Art Bridges Cohort Program

The Art Bridges Cohort Program expands access to American art by supporting multiyear, multi-institutional art-sharing partnerships among museums nationwide. The mission of the program is to create self-sustaining ecosystems of art sharing, collaboration, and community engagement across the country.

Program Goals

  • 01.

    Build and nurture art-sharing partnerships

    among a given cohort that extends beyond the program

  • 02.

    Dismantle siloed workflows

    within and between museums

  • 03.

    Eliminate bottlenecks

    in registration and conservation

  • 04.

    Broaden loan agreements’ climate parameters

    that restrict art access, especially to underserved areas

  • 05.

    Strengthen knowledge

    around practices of sustainable and cost-effective art sharing and exhibition building

  • 06.

    Create engagement opportunities

    that are long-term, reciprocal, and community-led

Cohort Program

How it works:

Each cohort, comprised of a lead museum and cohort members, works together for 4-6 years to share their collections, making art lending, borrowing, and display more efficient and environmentally sustainable.

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Installation view of Many Wests: Artists Shape an American Idea at the Whatcom Museum as part of the SAAM Cohort, March 19 2022 - August 21 - 2022

Funding

Art Bridges supports these partnerships through a mix of direct payments and flat-funding awards to offset hard and soft costs. Lead museums and cohort members are eligible to apply for Learning & Engagement funding in Phases 2 and 3 to deepen community engagement efforts.
1

Phase 1Research & Development (6 months)

Art Bridges will cover the travel and hosting costs of a 2-day, in-person convening for all museums within a cohort.

2

Phase 2Small Art Share (20 months)

Art Bridges pays directly for the Ki Futures Accessible Loans Program for each cohort, Ki Futures Collections Care Apprenticeship Program, and direct costs, such as crating, shipping, installation, deinstallation, and insurance for 3-5 works. Awards to lead museum and cohort members include Project Manager's salary, Collections Care Apprentice's salary, Collections Care Apprentice's housing and travel during training, $500 per object loaned, and 2 convenings.

3

Phase 3Large Art Share (45 Months)

Art Bridges pays directly for direct object costs, such as crating, shipping, installation and deinstallation, contract art handlers, installation materials, additional security, insurance, marketing toolkit, and exhibition design. Awards to lead museum and cohort members include Project Manager's salary, Collections Care Apprentice's salary, $500 per object loaned, annual convenings, in-gallery accessibility items, community resource group honoraria, sustainable exhibition materials incentive, and interpretation.

Partner Stories

Stories We Love

Frequently asked questions

If you are currently undertaking an implementation phase of your cohort project, continue executing this already funded work. The new Cohort Program requirements apply to applicants who are new partners, have closed previous cohort projects, or not yet entered an implementation phase by June 2024.

Lead Museums:

- US museum

- Art museum with a substantial American art collection that it’s willing and able to share

- Completed at least 1 art-sharing project with Art Bridges

- Strong history of community engagement

- Has gallery space available during the next 6 years to host cohort projects

Cohort Members:

- US museum

- Art museum with strong history of American art exhibitions

- Strong history of community engagement and onsite programming

- Has a Director of Education or similar position on staff

- Has gallery space available during the next 6 years to host

No.

Art Bridges understands American art as "art of the American experience" and thus not tied to citizenship or a specific time frame. These works may be created by artists who were born outside the US or have worked outside the US but have meaningful ties to the country. Therefore, art shared may exist outside of your designated American art collection or American art department.

No, the Cohort Program travels artworks that already exist and thus does not support the creation of new works. However, you may apply for Learning & Engagement funding that covers community art projects, artist residencies or workshops.

No, every cohort lead and member in the program must participate in this program. Representation from executive, registration, curatorial, learning and engagement, and facilities is recommended.

The Art Bridges Cohort team is happy to help research and identify potential cohort members based on your museum’s interests, mission and goals. While we are happy to provide recommendations, you are not required to move forward with any of them.

Although not required, we expect all partners to apply for this funding, as it is a core component of activating your shared artworks and welcoming new communities to your museum.

No, however, research that takes other forms without charge can be considered for funding support.

Potential cohort members are required to be invited to be part of a cohort to participate in the Cohort Program. If you are not associated with a specific cohort, please email the Cohort Program team. We’re happy to have a conversation to determine next steps.

We encourage diversity in the kinds of artistic mediums shared and recommend cohorts travel readily shareable art. We welcome conversations about what art is most compelling to lend and borrow for your communities.

We anticipate launching 4-6 cohorts per year, starting in the summer of 2025. Applications and timelines for future “waves,” or groups of cohorts, will be announced.

A cohort consists of 4-6 museum partners, including a lead museum, who serves as the administrative hub.

No, every cohort must begin at Phase 1 before moving on to Phase 2 and then Phase 3.

Get in touch

Interested in the Cohort Program?