The Rockefeller Foundation announced today the 2008 recipients of the Foundation’s $2.7 million New York City Cultural Innovation Fund awards. The annual Fund, established last year, celebrates innovation in the creative sector through grants for trailblazing initiatives that strengthen the city’s multi-faceted cultural fabric—and its economy.
As the Center for an Urban Future noted in its 2005 “Creative New York” report, funded in part by the Rockefeller Foundation, the economic contributions of people working in the city’s many creative industries—from performing and visual arts to architecture, design, and advertising—play a critical role in maintaining New York’s competitive edge as a global cultural leader.
One way the New York City Cultural Innovation Fund helps maintain the diversity that fuels the city’s artistic vitality is by recognizing hidden talent. For example, a grant to the Bronx Council on the Arts will showcase the work of young genre-mixing artists and arts-related entrepreneurs in the South Bronx. Another grant, to Chez Bushwick, will help a Brooklyn coalition stabilize a community by building new alliances among organizations ranging from local arts groups to real estate developers.
“The Rockefeller Foundation is proud to build on our extraordinary history of supporting cultural innovation and creative expression in our hometown,” said Judith Rodin, the Foundation’s President. “We believe there is an inextricable connection between cultural advances and social progress. These creative pioneers—through their performances, new alliances, community events, and other visionary projects—will help strengthen both.”
This year’s sixteen New York City Cultural Innovation Fund recipients were selected from a pool of more than 500 organizations that submitted proposals through the Rockefeller Foundation’s Web site. Three prominent leaders from the fields of innovation and the arts served as advisors to the Fund:The New York City Cultural Innovation Fund builds on the Rockefeller Foundation’s tradition of support for the arts. The Foundation has funded arts organizations and provided support for the formation of several of New York City’s landmark cultural institutions, including Lincoln Center, the Museum of Modern Art, Creative Capital, and the Tribeca Film Institute.
The Rockefeller Foundation, established by John D. Rockefeller, Sr., in 1913, works around the world to ensure that the benefits and opportunities of globalization are spread more fully to more people in more places. Since 2005, the Foundation has launched major initiatives to strengthen global health systems, bolster resilience to climate change in poor communities, mobilize an agricultural revolution in Africa, rebuild New Orleans in the wake of Hurricane Katrina, fortify the economic security of American working families, and shape more sustainable transportation policies in the United States.
For further information about the Rockefeller Foundation's New York City Cultural Innovation Fund, please go to http://www.rockfound.org/efforts/nycof/arts_nyc.shtml. The portal for submitting ideas to the New York City Cultural Innovation Fund will open in January 2009..