EIN 52-2137825

The Crucible

IRS 501(c) type
501(c)(3)
Num. employees
175
Year formed
1999
Most recent tax filings
2021-12-01
Description
The Crucible inspires creative exploration and expression through welcoming, hands-on arts education and experiences for people of diverse ages and backgrounds. As an innovative hub built around the industrial arts, The Crucible is a catalyst for individual growth and vibrant community connections.A leader in the Bay Area arts community, The Crucible is widely recognized for its exceptional learning experiences, rich and varied arts programs, skilled and committed faculty, and unparalleled educational facilities.
Total revenues
$3,442,587
2021
Total expenses
$3,237,005
2021
Total assets
$5,411,917
2021
Num. employees
175
2021

Program areas at The Crucible

Youth ProgramsThe pandemic continues to affect The Crucibles scholarship and outreach programs. The Crucible operated at 50% capacity in 2021. We lacked both staff and budget to fund scholarship access and offer free and subsidized programs at the same level as 2019, but managed to increase scholarship awards significantly over 2020 levels. Nevertheless, The Crucibles Youth Industrial Arts program was able to provide over $315,000 in services to young people to participate in the arts through hands-on learning experiences including, classes, field trips, outreach events, internships, teaching assistantships, and workshops during 2021. 558 young people were served in 2021 by these programs, 91 free of charge. Since its inception in 2010, more than 85 youth have graduated from the Fuego Youth Leadership Program. Of the 85 who have completed the program, 49 are still engaged with The Crucible as faculty, administrative staff, or volunteers. Many have gone on to build successful careers in the skilled trades, or have graduated from universities and art schools.The Crucible provided industrial arts programming that empowers youth to build technical and social/emotional skills while making deeper connections between science, technology, engineering, and math through hands-on, project-based instruction. During six weeks of Summer Camp in 2021, 444 youth in 107 classes fabricated jewelry, bent glass into neon light sculptures, hammered hot steel into practical tools, and more. An additional 163 youth participated in after-school and weekend intensives throughout the year, including an expanded bike program where youth built, fixed, and gave away working bikes to the community. During 2021, despite continued restricted operations, The Crucible offered free and discounted workshops and in-school presentations to students from 4 schools as well as paid leadership opportunities, and workforce development to 11 youth as part of our Fuego Youth Leadership Program.Adult ProgramsThe Crucibles mission is to inspire creative exploration and expression through welcoming, hands-on arts education and experiences for people of diverse ages and backgrounds regardless of income. As an innovative hub built around the industrial arts, The Crucible is a catalyst for individual growth and vibrant community connections. The Crucible is dedicated to inspiring creative growth in Oakland and the greater Bay Area.2021 was a year of recovery for The Crucible. Our core programs adult classes and workshops, youth industrial arts education, and community engagement made steady gains over 2020. The Crucible increased its capacity to 50% from 20% in 2020. Hands-on arts education programs, based in our West Oakland facility, were back in a limited way in some departments. This programming provided much-needed access to high-quality arts experiences for people of diverse ages and backgrounds. From blacksmithing to neon, glass casting, ceramics, welding, kinetics, and fire dancing, The Crucible was able to offer high-quality, hands-on arts education programs to more than 2,750 adults in 2021. This was an amazing credit both to our extremely skilled instructors and to our studio staff who worked so hard to meet and exceed all COVID-19 safety protocols. Together, they were able to create a welcoming environment at a time when much human interaction was only happening on screens. The Crucible piloted the Open For Business program, a incubator for BIPOC artisans launching businesses in the creative economy. 100% of its first cohort -- consisting of 5 BIPOC artisan-entrepreneurs -- completed the program and developed product lines. Team BuildsDuring 2021, The Crucible provided workshops for companies, schools, and other groups to collaborate on fabrication of industrial arts projects. Studio RentalsThe Crucible provided affordable studios, stalls, and locker spaces to two dozen working artists. We developed The Crucibles Expanded Access to Tools & Equipment (CREATE) program as a way for current and former students to benefit from broader access to the tools and resources of The Crucible. During the pandemic, we waived studio rental fees for artists who had lost income. Our CREATE program was paused due to COVID restrictions. EventsThe Crucible invites our local community to experience our industrial arts programming during our Open Houses, Bike Fix-A-Thons, GIFTY Annual Holiday Arts & Crafts Fair, and more.The Crucible offers up to three Open Houses annually, which are free of charge and give visitors an opportunity to tour The Crucible's 56,000 square-foot facility, meet faculty and artists, and watch demonstrations. We also provide weekly Open Shop Hours, free four-hour sessions for drop-in participants to learn the fundamentals of bicycle mechanics. With our quarterly Bike Fix-A-Thons, a team of bike techs repair as many bikes as possible for free, getting Oakland residents back on the road with safe, functioning bikes. We relaunched our first in-person holiday bazaar, GIFTY, since 2019 serving 3,000 people; 20% of whom were local BIPOC makers/vendors who received scholarships to support vending costs.All of these events help introduce participants to the creative possibilities of our classes and workshops and other programs.To stay connected with local artists, makers, and community members, we also participated in virtual events, including the Life is Living Festival in DeFemery Park.The Crucible also offers custom fabrication of one-of-a-kind works.

