FEBRUARY ANNOUNCEMENTS

FEBRUARY 4, 2009

(M & ALL) Artists Residency Program at I-Park for Music Composers
Connecticut, USA
Deadline: Feb 16th, 2009
I-Park announces its ninth season hosting The Artists’ Enclave. Artists’ residencies, self-directed/project oriented, will be offered from May through November 2009. Most sessions are four weeks in duration. In addition to music composers, the following disciplines participate: visual (including digital and environmental) artists, landscape/garden designers, creative writers and architects. Work samples are evaluated through a competitive, juried process. There is a $25 application fee and artists are responsible for their own transportation to and from the area. They also provide for their own food and work materials. The facility is otherwise offered at no cost to accepted artists. A limited number of travel grants are offered to non-U.S. artists.
The music studio, in addition to an acoustic piano, has a selection of digital keyboards as well as a growing collection of peripheral devices and software for recording, sequencing and sound manipulation. We have also begun to collect unusual percussion and other instruments for use by our composers.
For additional project information and to download 2009 application materials, go to the website: www.i-park.org/residency.html

(ALL) Residency at Castiglioncello / Tuscany / Italy / Spring 2009
Deadline: ongoing—artists may apply for residency between October and May.
The mansion and its coastline park is “niemandsland” (no man’s land) residency in Italy. It contains 12+1 completely equipped apartments in order to live and work. Dwellings can be used for studios. For larger work also the private park is available.
At the moment we accept applications to come to Castiglioncello for a minimum of 1 week during the period March – May, or October – December 2009.
You are a professional in any field of contemporary art, a curator or writer and want to work for your own. You can be eligible for the residency by sending your application. Residential artists benefit by special rental conditions met locally for them.
Further support: All guest artists, who are accepted by the selection committee are welcome in the residency program. It is further expected that the artist will be supported by sources based in the artist's country of origin!
Send your inquiry or application to: niemandsland@peintner-art.com
>>niemandsland<<
Christian I. Peintner, Im Kirchholz 23, A-6845 Hohenems, Austria
Tel. 0043-699-12132277, Fax 0043-699-32132277

(ALL) Residency at the Vermont Studio Center
Deadline: February 17th, 2009
The Vermont Studio Center is an international residency program open to all artists and writers. Year-round, VSC hosts 50 artists and writers per month, each of whom receives an individual studio, private room, and all meals. Residencies last from 2-12 weeks and provide uninterrupted time to work, a community of creative peers, and a beautiful village setting in northern Vermont. In addition, VSC's program includes a roster of Visiting Artists and Writers (2 painters, 2 sculptors and 2 writers per month) who offer slide talks/readings and individual studio visits/conferences. Applications and information available at www.vermontstudiocenter.org

(A) ASSOCIATION A.I.R. VALLAURIS
Phone: 330493646550
Fax: 330493646550
Email: contact@air-vallauris.com
Artist in Residence Program : The intent of the AIR program is to propose an environment to visiting artists which offers: a unique cultural experience, the opportunity to research and create new work, the opportunity to meet and collaborate with local artists, and the possibility to expose work in the AIR gallery and on the AIR web site. http://www.air-vallauris.org/

(A, MEDIA, INTERDISC.) ARTSPACE (AUSTRALIA)
Phone: +61 2 9368 1899 Fax: +61 2 9368 1705
http://www.artspace.org.au
Email: artspace@artspace.org.au
Artspace’s focus is on experimental and conceptual installation practices; projects involving critical and theoretical research into contemporary visual culture; collaborative and process-based projects; interdisciplinary, multimedia, new media and net.art practices; site specificity; and performance art. Artspace invites project proposals on an ongoing basis from emerging and established artists and curators. Project proposals may include an application for studio space (either residential or non-residential) in order to develop and/or install the work on-site. Proposals utilizing both studio and exhibition spaces are welcome.

(A) ARTSPACE, INC. (NC)
Phone: (919)821-2787 Fax: (919)821-0383
Email: info@artspacenc.org
http://www. artspacenc.org
Summer Artist in Residence Program
Provides an established artist with a brief studio opportunity to work on a specific project. Each summer, an artist is invited to work in Gallery 1 in an open-studio setting for 4 weeks. The residency culminates in a 6 to 8 week exhibition of the artist's work in Gallery 1. The intent of this residency is to provide fresh insight about mediums of art and processes of art making that are not common within the Artspace community.

