The Detroit Youth Choir, performing at Kresge's Strengthening Whole Child Communities summit at the Marygrove Conservancy campus in Detroit, is one of 107 arts and cultural organizations in metro Detroit to receive multiyear funding from the Detroit Arts Support initiative. (Photo by Cydni Elledge) Tracey Pearson Share Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email One hundred and seven arts and cultural organizations in the Detroit metropolitan area will share more than $11.2 million in multiyear general operating support. This multi-year funding initiative, known as Detroit Arts Support (DAS), is a collaboration between The Kresge Foundation, the Fred and Barbara Erb Family Foundation, and Hudson-Webber Foundation. The program aims to strengthen the sector broadly through consistent support for a diverse set of organizations. The Motown Historical Museum, a recipient of a Detroit Arts Support grant, is planning a multi-phase, $75 million expansion that will grow the museum campus to a 50,000-square-foot state-of-the-art entertainment and education facility. Grant recipients range from small to large organizations, spread throughout the region, including Motown Historical Museum, Mosaic Youth Theatre of Detroit and The Tuskegee Airmen National Historical Museum. (See the full list of grantees here). The three participating foundations came together to use one shared application and review process, while still making their own independent funding decisions. This collaboration made things easier for nonprofit arts organizations and created space for shared learning, stronger relationships and better data to guide each foundation’s support for the field. “Arts and culture are not separate from the work of building equitable cities — they are central to it,” said Wendy Lewis Jackson, managing director of Kresge’s Detroit Program. “These organizations create jobs, develop young talent and offer spaces where Detroiters see their experiences reflected and valued. Sustaining them is an investment in Detroit’s present and its future.” Strengthening the arts and culture sector in Detroit Detroit Arts Support grants provide unrestricted operating support to nonprofits in the performing, visual and literary arts, as well as to arts service, education, media and broadcasting, and cultural organizations. “The organizations supported through Detroit Arts Support strengthen our region in countless ways,” said Melissa Damaschke, president of the Fred and Barbara Erb Family Foundation. “These nonprofit organizations’ commitment to preserving cultural traditions, nurturing emerging talent and engaging communities is what keeps Detroit’s creative spirit alive. This funding simply reinforces the resilience that these arts organizations need to continue this essential, creative work.” General operating support is not tied to a specific initiative, allowing nonprofits to use these grants to support their day-to-day work, and lessen the impact of unexpected costs such as canceled gigs or shifting funding priorities. This type of support for an organization’s core work helps them to sustain and grow their business over an extended period of time. “The arts bring people together, reflect and celebrate our shared identity and strengthen the fabric of our community, while also serving as a vital economic driver for Detroit and the region,” said Donald Rencher, president and CEO of the Hudson-Webber Foundation. “Our commitment to Detroit Arts Support builds on the foundation’s longstanding mission to invest in arts and culture organizations that enrich the lives of Detroiters and ensure residents have access to high-quality cultural experiences from across the city, the nation and the world.” The 2025 Detroit Jazz Festival attracted over 300,000 attendees to downtown and midtown Detroit during Labor Day weekend. Detroit Arts Support also aims to provide added value to nonprofit arts groups beyond grant funding. This cycle, each DAS grantee will receive a financial report prepared by TDC, the nonprofit finance firm that analyzed all applicant financial statements. The reports offer insights into organizational financial health, planning considerations and broader sector trends that can help inform future decision-making. The Fred and Barbara Erb Family and Hudson-Webber Foundations announced their funding recipients in October 2025, with Kresge making its decisions in December. Grants from the individual foundations generally range from $5,000 to $100,000 per year based on size of organization. Eligibility criteria included 501(c)3 status, having at least one employee, annual revenues of at least $100,000, and a record of presenting programs for at least two years. Kresge awards grants to 83 organizations Kresge launched the Detroit Arts Support initiative in 2007, and the Fred and Barbara Erb Family Foundation began partnering with Kresge on the application and review process in 2010. The Hudson-Webber Foundation joined the collaboration prior to the launch of the 2019–2022 cycle. CultureSource, a coalition of more than 200 nonprofit arts organizations in Southeast Michigan, serves as the administrator for the DAS initiative, coordinating the collaboration of funding partners. The organizations receiving funding from Kresge through the Detroit Arts Support initiative include: Performing Arts: Theater & Dance A Host of People Detroit Opera Detroit Public Theatre Detroit Puppet Company Detroit Repertory Theatre Eisenhower Dance Detroit Macomb Center for the Performing Arts Matrix Theatre Company Music Hall Center for the Performing Arts Planet Ant Theatre Plowshares Theatre Company Shakespeare in Detroit TeMaTe Institute for Black Dance & Culture The Senate Theater Performing Arts: Music Akropolis Reed Quintet Chamber Music Detroit Detroit Chamber Winds and Strings Detroit Jazz Festival Foundation Great Lakes Chamber Music Festival Rackham Choir Sphinx Organization Museums Arab American National Museum (ACCESS) Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History Detroit Historical Society Detroit Institute of Arts Motown Historical Museum Museum of Contemporary Art Detroit The Henry Ford Tuskegee Airmen National Historical Museum Zekelman Holocaust Center Youth and Family: Arts & Culture Programs Accent Pontiac All the World’s a Stage Arts and Scraps Black United Fund of Michigan Class Act Detroit Community Arts Partnerships (College for Creative Studies) Crescendo Detroit Detroit Metropolitan Youth Symphony Detroit Public Schools Community District Detroit Public Schools Community District Foundation Detroit-Windsor Dance Academy Detroit Youth Choir Detroit Zoological Society FAR Therapeutic Arts and Recreation Living Arts Michigan Arts Access Mosaic Youth Theatre of Detroit Motor City Street Dance Academy MSU Community Music School-Detroit (Michigan State University) Teen HYPE Youth Development Program TeMaTe Institute for Black Dance & Culture The Detroit Creativity Project Y Arts (YMCA of Metropolitan Detroit) Young Nation Visual Arts/Design Anton Art Center Bulk Space Cranbrook Educational Community Design Core Detroit (College for Creative Studies) Detroit Artists Market Heidelberg Project Irwin House Global Art Center & Gallery Pewabic Pottery Scarab Club Stamelos Gallery Center (University of Michigan-Dearborn) Literary/Printing 826Michigan Detroit Public Library Foundation InsideOut Literary Arts Signal-Return Wayne State University Press Media Detroit Public Television (Detroit Educational Television Foundation) WDET 101.9FM (Wayne State University) WRCJ 90.9FM Storytelling/Narrative Detroit Narrative Agency Ghostlight Arts Initiative The Society for the Re-Institutionalization of Storytelling Historic Preservation Black Bottom Archives Detroit Sound Conservancy Cultural centers/ Public Art Spaces Black Artist Archive The Carr Center Garage Cultural Heritage Works Live Coal Sidewalk Detroit Women of Banglatown
Application opens for $50,000 Kresge Artist Fellowships and $5,000 Gilda Awards December 1, 2025 Detroit
News Kresge publishes monograph honoring 2025 Eminent Artist Marion Hayden September 19, 2025 Detroit