Hispánico’s ambitions are perpetuall­y limited.

But next year will be different. The Ford Foundation this week is announcing an unpreceden­ted $ 160 million- and- growing initiative called America’s Cultural Treasures, with substantia­l grants going to BIPOC ( Black, Indigenous and people of color) organizati­ons across the country. The grants are, in most cases, the largest ever for the 20 recipients in the first round. Ballet Hispánicow­ill receive $ 4million, more than half of its $ 7million annual budget.

“It takes an ice pick to this huge glacierof structural­Whitesupre­macy,” Vilarosays. “This is reorganizi­ng and saying, ‘ We have other national treasures thatwe need to refocus on.’ “

This is the Ford Foundation’s latest and most dramatic salvo in President Darren Walker’s bid to reinvent how Americans — and most important, American philanthro­pists — value theater companies, museums and the arts overall. The gap between rich, largely White institutio­ns and younger, BIPOC organizati­ons is wide, but Walker says he sees an opportunit­y for change now. The killing of George Floyd brought attention to the systemic racism in American society. The pandemic shutdowns drewattent­ion to thefinanci­algulf in the arts world.

“Just as inequality is playingout in our society, in the arts it is playing out,” Walker says. “The Getty and theNationa­lGalleryof Art are in their own bubbles. Yes, they’re concerned about finances, but as one of themsaid tome, ‘ This is terrible, but we can raise the money.’

“When you get to the medium and smaller arts organizati­ons — that don’t have endowments, that don’t have rich boards, that don’t have huge amounts of operating cash flow — those organizati­ons are panicked. If we don’t help them, they will be gone.”

Even such blue- chip institutio­ns as the Metropolit­an Museum of Art in New York and the Boston Symphony Orchestra have made painful cuts in recent months, but Walker and other philanthro­py leaders have feared that many organizati­ons run by and serving people of colormight have to shutter for good.

In June, the 84- year- old Ford Foundation, which has increasing­ly focused on fighting economic and racial disparity since Walker took over in 2013, announced that itwould borrow $ 1 billion by issuing bonds tohelpnonp­rofit groups in every area it funds. And behind the scenes, Walkerwasw­orking on something focused entirely on culture: a plan to distribute $ 85 million of that total to organizati­ons runbyandin­communitie­s of color for what would become America’s Cultural Treasures.

He would not do it alone. Walker began to recruit other foundation­s to join the mission. Kate Levin, who oversees the arts program at Bloomberg Philanthro­pies, particular­ly appreciate­d the reshufflin­g invoked by the initiative’s name. Bloomberg is giving $ 10 million.

“Calling them ‘ America’s Cultural Treasures’ recognizes that they are excellent but have suffered the impact of systemic racism by being undercapit­alized,” Levin says. “This is a situation that’s been in place a long time now, but it’s time to take action.”

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