The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts in New York has announced its fall 2025 grant recipients. The foundation has donated more than $4 million to 57 arts organizations.
The Warhol Foundation is known for its decades of support of arts and cultural organizations, including more than two years of program support, exhibition support, and curatorial research fellowships. For two years of project support, grantees will receive between $60,000 and $180,000 this year, while exhibition support ranges from $35,000 to $100,000.
Fall 2025 grantees hail from 17 states and Washington, D.C., and range from renowned institutions such as the Museum of Contemporary Art Houston, International Independent Curators and Anthology Film Archives to artist-run organizations such as Mini Mart City Park in Seattle and Transformer in Washington, D.C. Additionally, 20 grantees received first-time Warhol Foundation funding, such as Path with Arts in Seattle, Access Gallery in Denver, Galveston Artist Residency in Texas, and Harvester Arts in Wichita, Kansas.
Organizations outside of the Heritage Arts Center are also part of the fall 2025 cohort, including Village Arts in Winona, Minnesota; Catskill Arts Space in Livingston Manor, New York; Living Arts in Tulsa, Oklahoma; and Locate Arts in Knoxville, Tennessee. Two international organizations also received support: the NGO Museum of Contemporary Art in Kyiv and the Lebanese Plastic Arts Association Ashkal Alwan in Beirut.
Supported exhibitions include various solo shows such as Ching Ho Cheng at the Addison Gallery of American Art; Gisela Colón, University of South Florida Museum of Contemporary Art; and Leilah Babirye at the Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston. Group exhibitions are also included, such as Telenovelas at the American Society in New York, Counterpublic 2026 Triennial in St. Louis, and Light Comes Softly: An Archive of Tactile Materials at the Museum of Contemporary Art in North Miami.
“Arts organizations of all sizes, operating under increasingly precarious conditions, are looking for ways to not only stay true to their missions but also to increase the critical, curatorial and community resources available to artists,” Rachel Bers, director of programs at the Warhol Foundation, said in a statement. “We applaud their cultivation of artistic experimentation and appreciate the platform they provide for artists’ perspectives, allowing them (and all of us) to forge a path through difficult times to be seen, heard, and engaged.”
The recent funding cycle, which coincides with the Trump administration’s dismantling of the National Endowment for the Arts, one of the other major funders of arts organizations across the country, has made arts funding particularly challenging. The deadline for the Warhol Foundation’s spring 2025 grant cycle was March 1, and the NEA canceled funding entirely about two months later.
The deadline for the fall 2025 cycle is September 1, and for the first time arts organizations have a clearer picture of the arts funding landscape, as evidenced by the number of applications received by foundations. A spokesperson said the Warhol Foundation received nearly 40% more grant applications this cycle than usual, and the size of its grantee pool increased by nearly 20%.
“Recent reductions in government funding for the visual arts, coupled with a cultural infrastructure destabilized by widespread political and economic uncertainty, have significantly undermined support for the entire arts ecosystem,” Warhol Foundation President Joel Wax said in a statement. “The intense pressure this has placed on artists and the organizations that sustain their work reinforces the Foundation’s commitment to supporting and elevating the important work they do.”
The complete list of Warhol Foundation fall 2025 grantees is below.