(A) ART FARM
Phone: (402) 854-3120 Email: artfarm@hamilton.netVisit their website
Residency Program
Art Farm's program for professional artists offers them accommodation and studio space to pursue their artwork.
http://www.artfarmnebraska.org/

(A) ARROWMONT SCHOOL OF ARTS AND CRAFTS: Residency Program
http://www.arrowmont.org/

Phone: (865)436-5860 Fax: (865)430-4101 Email: info@arrowmont.org
Arrowmont School of Arts and Crafts offers an Artist-In-Residence Program designed to give pre-professional self-directed artists time and studio space to develop a major body of work in a creative community environment of students and visiting faculty. Five artists are selected annually to participate in this eleven-month program. The facilities are wheelchair accessible.
Also: Horn Woodturning Fellowship
The Horn Fellowship provides housing, private studio, basic equipment, professional development, optional teaching opportunities, and some meals for an 11-month residency at Arrowmont. The recipient will be one of five residents selected for the Artists-in-Residence program.

(A) ARCUS PROJECT in Japan
Phone: (029)301-2735 Fax: (029)301-2739
Email: info@arcus-project.com
Artist-in-Residence Program
The ARCUS Project is an artist-in-residence program organized by the Ibaraki Prefectural Government that was launched with a focus on nurturing young and mid-career visual artists and on fostering grounds for international exchange in the arts as well as in the local community. The project aims to serve two purposes. The first is to provide opportunities to young and mid-career visual artists to develop their artistic concepts and skills in a community setting and facilitate them with an environment for cultural exchange at professional level and community level. The second is to provide the local residents an opportunity to appreciate art in their local community and to nurture grounds for multicultural experiences through programs such as workshops and seminars.http://www.arcus-project.com/en/residence/

(ALL) ANDERSON CENTER FOR INTERDISCIPLINARY STUDIES in Minnesota
http://www.andersoncenter.org/residency_program.htm
Phone: (651)388-2009 Email: info@andersoncenter.com
Residencies
The Anderson Center offers short-term residencies of two weeks to one month from May-October to writers, artists and scholars. Through a grant from the Jerome Foundation of St. Paul, each year the Center devotes the month of July to encourage the work of emerging artists from New York City and Minnesota. Each resident is provided room, board, and workspace for the length of the stay of the residency period. The facilities are wheelchair accessible.

(A) AMISTAD NATIONAL RECREATION AREA in Texas
http://www.nps.gov/amis/
Phone: (830)775-7491 Fax: (800)775-9248 Email: Scarlett_Elkins@nps.gov
Artist in Residence Program
Amistad National Recreation Area is located in southwestern Texas, amid desert landscapes and alongside the US/Mexico border. Lake Amistad is known for excellent fishing, and the park is surrounded by world-class prehistoric rock art and classic Western history. The Artist-in-Residence program offers artists an opportunity for inspiration by living and working in a National Park setting. The program provides for a two to four week stay at Amistad NRA.

(M) AMERICAN COMPOSERS FORUM
Phone: (651)228-1407 Fax: (651)291-7978
Email: mail@composersforum.org
Community Partners Program
Administered through the Forum’s chapters, the Community Partners Program places composers in collaborative residencies with community, cultural and educational organizations to create new works designed around the needs of their specific communities, many of which are historically underserved by the arts. By partnering with cultural, educational and social services organizations, projects reach people who might otherwise have no opportunity or occasion to directly engage the arts, and do so in a context that makes their involvement personally and socially significant. Through these projects, the Forum’s chapters have sponsored more than 200 residencies, commissions and performances, engaged scores of educational, cultural and social institutions in the creation and presentation of new music, and elicited growing support from a wide range of local and regional philanthropies.
I would suggest emailing them because they have been having problems with their website (composersforum.com)


(A) STUDIO for Creative Inquiry
Carnegie Mellon University, College of Fine Arts, Room 111
5000 Forbes Avenue, Pittsburgh, PA 15213-3890
E-Mail Address: studio-info@andrew.cmu.edu
Website: www.cmu.edu/studio/fellowships/index.html
Application Deadline: Ongoing
The Artist Residency Program connects established artists to the robust science-technology resources at Carnegie Mellon through two concurrent year-long residences. The broad mission of the STUDIO is to facilitate work in two major areas: artistic creation and development of educational tools. Artists receive a salary and have access to the resources of the university. Assistance is offered in finding housing in the community. Applications are due at least six months in advance of the desired residency period. Write or see web site for additional information.

(W) Hill House Writers Retreat
8161 Highway 100 #177, Nashville, TN 37221
E-Mail Address: ron@Hillhousewriters.com
Website: www.hillhousewriters.com/policies.htm
Application Deadline: Ongoing
The Hill House Writers Retreat offers week-long residencies to poets, fiction writers, creative-nonfiction writers, and other literary artists on a thirty-four-acre horse farm an hour south of Nashville. Scholarships are awarded year-round and include a private room and three meals a day. To apply, send a bio, letter of intent, and a writing sample of up to 1,500 words, accompanied by a $30 application fee. See web site for complete guidelines.

