The Terra Foundation uses its endowment to award grants for exhibitions, fellowships, symposia, research, publications, and academic programs, with a special focus on international initiatives and local Chicago initiatives. It works closely with educators, scholars, curators, and museums. Despite the closure of the Museum in 2004, the Foundation continues to actively collect paintings, sculptures, works on paper, and other objects representing achievement in American art from the late eighteenth century to 1945. The collection currently comprises hundreds of works by artists such as
John Singleton Copley,
James McNeill Whistler,
Mary Cassatt,
Winslow Homer,
Marsden Hartley, and
Edward Hopper. The Foundation lends these works to institutions and exhibitions worldwide and maintains a comprehensive database of the collection. A selection of Terra Foundation paintings remains on long-term loan to the
Art Institute of Chicago, and the Art Institute also houses the Foundation's collection of works on paper. In 2007, the Terra Foundation teamed with the
Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation to take "Art in America: 300 Years of Innovation" to Beijing and Shanghai. In 2018, it organized Art Design Chicago, a year-long cultural programming initiative that drew 2.5 million people. ==Management==