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| Artist:Tina Winterlik |
When Does the Artist Get Paid?
By Tina Winterlik (Zipolita)
Every year, millions of dollars are announced for arts and culture funding. The press releases are always full of celebration. Organizations receive grants. Festivals receive grants. Galleries receive grants. Cultural initiatives receive grants.
The public sees headlines announcing millions of dollars flowing into the arts sector.
But there is one question I have been asking since I first started applying for arts opportunities in 1997:
When does the artist get paid?
As an artist, photographer, and content creator, I have spent decades watching organizations receive funding while artists are repeatedly asked to volunteer, donate work, provide content for exposure, or participate in unpaid opportunities.
The pattern has become so common that many artists simply accept it as normal.
An arts organization receives funding. The organization hires staff, rents office space, pays administrative expenses, develops programs, and hosts events. Then artists are invited to contribute their talent, time, and creative work, often for little or no compensation.
The justification is usually that artists will receive exposure, networking opportunities, or the chance to be part of the community.
Exposure does not pay rent.
Networking does not buy groceries.
Community does not cover the cost of art supplies.
Artists are told that funding is supporting the arts. Yet many artists continue struggling to earn enough income to continue creating.
I am not suggesting that every organization is acting in bad faith. Running cultural organizations costs money. Staff deserve fair wages. Rent, insurance, equipment, and event costs are real expenses.
However, after nearly thirty years of observing the system, I believe the public deserves greater transparency.
When a cultural organization receives public funding, citizens should be able to easily see:
- How much funding was received.
- How much was spent on administration.
- How much went toward salaries and management.
- How much was spent on facilities and operations.
- Most importantly, how much went directly to artists.
If supporting artists is the goal, then artist compensation should be one of the primary measures of success.
How many artists were paid?
What were they paid?
Were they paid fairly?
These questions should not be controversial.
Artists create the paintings, photographs, performances, music, stories, films, and cultural experiences that the public enjoys. Without artists, there is no arts sector.
Yet many artists continue to live with financial insecurity while organizations built around supporting artists continue to receive funding year after year.
I am not calling for less support for the arts.
I am calling for more support for artists.
If public funding is intended to strengthen culture, then artists themselves should be among the first to benefit.
After nearly three decades, I am still asking the same question:
When does the artist get paid?
Reflective Questions
- What does it mean to truly support artists?
- Should public arts funding prioritize artist compensation over administrative costs?
- How transparent should organizations be about how grant money is spent?
- Have you ever been asked to work for "exposure" instead of payment? How did it make you feel?
- What percentage of arts funding do you think should go directly to artists?
- How can communities ensure artists receive fair compensation for their work?
- What barriers prevent artists from earning a sustainable income?
- Should grant recipients be required to publicly report how much funding reaches artists?
- How would the arts sector change if artists were consistently paid fair rates?
- What role should governments, organizations, and the public play in supporting artists?
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"A culture that funds organizations but not artists risks losing the very creativity it claims to support." – Tina Winterlik (Zipolita)






