2025 Press Release

Kresge, Erb Family, and Hudson-Webber Foundations commit over $11.2M to 107 arts organizations for multiyear support

107 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. 

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. The full list of grantees is available 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 The Kresge Foundation’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.”

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.”

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. 

The Kresge Foundation 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.




Partners

Contact

For questions regarding the application, please email grants@culturesource.org.

For additional questions about funding geographies and priorities, please explore the funding partner’s details and contact information below.

Note: CultureSource serves as the administrator for DAS. CultureSource does not make funding recommendations or funding decisions.

The Kresge Foundation

Fred and Barbara Erb Family Foundation

Hudson-Webber Foundation

Be tax-exempt under section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Service or operate under a public college/university or government entity.
Not be classified as private foundations under Section 509(a) of the Internal Revenue Code.
Be headquartered and incorporated in the State of Michigan, located in and serving Wayne, Oakland or Macomb counties. Please note that some participating foundations may have narrower geographic restrictions (more detail below).
Have a mission primarily dedicated to arts, culture and creativity. Organizations that are a subsidiary or division of a larger 501(c)(3) organization must demonstrate an independent identity and governance structure. (Please see FAQ for additional attachments required for subsidiaries.)
Have a record of presenting programs for at least two years.
Employ the equivalent of at least one full-time person (please see the FAQ for how to calculate the full-time employment for your organization).
Have a current (no older than FY 2019) financial audit conducted by an independent certified public accountant. Organizations with annual budgets of less than $250,000 may provide a qualified review or IRS Form 990.
Have revenues of at least $100,000 from their most recently completed fiscal year.
Step 1 | Application Submission
Eligible organizations should submit one application. Applications are due Thursday, July 28th at 5:00pm EST.

Step 2 | Foundation Eligibility Review

Applications are shared with program staff of the Detroit Arts Support funding partners (The Kresge Foundation, Fred A. and Barbara M. Erb Family Foundation, and Hudson-Webber Foundation), who will each individually review applications for eligibility aligned with their foundation’s specific funding criteria.

Step 3 | Focus Groups

Four groups of community members (“focus groups”) each receive 20-25 applications to read. Focus group participants are connected to the regional arts and culture sector as supporters, advocates, or practitioners.  Focus group participants will not score applications or provide funding recommendations—again, each foundation will have their own process for reviewing applications against their own funding priorities. Instead, focus groups will surface characteristics and qualities they notice about applying organizations, highlighting points of perceived strength, fascination, and curiosity. The focus group dialogue is meant to provide helpful insights about the state of cultural organizations and reflect a useful range of perceptions about organizations as they present themselves in application materials. Applicants will be able to listen to the focus group discussion of their application. Scheduling details will be announced following the application deadline: Thursday, July 28th at 5:00pm EST. Apart from focus group participants and DAS funding partners, your application information will be kept confidential. Focus Group Participants:
  • Louis Aguilar
  • Racheal Allen
  • Rachel Bendit
  • Annmarie Borucki
  • Sandy Burnley
  • Cézanne Charles
  • Mark Clague
  • Shamyle Maya Dobbs
  • Khalilah Burt Gaston
  • Mia Khim
  • Dustin McClellan
  • Peter Robinson
  • Buzz Thomas

Step 4: Financial Health Assessment

Susan Nelson of the nonprofit consulting group TDC performs a financial health assessment of applying organizations and shares findings with the DAS funding partners. TDC will also be available to review results with organizations on an individual basis (an amazing and valuable opportunity for all applicants to gain insights about their organization). Scheduling details will be announced following the application deadline: Thursday, July 28th at 5:00pm EST.

Step 5: Decisions and Notification

Each DAS funding partner works with their internal staff and board to finalize their funding decisions. Individual grant sizes will range from $5,000 to $100,000 per year. All grants will be made in three-year commitments. Foundations will collaboratively announce these decisions in the fall of 2022. Applicants will be notified by email and CultureSource will post funding plans on this website.

Note: Not all organizations will be selected for funding by each funding partner, and selection is not merit based.

Get Started Here

Applications Due By Thursday, July 28th at 5:00pm EST

Please watch the recording of the Detroit Arts Support Info Session below

Contact

CultureSource is helping DAS partners administer this initiative. CultureSource is not making funding recommendations or making funding decisions.

For questions regarding the application, please email grants@culturesource.org.
For additional questions about funding geographies and priorities, please explore the funding partner’s details and contact information below.

The Kresge Foundation

Fred A. and Barbara M. Erb Family Foundation

Hudson-Webber Foundation