Partners and governance.
The Acarigua chapter brings together a regional cultural institution and a methodological partner in a structured collaboration. The project is also designed to attract complementary partners — sponsors, foundations, allied institutions and corporate supporters — that can expand its reach and sustainability.
Two complementary roles.
MAAA — Implementing institution
Fundación Museo de Arte Acarigua-Araure is the applicant entity and the institution responsible for the administrative, financial and cultural implementation of the project. Founded in 1988, MAAA holds a long-standing trajectory in exhibitions, education, mediation and community engagement in Venezuela's central-western region.
Exodus & Resilience — Conceptual and methodological partner
E&R provides the project framework, curatorial research structure, narrative design and strategic advisory support. Operating as a private-sector partner based in Spain, E&R supplies the methodology that links documentation, training, mediation and digital tools into one coherent platform.
UNESCO IFCD 2026 — Funding source
The project is submitted to the UNESCO International Fund for Cultural Diversity 2026 cycle, with a requested amount of USD 100,000 and an implementation period from May 2027 to April 2028. UNESCO IFCD funding provides the institutional anchor for the platform's first 12 months.
How additional partners strengthen the platform.
Foundations & institutional funders
Foundations interested in cultural infrastructure, education, public memory or civil society can support specific components of the program through complementary grants aligned with their priorities.
Corporate partners & CSR programs
Companies with CSR or ESG cultural programs can support the platform with visibility-aligned packages, in-kind services and structured impact reporting that fits institutional reporting requirements.
Cultural & academic institutions
Museums, universities and research centers in Venezuela and abroad can collaborate as content partners — sharing expertise, contributing to documentation, hosting joint activities or co-producing public programs.
Individual patrons
Individual supporters who care about Venezuelan cultural memory can contribute through dedicated donation tiers, with documented acknowledgment and access to the program's reporting cycle.
Visibility, reporting, and a credible cultural narrative.
Visibility
Acknowledgment in program communications, on the digital platform, in mediation materials and in public-facing reports. Visibility levels can be calibrated to each partner's profile and strategic objectives.
Documented impact reporting
Partners receive structured reporting that fits institutional, philanthropic or CSR reporting cycles: participation indicators, qualitative findings, alignment with SDGs 4, 10, 16 and 17, and IFCD-aligned outcome reporting.
A credible cultural narrative
Beyond visibility and reporting, partners associate themselves with a narrative of cultural infrastructure — not crisis communications, not partisan messaging. The platform speaks about Venezuelan contemporary culture in a way that is publicly defensible and institutionally robust.
Start a conversation about partnership.
Whether you represent a foundation, a corporate CSR program, an academic institution or an individual patronage initiative, the program team will work with you to design a partnership format that matches your priorities.