, at Versailles in September 2010 ACC provides
grants for individual fellowships, projects and organizations, graduate studies, and travel. They support activities that involve cultural immersion; cross-cultural engagement; and relationship building, collaboration, or exchange of best practices among arts professionals. In addition to funding, it is common for grantees to receive mentoring and personal introductions, and access to an international network of alumni. ACC provides grants from Asia to the U.S., the U.S. to Asia, and intra-Asia. Regions include:
Afghanistan,
Bangladesh,
Bhutan,
Brunei,
Cambodia,
China,
East Timor,
Hong Kong,
India,
Indonesia,
Japan,
Korea,
Laos,
Macau,
Malaysia,
Mongolia,
Myanmar,
Nepal,
Pakistan, the
Philippines,
Singapore,
Sri Lanka,
Taiwan,
Thailand, the
United States, and
Vietnam. Fields include:
archaeology,
architecture,
art history,
arts administration,
arts criticism,
conservation,
crafts,
curation,
dance,
ethnomusicology,
film/
video/
photography,
literature,
museum studies,
music,
theater, and
visual arts. In addition to grants, ACC organizes public programs to facilitate understanding and dialogue around cultural exchange. This includes forums, convenings, and public programs such as the East-West Dialogue series, Cultural Conversations, and inDialogue. In 2000 and 2003, ACC organized Forums on Arts and Culture in the Mekong Region with funding from the Rockefeller Foundation, and in 2017, the
ACC Forum: Making the Case for Cultural Exchange through funding by the Henry Luce Foundation. In 2018, ACC, La MaMa E.T.C., and Beijing Contemporary Art Foundation co-organized a panel on international artist residences. East-West Dialogue is an annual lecture series engaging leaders from the arts and cultural fields in Asia and the West. It was established in 2013 through an endowment gift from Tsuneko and
Shoji Sadao. Speakers have included author
Pico Iyer, writer and editor
Ian Buruma, American theater director
Peter Sellars, Japanese architect
Fumihiko Maki (ACC 1976), president of Japan Society of Boston Peter Grilli, and architect
Kengo Kuma (ACC 1985). In 2021, ACC hosted its first online festival
East West Fest, culminating in an East-West Dialogue with Pultizer Prize-winning author
Viet Thanh Nguyen (ACC 2010) and multidisciplinary artist
Tiffany Chung (ACC 2015). Cultural Conversations is an in-house lecture series that features ACC alumni and their work. Conversations have been led by alumni such as wooden boat builder Douglas Brooks (ACC multiple grants 2008-2017), Shiro Nakane and the
Japan Society (ACC multiple grants 1964-2015), artist
Oscar Oiwa (ACC 2001),
shamisen performer Hidejiro Honjo (ACC 2016), Taiwanese choreographer
Cheng Tsung-lung (ACC 2011), composer Matt Welch (ACC 2016), and scholar Urmila Mohan (ACC 2018). In 2020, ACC launched inDialogue, an online public program series aimed at maintaining international connectivity during the pandemic and beyond. Speakers have included poet-lawyer
Reginald Dwayne Betts, fiber and social practice artist
Aram Han Sifuentes (ACC 2019), visual artist
Weston Teruya (ACC 2018), playwrights
Candace Chong Mui Ngam (ACC 2004, 2012) and
David Henry Hwang (ACC 2011, 2012), artist
Koki Tanaka (ACC 2003), musician
Kyaw Kyaw Naing, and multidisciplinary artist
Leeroy New (ACC 2015).
Program timeline Below is a list of ACC programs. Those established through an initial donation, grant, or endowment have funding individuals or organizations noted in parentheses.
1983: ACC Japan-United States Program (Seiji Tsutsumi and the Seibu Saison group) • Ford Foundation Fellowship Program for individuals documenting and preserving the traditional arts of Asia (Ford Foundation) • Starr Foundation Visual Arts Program for artists and art specialists from Asia to travel to the United States (Starr Foundation)
1984: Samuel H. Kress Foundation Fellowships for American art history students conducting dissertation research in Asia (Samuel H. Kress Foundation)
1985: The Humanities Fellowship Program for American scholars and students carrying out research in Asia (National Endowment for the Humanities)
1986 The Hong Kong Arts Program—now called the China, Hong Kong and Macau Program—for artists, students and scholars from Hong Kong to research, study and create work in the United States (Asian Oceanic Group, British American Tobacco Company (Hong Kong) Limited and the Lee Hysan Foundation)
1987: The Asian Art and Religion Fellowship Program for American scholars, specialists and artists to undertake research and projects in Asia involving the intersection or religion and the arts (Laurance S. Rockefeller Jr.)
1993: The Indonesian Museum Development Program—organized in collaboration with the Nusantara Jaya Foundation and the Indonesia Directorate of Museums—for Indonesian museum professionals to intern in the United States and to help with museum workshop programs in Indonesia (Ford Foundation)
1994: • The Blanchette Hooker Rockefeller Fellowship Fund Committee was organized in Japan to establish an endowment honoring the memory of the late Blanchette Hooker Rockefeller • ACC Residency Program in Asia for American scholars, artists, and professionals to research, teach, and partake in residencies in Asia (Freeman Foundation)
1995: • ACC’s Taiwan Fellowship Program for the exchange of artists, scholars, and specialists between Taiwan and the United States, as well as Taiwan and other countries in Asia (Sino-American Foundation, now the ACC Taiwan Foundation) • China On-Site Seminar Program for the exchange of American and Chinese art history students (Henry Luce Foundation) • Ock Rang Cultural Foundation Fellowship Program for cultural exchange between Korea and the U.S. and Korea and other countries in Asia
1997: • The Cambodian Artists Mentorship Program to support performing arts training programs at the Royal University of Fine Arts in Phnom Penh (Rockefeller Foundation) • The Indonesia Cultural Management Assistance Project to support the management of cultural institutions in Indonesia (Ford Foundation)
2000: • The Philippines Fellowship Program for the exchange of artists, scholars, and specialists between the Philippines and the U.S., and the Philippines and other countries in Asia (ACC Philippines Foundation)
2001: The Mekong Region Fellowship Program to assist individual artists, scholars, and specialists from Burma, Cambodia, Laos, Thailand, Vietnam, and China’s Yunnan Province to undertake research, training and creative projects in the United States or Asia (Rockefeller Foundation)
2005: The Mandarin Oriental Fellowship to support the preservation of indigenous arts, cultures, and traditions of Asia (Mandarin Oriental Foundation)
2007: American Artists and Museum Professionals Program (Henry Luce Foundation)
2008: The Starr Foundation Performing Arts Program for individuals and institutions working in the contemporary performing arts in Asia to travel to the United States (The Starr Foundation)
2011: Arts in Action Program to support arts communities in need of assistance for rebuilding after natural disasters (Mikimoto)
2012: The Elizabeth J. McCormack Fund was established as an endowment to support the general operations of ACC
2019: The ACC/BCAF Contemporary Arts Fellowship Program for exchange of artists from China and the United States (Beijing Contemporary Art Foundation) == John D. Rockefeller 3rd Award ==