Dance/NYC Announces 4th Iteration of Dance Advancement Fund

Dance/NYC Announces 4th Iteration of Dance Advancement Fund

Dance/NYC is pleased to announce the fourth iteration of the Dance Advancement Fund made possible by the generous support of the Howard Gilman Foundation and the Ford Foundation. The purpose of the funding initiative is to address the inequitable distribution of resources in the dance field and advance its resilience and ability to thrive by supporting dance makers in the metropolitan New York City area with operating budgets between $25,000 and $250,000 with two-year general operating support grants of $6,000 to $40,000 annually, including ongoing professional development, from September 1, 2024 – August 31, 2026.

The fourth iteration of the Dance Advancement Fund, its components, and continued evolution is a reflection of ongoing learning and dialogue with current and past grantees, field partners, Dance/NYC’s task forces and committees, and ongoing field research and current events impacting the field. Dance/NYC is also working in collaboration with Niya Nicholson of MOVE|NYC|, a justice driven, creatively inclined nonprofit arts leader with 9 years of advancement expertise–namely, business strategy, fundraising, DEI, marketing, and Board & program development.

“I am grateful for the opportunity to partner with Dance/NYC to support and invest in the thriveability of NYC-based dance makers,” says Niya. “As this year’s Program Consultant, I am excited to serve as a resource to the dance community by providing insights on building company infrastructure, fundraising, and financial planning via webinars and 1:1 technical sessions and making panel recommendations.” 

“The Dance Advancement Fund intervenes in a critical support gap for smaller budget organizations” says Sara Roer, Co-Executive Director of Dance/NYC. “As these entities represent some of the deepest diversity across the New York City metropolitan area, moving them toward thriving has the potential to lift all ships toward a more just, equitable, and inclusive dance sector.”

Dance/NYC established the Dance Advancement Fund in 2017 to respond directly to Dance/NYC’s research, State of NYC Dance and Workforce Demographics 2016, which underscored that the smallest organizations demonstrate the greatest capacity to adapt and have workforces that better reflect the racial diversity and presence of disabled and immigrant people in New York City’s population than the workforces of larger organizations. The research also revealed that dance makers with annual budgets of less than $1 million comprise the lion’s share (84%) of total groups but have access to only 10% of the total revenue.

In 2020, Dance/NYC’s research study, Defining “Small-Budget” Dance Makers in a Changing Dance Ecology, further revealed that nearly all “small-budget” dance makers need funding for salaries/wages (95%) and general operations (93%), with more than half (56%) indicating that the salaries/wages category was the most critical funding need. These needs then deepened as the sector responded to the ongoing impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic. Dance/NYC’s Coronavirus Dance Impact Informational Brief found that individual dance workers and dance making organizations expressed an inability to provide for basic needs. That work also found that 84% of organizations facing permanent closure at that time had budgets under $100K.

Released in 2023, State of NYC Dance 2023: Findings from the Dance Industry Census reveals that small budget entities may comprise even more of the dance industry than originally believed. That work welcomed input from all entities regardless of budget size and structure. While previous research had been limited to non-profit entities and entities with budgets of more than $25K. Nearly 60% of dance entities responding to the Dance Industry Census had budgets less than $100K and 76% had budgets less than $250K. The Census research also found that smaller budget entities: Experienced more significant pandemic-related budget declines; Access the lowest proportion of contributed revenue; and lack capacity to pay living wages and effectively address diversity, equity, inclusion, accessibility and social justice.

Dance/NYC invites dance making organizations and groups based in the metropolitan NYC area with operating budgets of $25,000-$250,000 to apply for two-year general operating support awards for the period of September 1, 2024 – August 31, 2026. Dance/NYC expects to award up to twenty-five (25) dance makers to support their operations and advance their resilience and ability to thrive. Benefits of the program include general operating support grants of $6,000 to $40,000 per year; professional development support in the form of online webinars and grantee cohort meetings; and goal-directed coaching and consulting to address a specific organizational challenge and support grantee infrastructure and sustainability goals in the areas of: visioning and strategic planning; fundraising and resource gathering; marketing, storytelling, and communications; fiscal management; or general administration & operations.

In order to minimize applicant labor, the application will be a two part process:

  1. Expressions of Interest (EOI) are open for submissions until June 18, 2024, 5:00 p.m. ET. This is an accessible online form assessing applicant interest and eligibility for the grant.
  2. Full Application, to be available July 9, 2024. Applicants selected through the EOI process will be invited to submit a full application. Grantees of the previous (2022-2023) iteration of the program will not be required to respond to the EOI and will automatically be invited to the next tier of the application process. 

Additional information about eligibility, application requirements, accessibility, and application support can be found at bit.ly/DAF24-26.

A pink gradient over a photo of three dancers onstage in various levels. White text over the image reads ‘Dance Advancement Fund Expressions of Interest Open until June 18, 2024 at 5:00 pm ET. The Dance/NYC logo is in the bottom right corner. Photo credit: MBDance Up and Down Her Back. Photo by Liz Schneider Cohen.