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The Liz Claiborne & Art Ortenberg Foundation
Liz Claiborne and Art Ortenberg founded their foundation in 1987 after a safari to Kenya and Tanzania crystallized a conviction: national parks alone...
The Liz Claiborne & Art Ortenberg Foundation
Liz Claiborne and Art Ortenberg founded their foundation in 1987 after a safari to Kenya and Tanzania crystallized a conviction: national parks alone could not save migratory keystone species. The couple — who had already built a globally recognized fashion brand — structured their philanthropy around the idea that human communities and threatened wildlife must find a durable economic coexistence. That premise, decades ahead of mainstream conservation thinking, now defines a grantmaking portfolio anchored in Sub-Saharan Africa, Madagascar, Asia, Latin America, and the Northern Rocky Mountains. The foundation operates as a direct grantmaker rather than a passive endowment allocating to third-party funds. Its capital flows to field-based organizations running anti-poaching interventions, human-wildlife conflict mitigation, and land-use agreements with local communities — a deployment approach closer to an operating foundation’s rigor. Geographic concentration is highest in Africa and Madagascar, with significant programming in Asia and the American West. In 2018, the foundation committed $5 million over five years to the Wildlife Conservation Society’s elephant protection programs across Central and East Africa (per Philanthropy News Digest, 2018). More recently, it has funded community conservancy models in Kenya — where Maasai landowners receive lease payments to set aside rangeland for wildlife corridors — and has backed CFDA scholarship programs via an industry-association channel unusual for an environmental funder. The team operates out of a single office at 55 East 59th Street in New York. Kent Wommack serves as Executive Director, leading a lean staff and a board that includes former University of Cambridge Vice Chancellor Dame Alison Richard and Davis Wright Tremaine partner Victor Kovner. Aria Gallo co-chairs the Global Conservation Program at the Biodiversity Funders Group, signaling the foundation’s embeddedness in professional grantmaking networks. September 2023: The foundation’s website was refreshed but its core programmatic language — the tagline “Sustainability starts with you” and the emphasis on catalytic grants for wildlife and local people — remained structurally unchanged from prior years. The foundation is the primary vehicle for the Claiborne-Ortenberg philanthropic capital; it does not maintain a separate donor-advised fund or a public-facing impact-investing arm. Its structural differentiator is longevity in a single thesis: community-based conservation as the load-bearing wall of species protection. Three decades of grants have tracked the same logic — that lasting conservation requires aligning the economic incentives of the people who live alongside elephants, tigers, and predators — rather than chasing thematic pivots or short-term program cycles.
General information
Firm type
Endowment / Foundation
Year founded
1987
AUM
~$219M (Altss estimate)
Location
Region
North America
Country
United States
City
New York
Corporate office
55 E. 59th Street, 23rd Floor, New York, NY 10022, United States
Principals
Kent Wommack
Executive Director
Dame Alison Richard
Trustee
Victor Kovner
Trustee
Sector focus
Frequently asked questions
Who runs investment and grantmaking decisions at the foundation?
Executive Director Kent Wommack oversees operations and grantmaking strategy. The board includes Dame Alison Richard, former Vice Chancellor of the University of Cambridge, and Victor Kovner, a First Amendment attorney at Davis Wright Tremaine. The founders, Liz Claiborne and Art Ortenberg, have both passed away, and the foundation now operates under the governance of its trustees.
What is the foundation's geographic focus?
The foundation concentrates its grantmaking in Sub-Saharan Africa, Madagascar, the Northern Rocky Mountains of the United States, Asia, and Latin America. It favors landscape-scale projects where wildlife migration routes and human land use intersect, and where local communities can be compensated for conservation-compatible practices.
How does the foundation source its grantees and measure impact?
It operates as a direct grantmaker with a lean internal team, often co-funding with large field partners such as the Wildlife Conservation Society. Its trustees and staff are embedded in professional funder networks like the Biodiversity Funders Group, where Aria Gallo co-chairs the Global Conservation Program, acting as a primary sourcing and calibration channel.
Does the foundation make program-related investments or only outright grants?
The foundation's public filings and website describe a traditional grantmaking model focused on catalytic, project-based support. There is no disclosed program-related investment (PRI) or recoverable-grant program, nor a separate impact-investing allocation from its endowment.
What is the foundation's posture on co-funding alongside other donors?
The foundation actively co-funds. Its partnership with the Wildlife Conservation Society on a $5 million, five-year elephant protection initiative is one documented example (per Philanthropy News Digest, 2018). Its participation in the Biodiversity Funders Group further signals a preference for collaborative, multi-donor field programs rather than isolated, wholly self-directed projects.
Profile maintained by Altss using OSINT (open-source intelligence), regulatory filings, licensed data partners, and verified direct submissions. Read the methodology. Last updated: . Continuous refresh with full update cycles at least every 30 days.
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