People protesting with to save china twon

ABOUT US

ORIGINS

Attendees of Africarnaval dancing and walking around
Courtesy of Ashé Cultural Center; Africarnaval

Following the sunset of ArtPlace America in 2020, the Arts and Culture program directors at the Barr, Kresge, and William Penn Foundations sought to build on its insights and momentum. Partnering with Helicon Collaborative, they conducted research—including interviews with grassroots leaders—and reaffirmed the need for sustained investment in the integration of arts, culture, and creativity into efforts to build healthy, racially equitable, and sustainable communities. In response, they pooled resources to launch a $13 million initiative dedicated to advancing these practices and deepening field-wide knowledge.

Courtesy of The Village of Arts and Humanities; Youth Organizing Training: Budgeting Workshop

In 2022, Aviva Kapust and Erik Takeshita were appointed as Co-Directors. Under their leadership, the fund sharpened its focus on culture as a central force in community power-building. Culture has always been integral to how communities organize, sustain movements, and drive systemic change, yet it has often been siloed, underfunded, or narrowly understood in ways that limit its impact. Too often, it is valued primarily for its tangible expressions rather than recognized as essential to building power. C&CPF seeks to shift this paradigm, positioning culture as fundamental to how communities shape their futures.

VALUES

DJ Victoria Shen stands on a fold-out table, bent over at the waist to reach her controller while a crowd looks on
Asian Arts Initiative; Artist, Victoria Shen; Photo by Albert Yee

Follow those who are closest to the ground:
We honor the expertise of frontline organizations, practitioners, and communities most impacted by structural oppression. We seek to enlist them as co-designers in grantmaking and other critical aspects of C&CPF.

Be true partners and provide flexible support:
We’re not here to set rules and limits, we’re here to create space for expansive work. We create trusting relationships with grantee-partners so that they can be honest about their struggles and their successes. We strive to make our grants as flexible and straightforward as possible, and stand ready to share our experience and networks to aid however we can.

Minimize harm, center care:
We understand that any intervention in an ecosystem carries the risk of disrupting hard-earned relationships and progress, even with the best intentions. Recognizing this, we commit to moving with care, humility, and respect. Our aim is not just to avoid harm but to actively support and strengthen the ecosystems we are part of, staying accountable to those most impacted by systemic oppression.

Build on what’s working:
We build on existing knowledge and rely on practice-based experience, including calls-to-action from frontline practitioners, advice from trusted social justice funders, and equity-centered research methodologies and findings.

Unite means and ends:
We believe that what is won is just as important as how it is won. To that end, we support community power building rooted in culture as both a goal and a strategy.

OPERATIONAL MODEL

Two people holding copies of Fortunately Magazine up in front of their faces
Courtesy of Boston Ujima Project, Inc.; Fortunately Magazine

C&CPF functions as a lab, which means our work is exploratory and adaptive. We bring together frontline organizations, community members, funders, and thought leaders to explore ideas and strategies beyond traditional programs, structures, and geographic boundaries. This provides a space to test new approaches, make nimble and responsive investments, and engage in continuous, iterative learning. Just like in a lab, we ask critical questions: what works, what doesn’t, and why. Our aim is to strengthen both the transformative efforts happening in frontline communities and the strategies used to support those efforts, by organizations like ours.

Leadership

Director, Erik Takeshita
C&CPF

Erik Takeshita has spent more than 25 years supporting community development with an emphasis on the role of art and culture. Erik has held a variety of positions including with ArtPlace America, the Bush Foundation in St. Paul, and the Local Initiatives Support Corporation (LISC). Erik was trained as a ceramic artist and holds a master’s degree from the Harvard Kennedy School. He currently lives in Minneapolis, MN.

Director Emeritus, Aviva Kapust
C&CPF

Aviva Kapust has nearly 20 years of experience in culture-rooted, equity-focused community development. During her 10-years as Executive Director of The Village of Arts and Humanities in Philadelphia, she raised more than $10 million in reserve funds, restored and modernized its historic campus, and centered community values and voices in every initiative. Aviva is a Neubauer Civic Scholar and MBA candidate at the University of Chicago Booth School of Business, and a Field Catalyst Fellow with the Center for Community Investment. She lives in Philadelphia with her partner, Felix, and daughter, Zena.

