Are you looking for grants to support your fiber arts projects in Alameda County? Look no further! There are a variety of grants available to help you achieve your goals. The ARTSFUND provides grants for general operational support to art and cultural non-profit organizations based in Alameda County. This grant can help with the mission and vision of your project. StopWaste, a local public agency, is also offering grants for projects that prevent waste in Alameda County.
Past grant recipients have used the money for initiatives such as reducing food waste, funding reusable trays for school lunches, collecting baby clothes for newborns in need, and teaching young people work skills by restoring computers. The Light Space & Time Online Art Gallery is hosting its fourth annual online art competition “Summer 555 Summer Special”. All visual arts media (painting, photography, drawing, sculpture, digital, prints, fiber art, collage or installation) are accepted, except sound art and video art. This is a great opportunity for all 2D and 3D artists to showcase their work regardless of their experience or education in the art field. The Emergency Grants program is the only active, multidisciplinary program that provides immediate assistance to artists who live and work anywhere in the United States for projects that take place in the United States.
This grant is known as Gift of Time and can be used to fund your fiber arts project. The Roswell Resident Artist Program was established in 1967 to provide talented visual studio artists the unique opportunity to focus on their work in a supportive, university environment for an entire year. All winners of the Light Space & Time Online Art Gallery competition receive a 3-month virtual exhibition, social media exposure, international news publications from Art Week and Art Base, an electronic announcement, an official award certificate, and more. Entries must be original works of art finished within the last 2 years and that have not been previously exhibited at K Space. The Emergency Fund for Colored Leaders in Arts and Culture is intended to help those who are developing careers as artists or artistic administrators and whose income has been directly affected by the COVID-19 pandemic. This season, The Umbrella's Visual Arts and Art and Environment departments are intensifying calls for action against climate change through a series of exhibitions and programs. Hangar develops several international residency programs that offer artists not resident in Portugal or Lisbon the opportunity to live and work in Graça, one of the most artistic and cultural neighborhoods in Lisbon.
Finally, Forecast Public Art invites artists or teams of artists to submit their qualifications in order to participate in the design phase of four public art opportunities for the 11th Street Bridge Park project in Washington, DC.