EIN 56-1152286

The Harvey B Gantt Center for African-Ammerican Arts Culture

IRS 501(c) type
501(c)(3)
Num. employees
24
Year formed
1974
Most recent tax filings
2023-06-01
Description
The Harvey B. Gantt Center for african-american Arts + Culture exists to present, preserve and promote african American art, Culture and history for The education and enlightenment for all. The Center serves as a community epicenter for music, dance, theater, visual art, film, Arts education programs, literature and community outreach.
Also known as...
Charlotte Mecklenburg Afro-American Cultural and Service Center; Afro-American Cultural Center
Total revenues
$3,103,194
2023
Total expenses
$3,182,261
2023
Total assets
$10,590,840
2023
Num. employees
24
2023

Program areas at The Harvey B Gantt Center for African-Ammerican Arts Culture

Institutional focuscelebrating its 50th anniversary in 2024, The Gantt Center is a private, 501c3 non-profit museum focused on multidisciplinary art mediums. The 46,500 sq. Ft. Center houses three galleries; programs, and presentations; a multipurpose theater/lecture hall; a digital Arts studio; a rooftop terrace; administration offices; an art preparation area; and on-site art storage. The building, located in The historic brooklyn neighborhood of Charlotte, nc, is a key structure of The levine Center for The Arts, a corporate and Cultural campus featuring four newly constructed Cultural facilities: three museums, which include The Gantt Center, and a performing Arts center.named for Harvey B. Gantt, The prominent Charlotte architect, community leader, and former mayor of Charlotte, The Gantt Center is housed in an award-winning structure (aia north carolina honor award, 2010). Nearly 400,000 people have visited The Center since The facility opened in 2009, and approximately 50,000 visit (in-person) annually. Formally known as The Afro-American Cultural Center, it began in 1974 as a Cultural festival. Dr. mary harper and dr. bertha maxwell roddey, faculty members with The black studies department at unc Charlotte, saw a need to preserve The african-american history, heritage, and traditions that were being lost to urban renewal. Through their leadership and with The support of other community leaders, The Gantt Center became a place where african americans could continue to learn about their heritage and gain an awareness of The contributions of other minority groups to The region. The Gantt Center is The permanent home of The john and vivian hewitt collection. Acquired by bank of america and pledged to The Center in 1998, The hewitt collection is The cornerstone of The Gantt Center's permanent collection. The Gantt Center currently maintains a collection of more than 500 objects, including paintings, textiles, books, and historical documents.
Exhibitions and programmingexhibitionsthe Gantt Center's artistic vision exemplifies The use of "Arts as activism" while embracing innovation and intellectual thought, essential ingredients to fulfilling The critical need for a more vibrant Charlotte. As an innovative institution that prides itself on The quality of artistic works and programs presented to The community, The foundation of our vision lies on The premise that african-american art and Culture, although under-represented and drastically underfunded, must claim and own its place among mainstream Cultural institutions. The Gantt's iei focuses directly on access, inclusion and equity issues in The community, which has served to heighten our awareness internally and shifted our organizational strategies and practices. We ensure that our exhibitions align with The most pressing needs of our community, as well as provide a platform for education through The lens of artists, as seen in exhibitions such as choose your weapon, visual vanguard, welcome to brookhill, jamel shabazz: reflections of a people and visible man: art and black male subjectivity.modain may 2023, The Gantt Center opened The mecca of digital Arts (moda) digital Arts studio, which has successfully cultivated and established community connections to support mentorship, career choices, and exposure to existing and emerging technologies for local youth. This initiative served as a valuable community asset, fostering The exploration of digital Arts for emerging artists. The studio space was built to accommodate three key programming areas: photography, film/videography, and other related digital Arts disciplines such as animation, illustration, character design, and ar/vr. A dedicated staff member assigned to manage The digital Arts studio, supporting The creative faculty collective, teaching artists, and developing relevant and substantive programming curricula to ensure equitable community access to digital art instruction and resources.family firstthe Gantt Center offers educational and artistic programs for adults and schoolchildren of all ages. Our family first program, sponsored by novant health, has allowed us to design programs primarily for students between The ages of 5 and 13. On The first saturday of each month, children and their families can engage in artistic and Cultural activities and workshops that meet them where they are. Past family-first activities have included theatre Arts, dance, mask-making, music-making, spoken word, poetry, painting, collage-making, and various other art forms.k-12 students educational programmingat The core of our educational programming is The newly developed envision me program, launched in The fall of 2020 in partnership with charlotte-mecklenburg schools. Envision me aims to reach more students and provide access to high-quality creative experiences for title 1 school students. This program provides access to valuable experiences with state-of-the-art equipment that utilizes The Arts to build confidence, improve critical thinking, and ignite students' passion for learning across multiple subject areas. Students will engage in twice-weekly workshops with a selected artist in residence.gantt teacher institute: building equitable classroomsin partnership with charlotte-mecklenburg schools, The Gantt Center's teacher institute is a one-day experience designed to help teachers build more equitable classrooms. Recently, as a foundation for Cultural proficiency learning, The Gantt commissioned works by photographer and image activist alvin c. jacobs called welcome to brookhill. Through this and other thought-provoking exhibition projects like question bridge, teachers explore themes such as racism, gentrification, health, wealth, and education to help them identify their own biases. This process of self-discovery supports a better understanding of The issues marginalized students of color cope with outside of The classroom and how those issues can impact learning and behavior within The classroom. Gantt teacher institute sessions leverage exhibitions to increase engagement and discourse between educators to deepen their capacity for understanding and navigating differences in The classroom.
Initiative for equity + innovationin The fall of 2018, The Gantt Center launched its initiative for equity and innovation, or iei, as a strategic and permanent response to The nationally viewed riots that ensued in 2016 as a result of The shooting of keith lamont scott, a black man killed by charlotte-mecklenburg police. Our strategy is to be proactive rather than reactive in our approaches to effect change. Through iei, we create Cultural experiences and engage The community in conversations that build awareness about The systematic oppression that has long affected black people and communities of color. Although historical contexts of social justice are explored, The premise of iei is primarily solution-based. Harvard's chetty study further shaped our strategy to implement The initiative, which ranked Charlotte 50 out of 50 in economic mobility among The nation's largest cities. The chetty study, along with The 2016 "uprising," put a spotlight on longstanding racial divides and undeniable barriers to economic mobility, quality education, and fair access to resources and opportunity.we are Charlotte's largest and most prominent black-led nonprofit organization and one of The region's foremost Arts institutions. Thirty-five percent (35%) of our city's population identifies as black, and they disproportionately bear The intergenerational impact of inequities. Our goal was to create a permanent institutional strategy that would allow us to adapt to The systemic needs of The black community. The initiative encourages all of us to answer The tough questions and to be a part of The solutions that promote a more just society for black people in america. Iei is, therefore, built upon six pillars:1. Leverage The Arts to explore social issues, diffuse tensions, and introduce creative responses2. Heighten public awareness on issues of opportunity, fairness and justice;3. Engage The public on timely topics and community concerns4. Deepen capacity for understanding and navigating difference5. Equip The next generation with knowledge and tools6. Empower a broad range of partners across disciplines to function effectively as allieschange is unachievable if members of The Charlotte community are ill-informed or uneducated about 1) The societal problems that thwart marginalized communities and 2) The resources and approaches that can effect change. With iei, The Gantt Center is boldly stepping up to address racial equity and opportunity issues through various african-american art forms and with creative experiences that educate by challenging biases, regressive ideas, and rigid mindsets. Iei has produced many outreach opportunities for us to connect with diverse audiences regionally in a more profound way. With The launch of iei, we continue to offer experiential learning sessions to corporate and community groups rooted in our exhibitions and focused on equity and unconscious biases. These learning sessions include interactive activities, guided tours, and q&a sessions. An array of professional, community, and corporate groups such as nascar, leadership Charlotte, turner construction, ymca, crva, Charlotte rescue mission, and The city of Charlotte's citizen leadership academy have participated.