Who funds The Crucible

Grants from foundations and other nonprofits
GrantmakerDescriptionAmount
Schwab Charitable FundEducation$138,450
American Online Giving FoundationGeneral Support$34,284
East Bay Community Foundation (EBCF)Cultural Arts Support Related To Covid-19, General Support, the Development of the Bike Program, From Vita Wells, Youth Industrial Arts Program$33,500
...and 16 more grants received

Personnel at The Crucible

NameTitleCompensation
Renee VentimigliaChief Financial Officer and Interim Executive Director$84,722
Alex ZwisslerBoard Member
Cathy NilandDirector of Marketing and Ecommerce
Natasha von KaenelDirector of Marketing and Ecommerce / Director of Marketing and Communications
Josephine LeeDirector of Programs
...and 16 more key personnel

Financials for The Crucible

RevenuesFYE 12/2021
Total grants, contributions, etc.$2,033,369
Program services$1,393,204
Investment income and dividends$486
Tax-exempt bond proceeds$0
Royalty revenue$0
Net rental income$0
Net gain from sale of non-inventory assets$0
Net income from fundraising events$0
Net income from gaming activities$0
Net income from sales of inventory$0
Miscellaneous revenues$15,528
Total revenues$3,442,587

Form 990s for The Crucible

Fiscal year endingDate received by IRSFormPDF link
2019-122021-04-02990View PDF
2018-122019-12-11990View PDF
2017-122019-02-21990View PDF
2016-122017-12-04990View PDF
2015-122016-11-02990View PDF
...and 6 more Form 990s

Organizations like The Crucible

OrganizationLocationRevenue
Armory Center for the ArtsPasadena, CA$2,070,032
ArtsplusCharlotte, NC$1,953,117
Visual Arts Center of New JerseySummit, NJ$3,237,351
Skowhegan School of Painting and SculptureNew York, NY$5,438,132
Art Students League of DenverDenver, CO$1,673,352
Kentucky College of Art and DesignLouisville, KY$2,008,084
The Dreamyard ProjectBronx, NY$6,791,125
Marwen FoundationChicago, IL$2,137,194
Juxtaposition ArtsMinneapolis, MN$7,058,900
P.S. ArtsLos Angeles, CA$3,018,856
Data update history
May 6, 2023
Received grants
Identified 1 new grant, including a grant for $7,500 from Palayam Foundation
May 4, 2023
Updated personnel
Identified 6 new personnel
July 28, 2022
Received grants
Identified 2 new grant, including a grant for $21,000 from American Endowment Foundation
March 2, 2022
Updated personnel
Identified 8 new personnel
October 1, 2021
Received grants
Identified 3 new grant, including a grant for $25,000 from Kelson Foundation
Nonprofit Types
Civic / social organizationsSchoolsArts, culture, and humanities nonprofitsCharities
Issues
EducationArts, cultural, and humanities
Characteristics
Receives government fundingTax deductible donations
General information
Address
1260 7th St
Oakland, CA 94607
Metro area
San Francisco-Oakland-Berkeley, CA
County
Alameda County, CA
Website URL
thecrucible.org/ 
Phone
(510) 444-0919
Facebook page
The-Crucible 
Twitter profile
@thecrucible 
IRS details
EIN
52-2137825
Fiscal year end
December
Taxreturn type
Form 990
Year formed
1999
Eligible to receive tax-deductible contributions (Pub 78)
Yes
Categorization
NTEE code, primary
A25: Arts Education, Schools of Art
NAICS code, primary
813410: Civic and Social Organizations
Parent/child status
Independent
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