The Hall Art Foundation appears to concentrate its philanthropy on sustaining contemporary art museum operations, demonstrated by a single major grant enabling an established exhibition venue to continue its charitable work. The foundation favors direct institutional support that preserves exhibition capacity and public access to contemporary art. Its giving is programmatic and institution-focused rather than broadly distributed across many small projects.
Highly concentrated: a single very large grant to one institutional beneficiary, indicating targeted, major-investment support rather than many small or diversified grants.
A single 2025 grant of $5,842,522 to Schloss Derneburg Museum to help it continue as a contemporary art museum captures the Hall Art Foundation Inc’s approach: large institutional support aimed at keeping exhibition venues operating. The foundation’s recent giving is tied to museum continuity, public access, and the preservation of contemporary art collections rather than a broad mix of small awards. In the same year, it also supported Mass Moca Foundation Inc in North Adams, Massachusetts with $41,245 for the same charitable purpose, showing a consistent preference for direct support to established museum operators. The foundation is a private foundation with annual grants of $5,883,767 and total assets of $53,477,019 on the latest 990 year on file. Its grantmaking is centered on contemporary art museum operations and exhibition programming, with recipient organizations serving museum visitors, artists, and local communities. The active loan program further reinforces this pattern by facilitating loans from its own collection and that of the Halls to public institutions worldwide.
Hall Art Foundation Inc’s giving is closely aligned with museum operations and exhibition stewardship. In contemporary art museum support, it made a $5,842,522 grant to Schloss Derneburg Museum for enabling the organization to continue its charitable purpose as a contemporary art museum. It also gave $41,245 to Mass Moca Foundation Inc for the same purpose. The active loan program adds another layer to that work by collaborating with public institutions around the world to facilitate loans from its own collection and that of the Halls. The program focuses on contemporary art, postwar art, museum exhibitions, and collection loans, which points to a practical role in keeping exhibitions visible and collections in circulation.
The recent grant pattern is highly concentrated: the two listed 2025 grants are $41,245 and $5,842,522, a range that shows one very large institutional award and one much smaller support grant. The foundation is a private foundation, not a grantmaker to individuals, and it does not make program-related investments. The same charitable purpose appears across the recent grants, suggesting repeat support for museum continuity rather than one-off thematic experiments. Its active loan program also indicates an ongoing institutional relationship with public museums rather than an open application process.
$5.9M
$53.5M
$9.5M
$7.8M
About 100% of grants go to recipients in VT.
Top 2 recipient countries by grant volume for Hall Art Foundation.
| Rank | Country | Grants | Total | Share |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Germany | 1 | $5.8M | 50.0% |
| 2 | United StatesDomestic | 1 | $41K |
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Notable grantees: Schloss Derneburg Museum
Grantmaking is geographically local in the sense of recipient reporting: 100% of grants go to recipients in the HQ state of Vermont. The named recent grants are to Derneburg and North Adams, Massachusetts, and the recipient country distribution shows one grant in Germany and one in the United States. That pattern fits a small set of institutional partners rather than a broad geographic spread.
Its recent grants focus on contemporary art museum operations and exhibition support. The largest listed grant went to Schloss Derneburg Museum to enable it to continue its charitable purpose as a contemporary art museum, and a second grant supported Mass Moca Foundation Inc for the same purpose.
The active loan program is described as a collaboration with public institutions around the world to facilitate loans from its own collection and that of the Halls, and it is marked as not accepting unsolicited requests.
In the recent grants listed, awards ranged from $41,245 to $5,842,522. The median of those two grants is $2,941,883.50, showing a split between one very large museum support grant and one much smaller award.
The foundation supports established museum and exhibition institutions. Recent recipients include Schloss Derneburg Museum and Mass Moca Foundation Inc, and the loan program is designed for public institutions handling contemporary art, postwar art, museum exhibitions, and collection loans.
2025
Source: IRS Form 990-PF, fiscal year 2025.
Recipient country reflects the grantee's headquarters per IRS 990-PF and Schedule F filings, not the program's implementation country.
Most recent grants reported to the IRS.
| Recipient | Location | Amount | Year | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SCHLOSS DERNEBURG MUSEUM | DERNEBURG | $5,842,522 | 2025 | TO ENABLE THE ORGANIZATION TO CONTINUE ITS CHARITABLE PURPOSE AS A CONTEMPORARY ART MUSEUM |
| MASS MOCA FOUNDATION INC | NORTH ADAMS, MA | $41,245 | 2025 | TO ENABLE THE ORGANIZATION TO CONTINUE ITS CHARITABLE PURPOSE AS A CONTEMPORARY ART MUSEUM |
SCHLOSS DERNEBURG MUSEUM
$5,842,522TO ENABLE THE ORGANIZATION TO CONTINUE ITS CHARITABLE PURPOSE AS A CONTEMPORARY ART MUSEUM
MASS MOCA FOUNDATION INC
$41,245TO ENABLE THE ORGANIZATION TO CONTINUE ITS CHARITABLE PURPOSE AS A CONTEMPORARY ART MUSEUM