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From creative Impact funds to unrestricted grants, innovative funding models in 2023 are giving artists more flexibility and greater accountability, reshaping the economics of creative work.
The economics of artistic creation are changing. In 2023, innovative funding initiatives across the globe demonstrated new approaches to supporting creative work, balancing artist autonomy with accountability and finding fresh ways to evaluate creative impact.
The traditional grant model—where artists apply for specific project funding and report on specified outcomes—is giving way to more flexible approaches. These new models recognize that creative work often doesn't fit neatly into predetermined categories, and that artists need freedom to experiment, fail, and iterate.
The Creative Capital Award exemplifies the shift toward unrestricted funding. Artists selected for this award receive up to $50,000 in unrestricted grants, meaning they can use the funding however they deem necessary for their creative practice. Along with financial support, recipients gain access to professional development services that help them build sustainable careers.
This model reflects a broader recognition that treating artists as professionals—rather than as applicants seeking permission for predetermined projects—can yield more creative results. When artists don't have to justify every expenditure to a funder, they can take risks that grant structures typically discourage.
The National Endowment for the Arts launched its ArtsHERE initiative in 2023, focused on expanding access to arts participation. The program represents an attempt to move beyond traditional metrics of artistic excellence toward measures that capture how arts engage communities and foster belonging.
The 2024 Creative Impact Fund, operated by Assembly for the Arts in Cleveland, introduced a new approach to arts funding in 2023. Unlike traditional grants that fund specific projects, the Creative Impact Fund provides unrestricted funding designed to support an artist's creative practice and advance their impact.
This model reflects lessons from the philanthropic sector about what helps artists thrive. Research suggests that general operating support—funding that artists can use at their discretion—often produces better results than project-specific grants. When organizations have resources they can deploy where needed most, they can respond to opportunities and challenges more effectively.
At the state level, California's Creative Heights initiative continues to push boundaries. The program explicitly supports artists and culture bearers who are developing new work and testing new ideas. The philosophy behind Creative Heights is that artistic innovation requires institutional support for risk-taking—innovation without safety nets leads to conservative work that doesn't push boundaries.
Other states are experimenting with their own approaches. The Oregon Community Foundation's arts and culture funding emphasizes equity and inclusion, directing resources toward communities that have historically been underserved by traditional arts funding.
Despite these innovations, significant challenges remain. The arts funding landscape remains fragmented, with different funders prioritizing different outcomes and using incompatible measurement systems. Artists seeking support often spend as much time applying for grants as creating art—a transaction cost that benefits neither funders nor artists.
The shift toward unrestricted funding also raises evaluation challenges. How do you measure the impact of creative work when artists aren't required to produce specific outputs? Funders are experimenting with new approaches to evaluation, including narrative reporting, peer review, and community impact assessment.
The innovations of 2023 suggest that the creative funding ecosystem is evolving toward models that trust artists more, measure outcomes more thoughtfully, and recognize that artistic creativity requires support structures that differ from those used in other sectors. As these approaches mature, they may offer lessons for how to support innovation across the creative economy.
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