Oakland Asian Cultural Center
For General Operating Support
-
Amount$45,000
-
Program
-
Date Awarded11/30/2010
-
Term24.0 Months
-
Type of SupportGeneral Support/Organization
Strategies
Overview
The Oakland Asian Cultural Center (OACC) is the only pan-Asian culture and arts center in the City of Oakland and Alameda County. Located in Oakland’s Chinatown district, the organization annually serves 30,000 community members through a diverse suite of free and low cost programs that includes festival celebrations, multi-generational classes and workshops in a variety of Asian art forms, a residency program that fosters emerging and established local artists, and collaborations with community-based organizations. Now facing precipitous declines in its revenue, the organization plans to reduce its programming and staffing to align expenses with revenues, build a three-month cash reserve, and engage the board and remaining staff in intensive donor cultivation.
About the Grantee
Grantee Website
www.oacc.cc
Address
388 Ninth Street, Suite 290, Oakland, CA, 94607-4295, United States
Grants to this Grantee
for general operating support
The API Cultural Center, better known as the Oakland Asian Cultural Center, is a community center dedicated to exploring, teaching, and presenting the arts and culture of diverse local Asian and Pacific Islander communities. In a typical year, the organization serves more than 7,500 people through festivals, performances, classes, workshops, screenings, exhibitions, and lectures. This grant to API Cultural Center supports the Performing Arts Program’s Communities strategy.
for general operating support
API Cultural Center, doing business as Oakland Asian Cultural Center, fosters intergenerational and cross-cultural dialogue and strengthens the cultural identities that are the underpinning of the vibrant East Bay Asian community. The organization’s programming includes three annual festivals celebrating Asian and Pacific Islander traditional and contemporary artistic practices, weekly classes for all generations and families, an artist-in-residence program, visual arts exhibitions, in-school education residencies, and a host of community collaborations. With continued support, this cultural hub would improve its financial stability, plan for capital improvements, and deepen and expand its thriving programs.