Fall 2025 Grant Recipients | Over 2 Years of Program Support
| recipient | Place | Funding amount |
| Visit gallery | Denver, Colorado | $60,000 |
| Anthology Film Archives | New York City, New York | $75,000 |
| rural art | Winona, Minnesota | $60,000 |
| Bitton Project | Brooklyn, New York | $80,000 |
| black cube | Denver, Colorado | $100,000 |
| winery art | pittsburgh pennsylvania | $60,000 |
| Bronx River Arts Center and gallery | Bronx, New York | $60,000 |
| Catskill Art Space | Livingston Manor, New York | $80,000 |
| center for women and their work | Austin, Texas | $80,000 |
| contemporary art review Los Angeles (Cala) | Culver City, California | $60,000 |
| Houston Museum of Contemporary Art | Houston, Texas | $100,000 |
| CUE Art Foundation | New York City, New York | $80,000 |
| exile project | Miami, Florida | $60,000 |
| Feminist Center creation | Glendale, California | $60,000 |
| Galveston Artist Residency Hotel | Galveston, Texas | $60,000 |
| Giorno poetry system | New York City, New York | $60,000 |
| Grand Central Center for the Arts/California State University, Fullerton | Santa Ana, California | $80,000 |
| hamilton artist | washington d.c. | $80,000 |
| reaper art | Wichita, Kansas | $80,000 |
| International independent curator | New York City, New York | $100,000 |
| KMAC Museum of Contemporary Art | Louisville, Kentucky | $80,000 |
| Laundromat project | Brooklyn, New York | $100,000 |
| Lebanese Plastic Arts Association Ashkal Alwan | Beirut, Lebanon | $80,000 |
| Art of Living in Tulsa | Tulsa, Oklahoma | $80,000 |
| Mini supermarket city park | Seattle, Washington | $60,000 |
| National Coalition Against Censorship, Arts and Culture Advocacy Program | New York City, New York | $180,000 |
| NGO Museum contemporary art | Kiev, Ukraine | $100,000 |
| 99 canal | New York City, New York | $60,000 |
| art path | Seattle, Washington | $60,000 |
| Pioneer works | Brooklyn, New York | $60,000 |
| Project Townhouse | Houston, Texas | $100,000 |
| Root division | San Francisco, California | $80,000 |
| southern exposure | San Francisco, California | $100,000 |
| Squeaky Wheel Center for Film and Media Arts | Buffalo, New York | $80,000 |
| Art and Architecture Storefront | New York City, New York | $80,000 |
| Thaler Puerto Rico | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | $80,000 |
| tin factory | Bozeman, Montana | $60,000 |
| transformer | washington d.c. | $80,000 |
| Samsung Art (Positioning Art) | Knoxville, Tennessee | $75,000 |
| Visual Research Workshop | Rochester, New York | $80,000 |
Fall 2025 Grant Recipients | Show Support
Addison Gallery of American Art
Andover, Massachusetts
$75,000
“Zheng Qinghe: The light will continue”
american association
New York City, New York
$80,000
“TV drama”
bard college
Annandale-on-Hudson, NY
$60,000
Marilou Schulz Exhibition
Urban Legends: New York City Folklore Center
New York City, New York
$80,000
“artwork”
University of South Florida Museum of Contemporary Art
Tampa, Florida
$50,000
“Gisela Colón: Plasmática”
anti-public
st louis missouri
$100,000
Anti-Public 2026 Triennale
Holt Museum of Art
Helena, Montana
$80,000
Exhibition plan support
Institute of Contemporary Art/Boston
Boston, Massachusetts
$60,000
“Laila Barbier”
MIT List Center for the Visual Arts
Cambridge, Massachusetts
$60,000
“Hao Jingban”
Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art
North Adams, Massachusetts
$75,000
“Brother to Brother: Marlon Riggs and Essex Hemphill”
Minnesota Museum of American Art
St. Paul, Minnesota
$60,000
“The Smell of the Earth: The Works of Seitu Ken Jones”
Montclair Art Museum
Montclair, New Jersey
$35,000
“Nadia Maier: Analogues“
North Miami Museum of Contemporary Art
North Miami, Florida
$60,000
“Soft Light: Archives of Tactile Materials”
poster house
New York City, New York
$60,000
“Designing in Red: Native American and Indigenous Poster Works”
Wende Cold War Museum
Culver City, California
$60,000
“Competing Cosmology: Explaining the Sky”
Fall 2025 Grant Recipients | Curatorial Research Fellowships
University of Kentucky Art Museum
Lexington, Kentucky
$38,000
Rachel Hooper
Art Naples, Baker Museum/Naples Philharmonic Orchestra
Naples, Florida
$50,000
Diana Blas-Feliciano



