Kapulani Landgraf

Impact Award for Native American Art • 2024

Yoshie Sakai

Grants for Visual Artists • 2024

SaraNoa Mark

Grants for Visual Artists • 2024

Laura Nova

Grants for Visual Artists • 2024

Morel Doucet

Grants for Visual Artists • 2024

Elizabeth Alexander

Grants for Visual Artists • 2024

Margaret Jacobs

Grants for Visual Artists • 2024

Shirin Towfiq

Grants for Visual Artists • 2024

Autumn Knight

Grants for Visual Artists • 2024

Samira Yamin

Grants for Visual Artists • 2024

Brooks Turner

Grants for Visual Artists • 2024

The Harpo Foundation was established in 2006 by artist Ed Levine to support emerging and under-recognized visual artists. Through grants and residency programs, the Foundation seeks to affirm the centrality of the artist in the world of art, encourage new modes of making and thinking about art, and expand inclusivity and equitable representation in the visual arts. 

The Foundation also preserves Ed Levine’s creative legacy to provide access to the art and ideas of an unconventional thinker who extended the experience of art-making in unexpected and adventuresome ways. 

Ronald Athey

Natalie Marie Ball

Yasmine Nasser Diaz

June Edmonds
Jennifer Moon

Anja Marais

Marie Watt

Jessica Segall

Grants for Visual Artists

The Grants for Visual Artists award provides direct support to under-recognized artists 21 years or older.

The Impact Award for Native American Art

The Harpo Foundation now offers an annual $25,000 fellowship to amplify the contributions of under-recognized Native American contemporary visual artists. 

Back River Road Residency Retreat

The Back River Road Residency Retreat was established by the Harpo Foundation to provide time and space for artists to extend their work by engaging with the natural environment in a rural setting at Ed Levine’s former summer home in South Royalton, Vermont.

Ed Levine

In 2006, Ed Levine established the Harpo Foundation as an artist-endowed non-profit to support visual artists who are under-recognized by the field. 

Vermont Studio Center Fellowship

Since 2011, the foundation has awarded two residency fellowships to Native American visual artists at the Vermont Studio Center to support the development of visual artists and the potential for inter-cultural dialog.