Creative Capital today named 50 new Creative Capital Awards for 2022. The grants will fund the creation of innovative new artists’ projects by 59 individual artists working in the performing arts, visual arts, film, technology, literature, and socially engaged and multidisciplinary practices. Each project will receive varying amounts up to $50,000 in direct funding, supplemented by career development and networking services to foster thriving artistic careers totaling up to $2.5 million in artist support.
“Creative Capital believes that funding the creation of new work by groundbreaking artists is vital to the vibrancy of our culture, society, and our democracy. We are dedicated to supporting artists who are pushing boundaries and asking challenging questions—especially now when new ideas are critical to imagining our future,” said Christine Kuan, Creative Capital President and Executive Director.
“The selected projects critically and creatively address some of the most pressing issues of our moment, as well as painful historical legacies that continue to shape our present— from abortion, to money laundering in the art world, to the mass graves from the convict leasing program, to the lasting imprint colonization has left on the construct of time zones,” said Aliza Shvarts, Creative Capital Director of Artist Initiatives. “These artists demonstrate, with urgency and power, the many ways creative practice not only engages the world, but endeavors to shape it.”
Since its founding in 1999, Creative Capital has been deeply committed to diversity in all its forms— artistic disciplines, geographic regions, and artist identities. The 2022 awardee cohort comprises more than 90 percent Asian, Black, Indigenous, and Latinx artists of all abilities and genders from their 20s to their 60s. The 50 projects in the visual arts, performing arts, film, literature, socially engaged and multidisciplinary practices were selected from more than 4,000 applications via Creative Capital’s open call, national application process and through multiple rounds of external review culminating discipline-specific panels composed of experts, curators, arts professionals, and past awardees. The artists are affiliated with all regions of the United States and its territories, including Big Sky Country, the Midwest, New York City, NorCal and the Pacific Northwest, North- East, SoCal and Hawaii, South-East, South West, Texarkana, and Puerto Rico.
2022 Creative Capital Awardees
- American Artist
- Germane Barnes
- Black Quantum Futurism (Rasheedah Phillips, Camae Ayewa)
- Maura Brewer
- Dakota Camacho
- Crystal Z Campbell
- Etienne Charles
- Alexandra Chreiteh
- Ilana Coleman & Jamie Gonçalves
- Xavier Cortada
- Mónica de la Torre
- Du Yun
- JJJJJerome Ellis
- Alia Farid
- Teresita Fernández,
- Bárbaro Martínez-Ruiz, & Ada Ferrer
- Deborah Goffe
- Clement Hil Goldberg
- Graham Haynes
- Jasmine Hearn
- Randall Horton & Devin B Waldman
- Madeleine Hunt-Ehrlich
- Brandon Kazen-Maddox
- Lucy Kim
- Tan Lin
- Marina Magalhães
- Ramón Miranda Beltrán & Madeline Jiménez Santil
- Christopher K. Morgan
- Cyrus Moussavi
- Cheswayo Mphanza
- Mimi Onuoha
- Karthik Pandian
- Raúl O. Paz-Pastrana
- Kameelah Janan Rasheed
- The Revolution School(Jennifer Moon, Jessie Closson, Clara Philbrick, Devin Alejandro-Wilder)
- Sarah Rosalena
- Viva Ruiz
- Suneil Sanzgiri
- Jacques Schwarz-Bart
- Paola Segura Cornelio
- Nyugen Smith
- Mikaal Sulaiman
- Steven Kazuo Takasugi
- Sam Tam Ham
- Steven Tamayo
- Justin Randolph Thompson
- Marcos Varela
- Edisa Weeks
- Pioneer Winter
- Pinar Yoldas
- Zhalarina
Read more details and to read the full complete announcement, click here.
About Creative Capital
Creative Capital is a nonprofit organization whose mission is to fund artists in the creation of groundbreaking new work, to amplify the impact of their work, and to foster sustainable artistic careers. Founded in 1999, Creative Capital pioneered a transformative grant-making model that marries direct funding to individual artists with infrastructure and scaffolding support. Our pioneering efforts have impacted not just artists, but the arts ecosystem as a whole. The Creative Capital model of philanthropy has inspired countless other nonprofits investing in the long-term, sustainable careers of artists. More than 75 percent of recent awardees are Black, Indigenous, Latinx, Asian, or artists of color representing a wide range of age groups, artistic disciplines, and regions. Our awardees have received prestigious honors and other accolades, including: 127 Guggenheim Fellowships, 19 MacArthur “Genius” Fellowships, 3 Academy Awards and 13 nominations, and 1 Booker Prize.