Giving Compass' Take:
- Researchers document the severe impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on BIPOC artists and creative workers struggling with creative productivity.
- How can donors seek out and support BIPOC artists and advocate for the arts during this time?
- Learn more about the role of arts and philanthropy during COVID-19.
What is Giving Compass?
We connect donors to learning resources and ways to support community-led solutions. Learn more about us.
In the initial days of the pandemic, I—like many of you, I’m sure—imagined that I’d have so much more time to create. As a writer, I envisioned using what would have been my commute to crank out the draft of my next novel. However, my good intentions quickly faded as the reality of living through a pandemic set in.
I find some comfort in knowing that I’m not alone. Our survey of artists and creative workers found that 64% experienced a decrease in their creative productivity during the pandemic. Much of this decrease is due to logistical reasons: in-person events have been cancelled, venues have been closed. Additionally, artists are finding that their time is being spent on other responsibilities: homeschooling kids, taking care of elderly parents, or sifting through grant or loan applications to supplement lost income.
Plus, it’s hard to create when everything around you feels like a fire that needs to be put out. Perhaps not surprisingly, over half (53%) responded that their decline in productivity was due to stress, anxiety, and depression about the state of the world, and 19% said that their health or their family’s health had been impacted by COVID-19, preventing them from working. This last finding was true for 25% of BIPOC respondents, compared to 15% of white respondents. Within the BIPOC respondents, the top two most affected groups were artists who identify as Indigenous (30%) and Black (26%).
Though this post and previous ones in this series have demonstrated how much artists and creative workers are hurting, we still found that 77% are using their creative practice to help their community get through the pandemic. This is especially true of BIPOC artists (82%), and most seen in Black artists (87%) and disabled, Black artists (89%).
Read the full article about BIPOC artists by Isaac Fitzsimons at ARTS Blog.