Weekly Updates for GIA Members 
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Call for Sessions for the 2021 GIA Conference Opens Today!
Grantmakers in the Arts is currently seeking session proposals for the 2021 GIA Conference, to be held November 7-10 in San Juan, Puerto Rico.

Proposals must be submitted by April 28 at 5pm EDT. To submit your proposals, or for more information, visit our Call for Sessions page.
Today! “Native Arts and Culture: Resilience, reclamation, and relevance” webinar
In February 2020, the Native Arts and Cultures Foundation (NACF) co-hosted the first-ever gathering of the Native arts, cultures, and humanities field in collaboration with federal arts agencies. The big ideas that came out of the convening were compiled into a report that informs movement and mobilization around Native Arts leadership in arts philanthropy, rethinking funding methods and practices, and advancing partnerships in research and social justice.

Joining us today for a 75-minute webinar to discuss the report and explore action steps will be Lulani Arquette (NACF), Joy Harjo (US Poet Laureate, Muscogee (Creek) Nation), Shelly C. Lowe (Navajo / Harvard University Native American Program), and Clifford Murphy (NEA, Folk & Traditional Arts). Details here.
GIA Releases Report on Arts and Culture Grantmaking in the Solidarity Economy
Grantmakers in the Arts just released “Solidarity Not Charity: Arts & Culture Grantmaking in the Solidarity Economy.” Commissioned by GIA with funding by William and Flora Hewlett Foundation, Kenneth Rainin Foundation, and Barr Foundation, and written by Natalia Linares and Caroline Woolard, the report shares an overview of the solidarity economy, culture-workers’ role in it, and what grantmakers can do to support. Explore it here.
“Advancing Art & Advocacy: Abolition opportunities in juvenile detention” webinar
The Art for Justice Fund, a five-year initiative established by Agnes Gund, is disrupting mass incarceration by funding artists, youth activists, and advocates working together to reform our criminal justice system. Joining us in our webinar on April 27 are Shaun Leonardo (artist and performer); Margaret Morton (Ford Foundation); Hernán Carvente Martinez (Youth First Initiative); Mark Strandquist (Performing Statistics); and Risë Wilson (Art for Justice Fund) to discuss the program structure, what they learned, and why it is so crucial for art funders and justice funders to collaborate to disrupt and illuminate the inequitable laws and practices that drive mass incarceration and juvenile detention, and disproportionately impact ALAANA communities. Details and registration here.
Renew Your GIA Membership
To renew your Grantmakers in the Arts membership, click here.
Rozsa Foundation
News from the Field
Building Solidarity in and with AAPI Communities: In case you missed it
A panel hosted in May 2020 by the Freelance Artist Resource Collective on building solidarity in and with Asian American & Pacific Islander (AAPI) communities featured important conversations that deserve reliving in the midst of acts of violence against Asian American communities…
What We’re Reading: “Making Systems Changes for Equity”
The McKnight Foundation implemented a new program devoted to equity and inclusion in Minnesota. In a conversation with the National Center for Family Philanthropy, David Nicholson, program director of the Vibrant & Equitable Communities program, talks about how that team is thinking about systems change and what they’ve learned so far…

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