Art for Justice Fund (A4J) is announcing the launch of its archival website, available at https://artforjusticefund.org/. The new site provides a digital record of work undertaken by grantee partners and the Fund, including case studies, an impact report detailing key metrics and policy wins, and lessons learned from the Fund’s six years of grantmaking.
Designed as a time-limited, spend-down initiative, A4J ran from June 2017 to June 2023 and sought to bring artists and advocates together to end mass incarceration. The website includes a timeline of important milestones in the movement to end mass incarceration; a resource library of toolkits, reports and interactive content; and guidance for individuals, organizations and funders looking to take action in the fight to transform the criminal legal system.
A4J is excited to share a comprehensive grantee database on the site, with the hope of spurring connectivity and raising the visibility of partner artists, advocates, and organizations who are leading the movement. The site was especially designed to showcase the powerful work of grantee artists and illustrate their role in challenging and shifting narratives about mass incarceration, bearing witness to the experiences of those impacted by the criminal legal system, and inspiring new pathways to shared safety for all.
Inaugurated under the unprecedented philanthropic vision of Agnes Gund, A4J launched with $100M generated from the sale of Gund’s favorite painting, Roy Lichtenstein's Masterpiece (1962). This spurred artists, collectors, and supporters to donate an additional $27M in support of the Fund’s mission to advance policy reform, shift public narratives, and promote the leadership of formerly incarcerated people while centering art as a catalyst to transform the criminal legal system.
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