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The Ignite Fund Announces 2025 Cohort of Artist Grantees

$60,000 of project support for Chicago-area artists

CHICAGO, IL (October 27, 2025)— The Ignite Fund, supporting experimental and groundbreaking visual arts-based work by Chicago-area artists and artist-led collectives, has announced its 2025 cohort of grantees. Six artists and four artist-led collectives are receiving a combined total of $60,000 to support the creation and implementation of new, public-facing works.

Open to artists in Chicago’s six-county metropolitan area, The Ignite Fund received 70 applications that were reviewed by a national jury panel. The jury’s selections align with The Ignite Fund’s goal of prioritizing projects that center the visual arts, promote collaboration, raise awareness around social justice issues, engage local communities, and incorporate accessibility services in public presentations. Complete descriptions of this year’s grantee cohort and jury panel are available on the Ignite Fund website: www.ignitefund.org.

The Ignite Fund is administered by Chicago-based nonprofit organization 3Arts as part of The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts Regional Regranting Program.

The 2025 Ignite Fund grantees and projects are:

Alonso Galue (he/him): Push-On: The prophet of the extra-life ($6,000) Push-On: The prophet of the extra-life is a multidisciplinary visual arts project that looks at the possibility of a new chance in life by using gaming metaphors and post-colonial folkloric traditions. Consisting of sculptures and monumental paintings of deities from syncretic traditions this immersive and engaging project centers a pin-ball machine as an altar of the XXIst century.

Brandon Calhoun (he/him): Through Their Eyes: In the Shoes of Black Women ($6,000) Through Their Eyes: In the Shoes of Black Women is a dance layered visual installment that uncovers the process of a Black woman-led dance company. Through a street anthropology approach, filmmaker Brandon Calhoun will immerse himself in the people and work of Praize Productions Inc., a 15-year-old dance organization in Chicago. The documentation will then be shared on YouTube and at two intimate events– one at the Reva & David Logan Center for the Arts and the other at the Newberry Library.

CollⒶpse Consulting: Everyone's (A) Critic ($6,000) Everyone's (A) Critic is a new project by CollⒶpse Consulting a group of emerging artists appropriating the power of the critic to legitimize the kinds of visual art we find vital. Inspired by ‘00s artist-run initiatives at galleries such as Julius Caesar and Reena Spaulings, CollⒶpse Consulting believes that art criticism should more closely resemble an immersive art experience or subcultural party than a magazine article behind a paywall. This project is just the beginning.

Dorrah Alharbi (she/her): Objects of Memory ($6,000) Rooted in the Arab tradition of oral storytelling, Objects of Memory is an object-based oral history initiative dedicated to documenting and preserving the stories of this unique community by conducting interviews with first-generation residents, documenting their experiences in the diaspora, and recording the personal objects they have carried with them. Objects of Memory will create a visual archive, narrated through the participants' objects that tell the cultural history, memory, and identity of Little Palestine.

Kenn Cook Jr. (he/him): From The Westside, With Love – Outdoor Exhibition ($6,000) From The Westside, With Love – Outdoor Exhibition is a traveling public art project adapted from an upcoming photo zine of the same name. The exhibition brings large-scale photographs into the heart of Chicago’s West Side, transforming streets, parks, and community spaces into open-air galleries making art free and accessible to all.

Laurel Hauge (she/they): Help Me Help You ($6,000) Help Me Help You gives time back to participants by offering assistance within a designated space. Visitors are invited to use the time they might have set aside to “see art” to take care of tasks related to the maintenance of their professional, civic, and personal standings. These are often the tasks which people avoid, delay, or dread: such as updating a resume, paying a parking ticket, signing divorce papers, or other neglected forms of life’s admin. The project repositions the artist as an assistant rather than an author, transforming the exhibition space into one of quiet utility, responsiveness, and service.

Leticia Pardo (she/her): greetings from Chicagoacán (stories from within) ($6,000) greetings from Chicagoacán (stories from within) gathers oral histories and casts of domestic spaces belonging to members of Chicago’s Mexican diaspora, forming a visual and auditory archive where narratives and fragments reflect on spaces—real and imagined, present and longed for—that anchor a sense of home. The project explores how migration reshapes the built environment, and how longing, adaptation, and memory endure. Voices recorded in oral histories inform a series of casts taken from domestic surfaces, materializing these stories in both sound and architectural form.

