September Fundholder Newsletter // Arts, Culture & Community Giving
Dear fundholder,
Welcome to the CICF Collaborative fundholder newsletter. In this issue, we’re highlighting arts and culture – a more expansive giving area than many of us realize.
But first, a couple of updates:
As part of our ongoing effort to make it easier to engage with us and explore available resources, CICF, Hamilton County Community Foundation, and Indianapolis Foundation have launched new websites. Each site reflects the organization’s unique focus and offers insight into its programs, priorities, and impact. Visit each of our sites to learn more about how each organization is serving its community.
Additionally, we now offer a giving library, which highlights nonprofits in a variety of sectors to make giving easy. This is a new resource, and we’re excited to continue growing it by featuring additional nonprofits over time. Note that we don’t endorse any specific nonprofit. Those featured span a variety of giving areas that our fundholders are passionate about.
The Fundholder Bus Tours return this year, and there’s still one opportunity available to learn about giving in Marion County:
- Marion County bus tour: Thursday, Sept. 17 at 9 a.m. This trip will take donors to organizations addressing food insecurity in Central Indiana. Register here.
Make the Most of New Charitable Giving Tax Benefits in 2025
Read our latest article to learn how the team at the CICF Collaborative can work with you and your advisors to navigate these opportunities.
Reach out to your philanthropic advisor for any help with strategy or execution.
Arts & Culture Giving
In 2024, $6,014,641, or 10% of all giving through CICF Collaborative’s donor-advised funds, supported arts and culture organizations.
Some recipients are long-running bedrock institutions, like Indiana Repertory Theatre and the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra; others are newer arts entities like GANGGANG, creators of the enormously successful BUTTER fine art fair.
Some, however, are organizations you might not realize fall under the banner of arts and culture, such as Indy’s Pattern Inc. or Noblesville Creates – two cultural advocacy groups. These entities create and coordinate arts and cultural experiences to improve quality of life, support artists’ livelihoods, strengthen local economies, and enrich experiences for visitors.
Arts and culture organizations are often some of the primary places where people gather to foster a sense of community. There is something special about sitting in a theatre with other patrons as the lights go down and the curtain rises, and you are all brought into experience a story together.
As Indiana Humanities explained in a recent Q&A with CICF, “The humanities have always mattered, and that is especially true now. They help us all bridge the spaces that divide us and are essential as we think about our American democracy on the eve of the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence.”
This act of experiencing together (all too rare, these days) is part of what makes arts and culture organizations so special and an important part of our community.
Importantly, however, arts and culture organizations are essential economic drivers for any community. In fact, a recent report from the Indy Arts Council showed that in the 13-month period from 2022 to 2023, the arts and culture sector drove $524 million in economic impact to the region . The arts bring people into different neighborhoods to eat and explore. It creates opportunities for shops to welcome people and local businesses to thrive.
Nolen V. Bivens, president and CEO of Americans for the Arts:
Arts and culture organizations have a powerful ability to attract and hold dollars in the community. They employ people locally, purchase goods and services from nearby businesses, and produce the authentic cultural experiences that are magnets for visitors, tourists, and new residents. When we invest in nonprofit arts and culture, we strengthen our economy and build more livable communities.
These secondary benefits are partly why CICF collaborated with Indy Arts Council recently to conduct a survey of arts venues across Central Indiana (to be released later this year). With the data collected, nonprofit arts producers, artists, venue owners, and even developers can better meet Central Indiana’s demand for artistic and cultural experiences and help enliven neighborhoods and bring people together in new ways.
Upcoming Events
Join us for upcoming events across the CICF Collaborative
Wednesday, Sept. 17, from 9 a.m. – 1 p.m.: Marion County Fundholder Bus Tour with a Focus on Food Insecurity – Register Now
Thursday, Nov. 6, from 5 – 9 p.m: Women’s Fund of Central Indiana presents Power of Women with Glennon Doyle –Tables Available
Youth Philanthropy Corner
Redefining Philanthropy: Helping Kids See Themselves as Changemakers
Philanthropy, rooted in the Greek idea of “love of humanity,” is not just for adults. It is a way of living that kids can embrace, too. Seeds of Caring shows how even the youngest among us can step into roles as helpers, advocates, and givers.
From volunteering and acts of kindness to raising funds or speaking up for others, children can learn that their voices and actions matter. Parents and caregivers can guide them by modeling generosity, encouraging advocacy, and weaving giving into everyday habits. Stories of young changemakers in Central Indiana, like Moe, who raised $680 for snack bags for unhoused neighbors, or three friends who funded diapers through a lemonade stand, prove that kids’ small steps create real impact.
As Brandy Jemczura, founder of Seeds of Caring, explains, redefining philanthropy for kids nurtures empathy, courage, and responsibility.
Philanthropy Toolkit
Grantee Research and Recommendations
As grantmakers ourselves, our teams are uniquely familiar with the local landscape of nonprofits. We can provide information on specific organizations you are interested in, make recommendations within a category you are looking to impact, and vet organizations.
Giving Library
The Giving Library is a resource hub highlighting nonprofits in a variety of sectors to make giving easy. This is a new resource, and we’re excited to continue growing it by featuring additional nonprofits over time. Note that we don’t endorse any specific nonprofit. Those featured span a variety of giving areas that our fundholders are passionate about. Learn more.
Site Visits
Want to see an organization in action or get behind-the-scenes access? Let us coordinate an opportunity to see the work, meet the team, and learn more!
Succession Planning
There are various options for maintaining your fund’s legacy after your lifetime, from passing to future generations to being allocated to specific organizations or general impact areas. Working closely with in-house legal counsel, our philanthropy teams can help you explore and establish a plan for your fund.
Family Philanthropy
Engaging your family in your philanthropic work makes it more meaningful for them, you, and even the organizations you support. We would love to advise you on strategies involving your young or adult children, or even your grandchildren.
Values, Interests, and Purpose Exercise
This unique exercise, facilitated by our philanthropic advisors, is designed to help you identify and narrow a purpose for your fund. By exploring the alignment of your family’s values and the causes you care about, we can help outline key areas of impact for your fund, complete with a custom mission/purpose statement to help guide your grantmaking.
Fund Growth Support
We offer assistance with a variety of complicated assets at no additional charge and can support strategies that are a win-win for you and for the community as you grow your fund.
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