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International Collaborative Projects with Heritage Institutes Scheme

Second Call for Applications: The Headley SEE Cultural Heritage Fund Program 2025

Deadline: 28-May-2026

The Mondriaan Fund is inviting applications from Dutch and Caribbean heritage institutions to support international collaborative research projects in shared collection areas. The grant promotes art historical research, provenance research, international museum partnerships, and public presentation of findings, with funding covering up to 40% of variable project costs and up to 70% for development-phase research (maximum €15,000).

Overview

The Mondriaan Fund supports publicly accessible museums and heritage institutions that want to work with international partner institutions on research in areas where their collections overlap.

The main aim is to encourage:

This scheme is especially useful for institutions planning joint research projects with foreign museums or heritage bodies.

Key Funding Details

What the Grant Supports

This funding is intended for collaborative research projects between Dutch heritage institutions and international partners in areas where their collections connect.

Main supported areas

Eligible activities may include

The fund places strong value on research that leads to a public outcome, not just internal study.

Why This Grant Matters

This grant helps museums and heritage institutions move beyond isolated research and build meaningful international partnerships.

It matters because it supports:

For institutions working on museum research, restitution-related context, provenance studies, or transnational collection histories, this is a strategically important opportunity.

Who is Eligible?

Eligible applicants

Applicants must be:

Institutional requirements

They must:

Partnership requirement

Applicants must have:

Presentation requirement

The project must be:

However:

How the Funding Works

The Mondriaan Fund does not use a fixed one-size-fits-all grant amount for full projects.

Standard project funding

Development-phase funding

For early-stage or preparatory research, applicants can request:

This can be useful for:

How to Apply

A practical approach is:

  1. Confirm institutional eligibility
    • Make sure your museum or heritage institution is publicly accessible and manages nationally important heritage.
  2. Secure an international partner
    • Establish a formal collaboration with a comparable foreign institution.
  3. Define the shared collection area
    • Clearly explain how the collections overlap and why joint research is valuable.
  4. Develop the research concept
    • Focus on art historical, provenance, or related collection-based research.
  5. Plan the public outcome
    • Show how the results will be presented to the public.
  6. Prepare the budget
    • Separate variable costs clearly.
    • Show what part you want the Mondriaan Fund to support.
  7. Apply for development support first if needed
    • If the project is still in early planning, consider requesting preparatory funding.

Tips for a Strong Application

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

What is the Mondriaan Fund grant for?

It supports international collaborative research projects between Dutch heritage institutions and foreign partners in shared collection areas, especially in art historical and provenance research.

Who can apply?

Eligible applicants are:

What types of research are supported?

The grant supports research such as:

How much funding is available?

Can the grant support early-stage planning?

Yes. Development-phase support can cover:

Do results need to be publicly presented?

Yes. The fund gives strong importance to projects where the research leads to a public presentation.

Are international partner presentation costs covered?

No. The project must be presented by both sides, but only the Dutch institution’s presentation costs are eligible for funding.

Conclusion

The Mondriaan Fund offers an important opportunity for museums and heritage institutions to build international research partnerships around shared collections.

For organisations in the Netherlands and the Caribbean part of the Kingdom, this grant can support provenance research, art historical collaboration, early-stage project development, and public presentation of findings. The strongest applications will clearly show a real collection overlap, a formal international partnership, and a strong public-facing research outcome.

For more information, visit Mondriaan Fund.

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