Who funds The Harvey B Gantt Center for African-Ammerican Arts Culture

Grants from foundations and other nonprofits
GrantmakerDescriptionAmount
The Wallace FoundationA Planning Grant To Prepare for Implementation Work As Part of A New Arts Initiative.$449,000
Greater Charlotte Cultural TrustArts & Culture$298,551
John S. and James L. Knight FoundationTo Expand the Reach of the Harvey B. Gantt Center for African-American Arts + Culture Through Support for A Robust Digital Team With A Focus on A New Approach To Programming and Community Engagement.$180,000
...and 8 more grants received

Personnel at The Harvey B Gantt Center for African-Ammerican Arts Culture

NameTitleCompensation
Bonita BufordPresident and Chief Executive Officer$142,000
Chanel DavisChief Experience Officer / Vice President , Events + Visitor$109,975
Ingrid Travis JamesDirector of Marketing and Communications
Martin J. McNeeseDirector of Technology and Innovation
Aja RobertsDirector of Institutional Advancement
...and 13 more key personnel

Financials for The Harvey B Gantt Center for African-Ammerican Arts Culture

RevenuesFYE 06/2023
Total grants, contributions, etc.$2,751,275
Program services$131,660
Investment income and dividends$65,455
Tax-exempt bond proceeds$0
Royalty revenue$0
Net rental income$29,764
Net gain from sale of non-inventory assets$0
Net income from fundraising events$0
Net income from gaming activities$0
Net income from sales of inventory$63,841
Miscellaneous revenues$61,199
Total revenues$3,103,194

Form 990s for The Harvey B Gantt Center for African-Ammerican Arts Culture

Fiscal year endingDate received by IRSFormPDF link
2023-062024-05-14990View PDF
2022-062023-03-17990View PDF
2021-062022-02-24990View PDF
2020-062021-04-15990View PDF
2019-062021-01-28990View PDF
...and 9 more Form 990s
Data update history
September 21, 2024
Received grants
Identified 3 new grant, including a grant for $298,551 from Greater Charlotte Cultural Trust
July 21, 2024
Updated personnel
Identified 5 new personnel
July 18, 2024
Posted financials
Added Form 990 for fiscal year 2023
June 30, 2024
Used new vendors
Identified 1 new vendor, including
May 18, 2024
Received grants
Identified 3 new grant, including a grant for $449,000 from The Wallace Foundation
Nonprofit Types
Arts, culture, and humanities nonprofitsMuseumsCharities
Issues
EducationArts, cultural, and humanitiesAfrican Americans
Characteristics
State / local levelReceives government fundingEndowed supportCommunity engagement / volunteeringTax deductible donationsAccepts online donations
General information
Address
551 S Tryon St
Charlotte, NC 28202
Metro area
Charlotte-Concord-Gastonia, NC-SC
County
Mecklenburg County, NC
Website URL
ganttcenter.org/ 
Phone
(704) 374-1565
Facebook page
harvey-b-gantt-center-for-african-american-arts-culture 
Twitter profile
@hbganttcenter 
IRS details
EIN
56-1152286
Fiscal year end
June
Taxreturn type
Form 990
Year formed
1974
Eligible to receive tax-deductible contributions (Pub 78)
Yes
Categorization
NTEE code, primary
A23: Cultural, Ethnic Awareness
NAICS code, primary
7121: Museums, Historical Sites, and Similar Institutions
Parent/child status
Independent
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