Funders Collaborative

The Barr Foundation

The Barr Foundation’s mission is to invest in human, natural, and creative potential, serving as thoughtful stewards and catalysts. Based in Boston, Barr focuses regionally, and selectively engages nationally, working in partnership with nonprofits, foundations, the public sector, and civic and business leaders to elevate the arts, advance solutions for climate change, and enable all students to thrive in high school and beyond. Founded in 1997, Barr now has assets over $2.5 billion and has contributed more than $1 billion to charitable causes.

The Kresge Foundation

The Kresge Foundation was founded in 1924 to promote human progress. Today, Kresge fulfills that mission by building and strengthening pathways to opportunity for low-income people in America’s cities, seeking to dismantle structural and systemic barriers to equality and justice. Using a full array of grant, loan, and other investment tools, Kresge invests more than $160 million annually to foster economic and social change.

William Penn Foundation

The William Penn Foundation, founded in 1945 by Otto and Phoebe Haas, is dedicated to improving the quality of life in the Greater Philadelphia region through efforts that increase educational opportunities for children from low-income families, ensure a sustainable environment, provide inclusive and equitable public spaces and arts and culture experiences, and advance philanthropy in the Philadelphia region.

Steering Committee

Anasa Troutman
Strategist, writer, director, founder and leader | The Big We

Anasa has dedicated her work to the importance of culture and the power of love. She is the founder of The BIG We LLC, The BIG We Foundation, BIG We Capital, and Historic Clayborn Temple, home of the 1968 Sanitation Workers’ Strike in historically South, Black Memphis.

Sumitra Rajkumar
Director of Education and Cultural Strategies | The Action Lab

While at the Social Justice Leadership in 2010, Sumitra trained with its partner organization, generative somatics, in politicized somatics, a method that addresses trauma and connects personally embodied values to social transformation and one she uses today as a leadership coach and therapeutic practitioner.

Kenneth Bailey
Co-founder | Design Studio for Social Intervention

Kenneth has more than three decades of experience on the ethics of design in relation to community engagement. He was a founding member of Theatrum Mundi NYC with Richard Sennett, and co-authored the book “Ideas—Arrangements—Effects: Systems Design and Social Justice.”

Rahwa Ghirmatzion
Senior Policy Fellow | Just Solutions Collective

Rahwa was previously the executive director at PUSH Buffalo, a community organization that works at the grassroots to create and implement a comprehensive revitalization plan for Buffalo’s West Side. She is on the Governance Assembly of Mosaic and part of the NYS Climate Justice Working Group.

Carlton Turner
Founder | Mississippi Center for Cultural Production (MCCP)

Carlton is a nationally renowned performing artist, policy shaper, lecturer, and facilitator. Along with MCCP, he is also co-founder and co-artistic director of Men Under Guidance Acting Before Early Extinction, a Mississippi-based performing arts group that blends music with non-traditional storytelling.

Harmony Goldberg
Director of Praxis | Grassroots Power Project

Harmony helped found and lead SOUL, the School Of Unity and Liberation in the 1990s. She has a PhD in Cultural Anthropology from the City University of New York’s Graduate Center. At GPP, Harmony works with People’s Action, and she leads the development of strategic education programs.

Partners

New Venture Fund

The New Venture Fund (NVF) hosts and incubates a wide range of conservation, education, global health, and other charitable projects. For more information, visit its website.

Outside

Outside is an impact-driven design and technology studio born in Nepal, creating globally. Its mission is to support the meaningful companies, causes, and communities building a more equitable world.

Helicon Collaborative

Strategy & Research Partner, Helicon works at the intersection of equity, culture, and the environment. The collaborative specializes in asking good questions, helping people explore new and complex territory, and developing transformative strategies for change.

Next steps