THE IDEA FUND AWARDS $60,000 to 13 GREATER HOUSTON AREA ARTISTS & COLLECTIVES
The Idea Fund, a re-granting program administered by DiverseWorks, Aurora Picture Show, and Project Row Houses and funded by The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, is thrilled to announce the selection of 13 projects by Houston-based artists to receive grants of $2,500 and $5,000.
The Idea Fund Round 19 grant recipients are as follows: Saran Alderson; Salima Bowaniya, Sol Diaz-Peña & Ryan Hollaway; Mitchell Collins & Sofia Siluet Friends Gallery; Preston Gaines; Jessica Carolina González; Jennifer Marion; Tobe Mokolo; Quentin Pace; Joe Robles; Jesse Spiehler & Logan Tuttle; aisha tida; and Chris Wicker, Anna Taylor & Trent Teinert.
Grantees will present their project proposals to the public at the 2026 Idea Fund Award Presentation on March 3, 2026, 7:00 PM, at Aurora Picture Show, 5601a Navigation Blvd, Houston, TX 77011.
The Idea Fund supports innovative, experimental, public-facing visual arts projects that expand our understanding of how art exists in the world or exemplify new ways of working in, for, and with community. A total of $60,000 will be distributed to 6 individual artists, 3 collaborative duos, and 4 collectives, selected from 115 eligible applicants by a three-member multidisciplinary panel composed of experts from the field.
Since its inception, The Idea Fund has supported more than 169 visual art projects involving over 530 artists and collectives with grants totaling more than $902,000. Round 19 marks 17 years of regranting to artists in the Greater Houston Area.
Round 19 was juried by Lani Asunción, interdisciplinary multimedia artist and independent curator, Boston, MA; Sebastien Boncy, photographer, educator, and Round 18 Grantee, Houston, TX; and Alexis Wilkinson, Curator at the Museum of Contemporary Art Tucson, Tucson, AZ.
THE IDEA FUND 2026 ROUND 19 GRANTEES AND PROJECTS:
Saran Alderson – Rosin & Talc Community Printmaking Project
Rosin & Talc Community Printmaking Project seeks to develop a flexible, community-centered printmaking space. The project will establish a collapsible, hybrid printmaking studio that can be easily set up and taken down to accommodate shared use of space. The Idea Fund support will assist with equipment purchases, modular infrastructure, and a series of printmaking workshops. Centered on slow, analog processes, the project fosters conversation, collaboration, and collective “plotting.”
Salima Bowaniya & Sol Diaz-Peña with support from Ryan Hollaway – Pesadito
Pesadito is a multi-format project that unites a group of Houston-based artists navigating the social and political heaviness of our time with wit, sincerity, and action. Moving between comedy and critique, these artists will utilize their distinct perspectives to rebuild meaning and connection across physical and digital landscapes. The Idea Fund will support the exhibition component of Pesadito, which will be featured as a Fotofest Biennial 2026 Participating Space.
Mitchell Collins & Sofia Silueta – It’s a City Not a Choice
It’s a City Not a Choice is a feature-length film about young, working-class queer artists living their lives and trying to survive in Houston. The film will present an offbeat and underground look at the world of art in Houston through a hybrid documentary/fiction lens as a way of holding up a mirror to the physical realities that inform the creative choices of the many artists who live and work in our city.
Friends Gallery- a QTBIPOC community art space
Friends Gallery is a volunteer-run trans/queer/BIPOC-led collective stewarding a community art space in the Magnolia Park neighborhood of Houston. With support from The Idea Fund, Friends Gallery will expand its capacity by providing equipment and training for local artists, building an artist-curated reading library, tool school + tool bank, and strengthening infrastructure for community events.
Preston Gaines – IN Nature: A Living Tapestry
IN Nature: A Living Tapestry is a site-specific public art installation that transforms a section of Japhet Creek into a contemplative landscape composed of laser-cut steel floral sculptures and native plantings. The project examines the creek’s environmental history, its role in the Fifth Ward, and the lived experiences of nearby residents who have watched the waterway be alternately neglected and cherished over generations. Proposed programs include a walking tour and native planting zone, live storytelling by community members, and hands-on activities centered on ecology and memory.
Jessica Carolina González – Superneighborhood 27: The “Gulfton Ghetto”
González will examine the histories embedded in apartment complexes built during the 1970s oil boom, globally connected businesses catering to Central American immigrants, and communal squares through cameraless photography and on-site performance.
Jennifer Marion – A to B. B to A. Repeat.
With support from The Idea Fund, Marion seeks to transform a rental truck into a traveling exhibition space, projecting video documenting her bi-weekly custody exchange commute between Houston and Beaumont. The project will feature projections on the truck’s side at dusk in unexpected locations such as town squares, rest stops, and parking lots. As both subject and object are moving, the project highlights the transition between places while displaying images of movement itself. Inviting every viewer to become a passenger in someone else’s commute.
Tobe Mokolo – Amerikan Boy
Amerikan Boy is a short psychological thriller inspired by Mokolo’s lived experience emigrating from Nigeria to the United States in 2004. Set in Houston, the film explores identity, masculinity, and the search for belonging through the perspective of a young Nigerian immigrant navigating the tension between cultural duty and personal desire. Produced in collaboration with a fully Houston-based production crew of cinematographers, artists, and post-production creatives, Amerikan Boy is both deeply personal and community-driven. The Idea Fund support will be used to complete post-production, execute a targeted marketing campaign, and support screenings and distribution, ensuring the film reaches audiences in Houston and beyond.
Quentin Pace – Artist Archive Development Workshop
As an artist and archivist Pace recognizes the long-term importance of artists being able to properly archive their work, practice, and art career. Through The Idea Fund, Pace will create a series of workshops to share basic archival fundamentals with artists to better organize and document the history of their work.
Joe Robles – Still Growing Up Here
Still Growing Up Here is a photo narrative project of Robles’ hometown, Pasadena, Texas, specifically, the northside. With support from The Idea Fund, Robles will create a photo book documenting life in Pasadena, a city primarily acknowledged for its pollution and the oil and gas industry. The photo series and book will redirect the eyes of others to the beauty and humanity he has found in this area he calls home.
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