Lifestyle December 05 2025

GoodHeart | Applications open for Creative Resilience Grant

Updated December 9 2025 2 min read

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  • Kingston Creative headquarters in downtown Kingston Kingston Creative headquarters in downtown Kingston
  • Andrea Dempster Chung, co-founder and executive director of Kingston Creative. Andrea Dempster Chung, co-founder and executive director of Kingston Creative.

Kingston Creative, in partnership with the American Friends of Jamaica (AFJ), The Miami Foundation, and generous individual donors, is opening applications for the Creative Resilience Grant, an emergency financial support programme offering $30,000 stipends to artists and creative entrepreneurs whose livelihoods have been disrupted by Hurricane Melissa.

Hurricane Melissa highlighted significant vulnerabilities within Jamaica’s cultural and creative industries, a sector that contributes to national identity, tourism, and economic development, yet remains largely unprotected within traditional disaster recovery systems. The Creative Resilience Grant provides urgent relief for creatives needing to restock materials, replace equipment, and supplement income lost as a result of cancelled gigs, production downtime, or damaged materials and studio spaces.

“Creatives are at the heart of community and economic recovery,” said Andrea Dempster Chung, co-founder and executive director of Kingston Creative. “When disaster strikes, this is the sector that helps rebuild morale, that performs at the telethons to raise funds, and whose music plays on repeat to give people hope. Creatives restore the spirit of the nation and this grant is a first step in ensuring that our artists are not left behind.”

This Creative Resilience initiative continues Kingston Creative’s mission to work with key partners to strengthen Jamaica’s creative ecosystem through advocacy and inclusive economic development. Kingston Creative is also advocating for stronger protections for artists and creative livelihoods in national disaster planning. The organisation believes that supporting creatives is not charity, it is protection of Jamaica’s global cultural influence, and investment in its long-term economic recovery, as these creative entrepreneurs are the same micro, small and medium-size enterprises that form the backbone of the Jamaican economy.

“Hurricane Melissa has not only devastated our physical landscape and infrastructure, she has also disrupted the industries driving the economy of Jamaica. This includes the livelihoods of our creative entrepreneurs and arts professionals who form the bedrock of our cultural tourism economy. It is critical for us to assist them during this recovery transition and getting back on their feet,” said Marlon Hill, former trustee of The Miami Foundation and fiscal director of US Caribbean Strong Relief Fund

Applications are now open to artists, designers, performers, filmmakers, craft producers, musicians, and other cultural practitioners from the west who have been professionally active and can demonstrate hurricane-related disruption to their income or practice. Recipients will be selected each month by an independent review panel that includes members of the Cultural and Creative Industries Alliance of Jamaica (CCIAJ).

Eligible Jamaican creatives are encouraged to apply as soon as possible at: bit.ly/creativeresiliencegrant .

Kingston Creative is also inviting the public– including corporate partners and members of the Jamaican diaspora – to donate and support a creative in the western parishes through its fundraising portal at www.kingstoncreative.org/donate, developed in partnership with the American Friends of Jamaica.

“No contribution is too small to help safeguard the creatives that have put our island on the map. By supporting even one artist, you are supporting local families and communities,” Dempster Chung added.

entertainment@gleanerjm.com