Marimacha Monarca Press: TRANSplantas - carrying belonging ($6,000) TRANSplantas - carrying belonging is a print exchange portfolio between queer artists in community around Chicago + la Ciudad de Mexico. The exchange is organized by Tortillería Gráfica (CDMX) + Marimacha Monarca Press (Chicago). This portfolio seeks to illustrate queer ecological visions, visions that disrupt binary frameworks and recognize fluidity + otherness. Sharing print invocations for past, present + future environmental justice, cross pollination / hybridity, and human, flora + fauna transmigration. Honoring our queer ecosystems that are both as flamboyant as poison dart frogs and as underground as mycelial networks.

The Adoptea: Spill the tea ($6,000) As an all-adoptee artist collective by adoptees for adoptees, The Adoptea challenges the sugar-coated narrative of adoption and centers the adoptee diaspora through art, critical dialogue, and community-building. In this next phase, The Adoptea collective will expand its work by focusing on outreach, launching a website, and developing public programming to amplify adoptee voices.

John H. Guevara & Xavier Robles Armas: Glimmers: Latinx Illuminations ($6,000) Glimmers: Latinx Illuminations highlights the current waves of Latine visual and performative practices of today. Focusing on artists whose works are shimmering in critical brilliance, this event is both an ephemeral visual showcase, performance, and a panel discussion on Latine and LatAm artistic practices. Taking a pulse on Chicago, it hopes to not only showcase Latine and LatAm performance and contemporary art now but strengthen the national network that connects projects–across shared dialogues and labor.

For press or media inquiries, please contact Cat Tager at cat@3arts.org or 312-443-9621.

About 3Arts

Founded in 1912, with a history centered on women artists, 3Arts is a nonprofit organization that supports artists working in the performing, teaching, and visual arts in the Chicago metropolitan area, including women artists, artists of color, and Deaf and disabled artists. By providing unrestricted awards, project funding, residencies, professional development, and promotion, 3Arts helps artists take risks, experiment, and build momentum in their careers over time. Since 2007, 3Arts has supported more than 2,500 artists across all program areas, representing 66% women artists, 74% artists of color, and 17% Deaf and disabled artists working in the six-county metropolitan area, and distributed $8.2 million through our grantmaking.

For more information, please visit https://3arts.org.

About the Regional Regranting Program

The Ignite Fund is funded through the generous support of The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts Regional Regranting Program. The Regional Regranting Program was established in 2007 to recognize and support the movement of independently organized, public-facing, artist-centered activity that animates local and regional art scenes but that lies beyond the reach of traditional funding sources. The program is administered by non-profit visual art centers across the United States that work in partnership with the Foundation to fund artists’ experimental projects and collaborative undertakings.

The 39 regranting programs provide grants of up to $12,000 for the creation and presentation of new work. Programs are developed and facilitated by organizations in Albuquerque (NM), Atlanta (GA), Baltimore (MD), Buffalo (NY), Chicago (IL), Cleveland (OH), Denver (CO), Detroit (MI), Homer (AK), Honolulu (HI), Houston (TX), Indianapolis (IN), Iowa City (IA), Kansas City (MO), Knoxville (TN), Rapid City (SD), Los Angeles (CA), Medford (MA), Miami (FL), Milwaukee (WI), Minneapolis (MN), Mobile (AL), New Orleans (LA), Newark (NJ), Oklahoma City (OK), Omaha (NE), Philadelphia (PA), Tucson (AZ), Portland (ME), Portland (OR), Providence (RI), Raleigh (NC), Saint Louis (MO), Salt Lake City (UT), San Francisco (CA), San Juan (PR), Seattle (WA), Utica (MS), and Washington, DC. For more information, please visit https://warholfoundation.org/grants/regional-regranting.

About The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts

In accordance with Andy Warhol’s will, the mission of The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts is the advancement of the visual arts. The Foundation manages an innovative and flexible grants program while also preserving Warhol’s legacy through creative and responsible licensing policies and extensive scholarly research for ongoing catalogue raisonné projects. To date, the Foundation has given over $300 million in cash grants to more than 1,000 arts organizations in 49 states and abroad and has donated 52,786 works of art to 322 institutions worldwide.

For more information, please visit https://warholfoundation.org.

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