With Federal Funding in Question, Artists Can Navigate a Perilous Future by Looking to the Past

As funding dries up and political scrutiny intensifies, artists turn to grassroots networks, mutual aid, and historical resilience to navigate a turbulent new era in American arts and culture

Artists and arts organizations have a long legacy of persistence and strategic organizing during periods of political and economic upheaval.
Artists and arts organizations have a long legacy of persistence and strategic organizing during periods of political and economic upheaval.
1 min read
Share
Artists and arts organizations have a long legacy of persistence and strategic organizing during periods of political and economic upheaval.
Artists and arts organizations have a long legacy of persistence and strategic organizing during periods of political and economic upheaval.
With Federal Funding in Question, Artists Can Navigate a Perilous Future by Looking to the Past
Copy

In a February 2025 Truth Social post, President Donald Trump declared a “Golden Age in Arts and Culture.”

So far, this “golden age” has entailed an executive order calling for the federal agency that funds local museums and libraries to be dismantled, with most grants rescinded. The Trump administration has forbidden federal arts funding from going to artists who promote what the administration calls “gender ideology”. There’s been a purge of the board of the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, with Trump appointing himself chair. And the administration has canceled National Endowment for the Humanities grants.

Suffice it to say, many artists and arts organizations across the U.S. are worried: Will government arts funding dry up? Do these cuts signal a new war on arts and culture? How do artists make it through this period of change?

As scholars who study the arts, activism and policy, we’re watching the latest developments with apprehension. But we think it’s important to point out that while the U.S. government has never been a global leader of arts funding, American artists have always been innovative, creative and scrappy during times of political turmoil.

Read the rest on The Conversation.

Rhode Island joins 20 other states in winning a preliminary injunction against President Trump’s attempt to eliminate federal library funding through the Institute of Museum and Library Services
State economies, energy prices and climate change goals at risk under federal pause in offshore wind development
Handful of candidates emerge with declarations due May 29-30
Updated complaint asks federal judge to reinstate work visa, allow for immigration court proceedings for Dr. Rasha Alawieh
Supporters say the proposed course would empower students by centering underrepresented histories, despite political pushback from the Trump administration
Facing a $34 million budget deficit and a student body half the size it was in 2011, the Providence-based university says layoffs—mostly at its flagship campus—are needed to stabilize finances
At least 27 percent of staff who worked at NOAA’s Northeast Fisheries Science Center when Trump took office are no longer with the agency. The Woods Hole lab is at the center of the regional fisheries operations