TX 501(c)(3)
SAN ANTONIO MUSEUM OF ART
A510: Arts, Culture, Humanities
$9,766,075 budget
Filed 2023
80% data quality
The San Antonio Museum of Art brings people together with art by collecting, preserving, and presenting significant works of art representing a broad range of history and cultures, advancing human connection and understanding, and inspiring curiosity, creativity, and discovery.
Total received from foundations
$10.6M
184 grants from 68 funders
· 2016–2025
Annual revenue
$19,826,011
Annual expenses
$9,766,075
Total assets
$80,069,324
Months of operating reserves
98.4
assets / monthly burn
Funding history · IRS 990-PF public records
Who funds SAN ANTONIO MUSEUM OF ART
$10.6M
Total received
68
Distinct funders
184
Grants on record
2016–2025
Span of records
Top funders by cumulative giving
-
1
$2.51Mcumulative
-
2
$1.76Mcumulative
-
3
$1.00Mcumulative
-
4
$960Kcumulative
-
5
$789Kcumulative
-
6
$646Kcumulative
-
7
$500Kcumulative
-
8
$494Kcumulative
-
9
$250Kcumulative
-
10
$227Kcumulative
-
11
$135Kcumulative
-
12
$134Kcumulative
Where the money came from (United States)
Texas counties the money came from
6 TX counties with funders on record
- 1 Bexar
- 2 Harris
- 3 Dallas
- 4 Rockwall
- 5 Jefferson
- 6 Travis
For grant reviewers
Filing and contact details
Officer
Emily Neff
Kelso Director
Contact email
Last 990 filed
2023
most recent IRS filing
Year founded
1994
IRS ruling year
EIN
742689943
NTEE classification
A510
Arts, Culture, Humanities
From Form 990
Programs and activities
SAMA's 2024 exhibitions included: The Age of Armor: Treasures from the Higgins Armory Collection at the Worcester Art Museum, highlighting arms and armor in the golden age from the late Middle Ages to the Renaissance; Goddess Triptych Reunited, which centered three paintings by the late San Antonio-based artist Ángel Rodriguez-Díaz along with works from the Museum's Ancient Mediterranean collection, accentuating the feminine form across time, culture, and geography; Lovers & Fighters: Prints by Latino Artists in the SAMA Collection, exploring love, power, and struggle, and the significance of
SAMA creates and delivers meaningful interpretive programs that connect people to art, ideas, and each other through a dynamic exhibition calendar, comprehensive global collection, and other mission-driven offerings. With a variety of year-round initiatives for adult, family, children, university/college, and other audiences, the ~500 engagements carried out in 2024 included: a suite of docent-led tours for preK-12, collegiate, and adult audiences, including a new "off the wall" series offering fresh takes on the Museum's permanent collection; artist talks; artmaking experiences; lectures and
In 2024, on-site visitation was ~148,000, with many more visitors engaging in artworks and programming virtually. Based on annual Museum data, 44% of visitors to SAMA reside in San Antonio, Bexar County, and surrounding counties; approximately 40% are from elsewhere in Texas; and 19% are from outside the state. Approximately 48% of Museum visitors self-identify as Hispanic/Latino or Indigenous, 35% as Caucasian, and 16% as African American, Asian, and other. Eight percent (8%) identify as military with increases each year. Data from recent exhibitions indicate that approximately one-third of M
Data provenance
About this profile
Built from the IRS Business Master File, Form 990 and 990-EZ filings, and public website enrichment. Funding history is derived from IRS Form 990-PF Schedule I grant records for private foundations. Data accuracy depends on how recently the organization filed. The data-quality score reflects how many fields are populated.
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