In accordance with Andy Warhol’s will, the mission of The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts is the advancement of the visual arts. The Foundation manages an innovative and flexible grants program while also preserving Warhol’s legacy through creative and responsible licensing policies and extensive scholarly research for ongoing catalogue raisonné projects. To date, the Foundation has given nearly $300 million in cash grants to more than 1,000 arts organizations in 49 states and abroad and has donated 52,786 works of art to 322 institutions worldwide.
Mission
The Foundation encourages a deeper understanding and appreciation of Warhol’s artistic and cultural influence by providing access to Warhol’s work and encouraging new Warhol scholarship, most notably, through the Andy Warhol Museum in Pittsburgh, which was formed through the donation of thousands of artworks and archival materials from the Foundation; the Andy Warhol Photographic Legacy Project; and through the Andy Warhol Catalogue Raisonné, an immense ongoing scholarly project funded by the Foundation.
Philip Johnson commissioned Warhol to make a large-scale work for the exterior for his pavilion for the New York World’s Fair, along with other artists. Warhol’s provocative response, a multiple portrait of ‘Most Wanted Men’ was installed a few days before the opening but was deems too inflammatory and contrary to the upbeat image of the World’s Fair and the work was taken down.
The Foundation is dedicated to supporting the creation of new work by experimental visual artists. Funding reaches artists through flexible grants awarded to the organizations and institutions that support them. Driven by the belief that visual art is an essential form of communication, and that innovative creative expression is a crucial component to an open and enlightened democracy, the Foundation funds projects and organizations that challenge art historical and social conventions, address systemic inequities, and push art in new directions, whether through content, concept, aesthetics, process, techniques, or materials.
“Our granting program recognizes the equal importance of small, community-oriented spaces, major museums, and everything in between. Together, and with the foundation’s support, they work to collectively amplify the voices and visions of artists, which deepens and diversifies the national cultural discourse.”
Joel Wachs, President
Our grants are designed to respond to the needs of artists, and to foster creative innovation across the full spectrum of visual artistic activity, from public-facing grassroots collectives, to major exhibitions at high-profile institutions. We actively support work by underrepresented practitioners and strive to recognize organizations that address our culture’s systematic marginalization of artists based on race, gender, age, ability, sexual orientation, immigration status, and income level.
All grantmaking activities are funded by an endowment created from Warhol’s assets, as well as through revenue generated from a licensing and sales program. The Foundation upholds Warhol’s unprecedented generosity toward his fellow and future artists as an inspiration and example to artists working today who might have the means to make a comparable philanthropic impact.
Core Values
- Visual art and artists are at the center of our work. We believe in the intrinsic value of experimental artistic practice and promote artistic participation in cultural conversations at the highest level.
- We value risk-taking; we stand behind work that is challenging in nature, and encourage others to do the same.
- We acknowledge our culture’s systemic marginalization of artists because of race, gender, religion, age, ability, sexual orientation, and/or immigration status among other factors. We actively seek to highlight the work of under-represented practitioners and support efforts to address entrenched inequities.
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We believe freedom of artistic expression is fundamental to an open and enlightened democracy and are committed to promoting and defending it.
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Andy Warhol was an avant-garde artist and a philanthropic visionary; his life, work, and directive to establish a Foundation for “the advancement of the visual arts” are a testament to that. We honor his cultural influence in our core values and all of the Foundation’s activities.
See Also
Foundation
The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts Announces Spring 2021 Grantees
29 June 2021
Foundation
The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts Announces Fall 2020 Grantees
13 January 2021
Foundation
The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts Expands Its Regional Regranting Program and Appoints Khadija Nia Adell as Regional Re-granting Program Manager
15 October 2020
Foundation
The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts Announces Spring 2020 Grantees
24 June 2020
Contact
Address 65 Bleecker Street Seventh Floor New York, NY 10012 Send us a message General inquiries Catalogues raisonnés inquiries Grants inquiries Licensing inquiries Phone +1 (212) 387–7555 Fax +1 (212) 387–7560 Social Media Facebook Instagram Twitter
Warhol acquires the first of several compact 35 mm cameras, and over the next 11 years shot approximately 130,000 black-and-white images, claiming that “having a few rolls of film to develop gives me a good reason to get up in the morning.”