The Teiger Basis, a US-based non-profit dedicated to supporting artwork curators, has revealed its 2025 grantees—offering a complete of $7m to 85 curators at establishments throughout the nation. These numbers almost double final 12 months’s grants, because the organisation prepares to maneuver right into a biennial mannequin (the following grant software deadline will probably be in January 2027). Particular person grants vary between $50,000 and $150,000 for exhibitions, analysis, touring exhibits and help for 3 years of programming.
Whereas 2024’s grants largely centered on tasks associated to decolonisation and the environmental disaster, many grantees on this 12 months’s cycle work at smaller establishments or in additional far-flung areas. For instance, the curators Ryan N. Dennis, Annalise Flynn and Yaphet Smith of the Arts Basis of Kosciusko will obtain a grant to organise the primary main survey dedicated to the late artist L.V. Hull. The present will happen concurrently on the Mississippi Museum of Artwork in Jackson and on the artist’s former house in Kosciusko, which was added to the Nationwide Register of Historic Locations final 12 months.
“Small organisations are so essential of their respective communities,” Larissa Harris, the Teiger Basis’s govt director, tells The Artwork Newspaper, “and likewise when it comes to experimentation and having large ambitions.”
She provides that whereas the muse’s Local weather Motion for Curators initiative is presently on maintain, “we’ve determined to combine resilience and emergency planning into the programme, alongside lowering emissions and waste”. Harris notes that various grantees, each from 2024 and 2025, are excited by “serving their communities in occasions of catastrophe”, an space by which the Teiger Basis is much from knowledgeable. “Folks wish to merge mission and infrastructure,” Harris says. “However we’ve to really feel we all know what we’re providing first, earlier than giving out these sorts of grants.”
Harris provides that the Teiger Basis continues to work with Alexa Steiner of Rute Collaborative, in addition to with different specialists within the fields of each local weather motion and emergency planning, in an effort to create a extra strong plan for future iterations of Local weather Motion for Curators.
L.V. Hull’s frequently evolving artwork surroundings, created from discovered objects she adorned and punctiliously positioned in her yard Photograph: Invoice Arnett, 1997
Whereas the muse strikes most of its grants to a biennial schedule, it’s increasing its Internet hosting grants, which help travelling exhibitions, to a quarterly cycle. “We’re the one basis that gives funds for travelling exhibits,” Harris says. “It’s a terrific alternative for curators to work collectively, it’s extra sustainable and it lightens the load for everybody concerned.” She provides that, with the brand new quarterly schedule, “candidates will now hear again from us in 4 months most, to allow them to make faster selections, align their calendars and make the most of alternatives they wouldn’t have been capable of make the most of earlier than”.
Recipients of Internet hosting grants for this cycle embody Malik Gaines and Tim Griffin (of The Trade, Los Angeles), who will host a multimedia opera by the artist Sable Elyse Smith, initially commissioned by New York’s Museum of Fashionable Artwork; Georgia Erger (Frye Artwork Museum, Seattle), for an exhibition of Indigenous abstraction, curated by Jeffrey Gibson and Jenelle Porter, from Institute of Up to date Artwork in Boston; and Aaron Gomez (Luckman Superb Arts Advanced, California State College, Los Angeles), for a homecoming present for the artist Millie Wilson from the Krannert Artwork Museum in Illinois.
This 12 months’s grantees for brand spanking new exhibitions embody the curators Victoria Sung with Tausif Noor (Berkeley Artwork Museum and Pacific Movie Archive, California) for a Theresa Hak Kyung Cha retrospective; Michael Neumeister (Columbia Museum of Artwork, South Carolina) for Rodney McMillian’s largest museum exhibition within the US; and Clara Kim and Kris Kuramitsu (Museum of Up to date Artwork, Los Angeles) for Afterlives: Japanese American Artists and the Postwar Period, a gaggle present of 200 works, together with objects by Ruth Asawa and Isamu Noguchi alongside up to date items.

Efficiency of Dorota Gawęda and Eglė Kulbokaitė’s -lalia (2023) on the Renaissance Society, Chicago, Might 2025 Photograph: Ry Thiel, courtesy the Renaissance Society
In the meantime, curators who’ve acquired grants for 3 years of programming or analysis tasks hail from establishments just like the Mattress Manufacturing unit (in Pittsburgh), Acadiana Middle for the Arts (Lafayette, Louisiana), Museo de Arte Contemporáneo de Puerto Rico (San Juan), CCA Wattis Institute for Up to date Arts (San Francisco), Virginia Museum of Superb Arts (Richmond), PuĘ»uhonua Society (Honolulu) and the Renaissance Society (Chicago).
A analysis grant for Regina Bain on the Louis Armstrong Home Museum in Queens, New York, will probably be used to discover the continuing affect of the jazz musician’s 1956 journey to Accra on each the Black diaspora and Ghanaian artists. The venture will culminate in concurrent exhibitions of newly commissioned works in New York and on the Nubuke Basis in Accra.
Whereas the political local weather may be very completely different this 12 months than it was when the Teiger Basis’s 2024 grantees have been introduced, “we aren’t altering what we fund”, Harris says, noting that purposes haven’t proven indicators of political affect. She does add, nonetheless, that “in a number of establishments, the political scrutiny is creating new stipulations”. In conversations with final 12 months’s grantees, Harris has heard that “persons are transferring forward, however there’s a ton of hysteria”. A lot of this stems not solely from latest makes an attempt by US President Donald Trump and his administration to censor exhibitions, but in addition the huge cuts to the Nationwide Endowment for the Arts (NEA).
“Our grantees have misplaced between $20,000 and $85,000 in NEA funding,” Harris says, “so we had a particular board assembly in April to see if we might set some funds apart to assist.” The muse was capable of commit $500,000 to organisations that misplaced cash and funding.