Senior leaders and other employees left the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) en masse this week. This news comes on the heels of the Trump administration effectively shuttering the agency, with a proposed budget proposal cancellation for the 2026 fiscal year and redistribution of said funding.
Among those departing are all ten directors who oversee grants across various disciplines of the arts, including museums, theater, design, and folk and traditional arts, the Washington Post reported.
“We are processing a lot of complex emotions in this moment, as we imagine you are too in light of recent agency developments, but know that we remain unwavering in our overall support of all of you and the critical work you do,” wrote the director of literary arts and three of her colleagues in that division in an email from the LitNet literary coalition.
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Michael Orlove, director of state, regional and local partnerships, and international activities and Ayanna Hudson, the agency’s chief strategy, programs and engagement officer also announced their exits.
Officials who oversaw the Native arts and grants for Challenge America, which aimed to help “underserved communities” and was canceled in February, are also leaving, along with the artistic-discipline directors; many specialists who reviewed grant applications and made funding recommendations have also retired or resigned. The full extent of these “coerced resignations”, however, has not been fully realized.
“Following the budget release, grantees that fell outside of the Administration’s priorities began receiving abrupt grant termination notices — over 50% of open NEA awards are being terminated,” the American Federation of Government Employees Local 3403, which represents employees at the NEA, said. “While these cuts benefit Trump’s agenda, they are detrimental to organizations that provide vital arts programming and arts education to communities nationwide, especially in rural communities.”
While there has been emergency funding efforts offered as a kind of band-aid, it remains unclear how many art organizations will shutter nationwide as a result of these funding cuts.