(W) Bucknell University, Philip Roth Residence
Bucknell University, Bucknell Hall, Lewisburg, PA 17837
E-Mail Address: stadlercenter@bucknell.edu
Website: www.departments.bucknell.edu/stadler_center
Application Deadline: February 21
The Philip Roth Residence in Creative Writing provides four months of unfettered writing time during Bucknell's fall semester, without formal academic obligations, and a stipend of $4,000 for a young writer with some record of accomplishment. The residence coincides with the fall semester, mid-September through late December. In even-numbered years the residence is awarded to a poet, in odd-numbered years to a fiction writer. Write to Philip Roth Residence in Creative Writing at above address or see web site for more details.

(W) Writers' Conferences & Centers
Association of Writers & Writing Programs
MS1E3, George Mason University, Fairfax, VA 22030
E-Mail Address: wcc@awpwriter.org
Website: writersconf.org/scholarship/index.php
Application Deadline: March 30
The WC&C Scholarship Competition supports emerging writers who wish to attend a writers' conference. Two scholarships of $500 each will be awarded and applied to the fees of any of the member conferences of WC&C, an association of conferences, colonies, and festivals for writers. There is a $10 reading fee for each manuscript submitted. Submissions are accepted between December 1 and March 30. Write to WC&C Scholarship Program at above address or see web site for more details.

(W) Writers at Work
PO Box 540370, North Salt Lake, UT 84054-0370
E-Mail Address: lisa@writersatwork.org
Website: www.writersatwork.org/submission.html
Application Deadline: March 1
Writers at Work sponsors a Fellowship Competition in fiction (short stories or novel excerpts), literary nonfiction, and poetry. The first prize in each category consists of $1,500, publication in Quarterly West, a featured reading, full tuition to the Writers at Work Conference in Park City, Utah, a manuscript consultation during the Conference with one of the visiting editors or agents, and free housing. Eligible are writers who have not published a book-length volume of original work. Fiction and literary nonfiction submissions should not exceed 5,000 words; poetry may be six poems not exceeding 10 pages total. Only unpublished work will be considered. There is a $20 reading fee for each entry. Write or see the web site for more details and latest deadline.

(W) Wesleyan Writers Conference
294 High Street, Middletown, CT 06459

E-Mail Address: agreene@wesleyan.edu
Website: www.wesleyan.edu/writing/conference
Application Deadline: April 3
The Wesleyan Writers Conference, staffed by award-winning writers, offers full and partial scholarships to participants. Scholarships include the Joan and John Jakobson Scholarships, open to writers of fiction, nonfiction, and poetry, and the Jon Davidoff Scholarships for Journalists. Teaching fellowships—including the Barach Fellowship—which all cover tuition, room, and board, and include an honorarium of $500, are also awarded. Write to Fellowship and Scholarship Committee at above address or see web site for specific details and application procedures.

(W) Taos Summer Writers' Conference, D. H. Lawrence Fellowship
Department of English Language and Literature
MSC03 2170, 1 University of New Mexico
Albuquerque, NM 87131-0001
E-Mail Address: taosconf@unm.edu
Website: www.unm.edu/~taosconf/Registration/Scholarships.htm
Application Deadline: April 15
The D. H. Lawrence Fellowship is awarded to an emerging writer of fiction or poetry with one book in print or at press. The D. H. Lawrence Fellow will receive tuition remission, lodging at the Sagebrush Inn or Comfort Suites, and two meals a day (breakfast and lunch). In return, the Fellow contributes to the Taos Summer Writer's Conference activities and gives a formal reading. Write to Sharon Oard Warner, Director at above address or see web site for more details.

(CB) The Highlights Foundation
Selection Committee, Highlights Foundation Scholarship Program
814 Court Street, Honesdale, PA 18431
E-Mail Address: contact@highlightsfoundation.org
Website: www.highlightsfoundation.org/pages/scholarships_top.html
Application Deadline: February 15
The Highlights Foundation Scholarship Program provides financial support to qualified candidates wishing to attend the annual Highlights Foundation Writers Workshop at Chautauqua for the first time. Individuals with a serious interest in writing for children and an established financial need are invited to apply. Scholarship awards are granted at the discretion of the Foundation Scholarship Committee. Send SASE for guidelines. For more information, contact Jenny Blanchard, Program Director, above address.

(CBW) Society of Children's Book Writers, Work-in-Progress Grants
8271 Beverly Boulevard, Los Angeles, CA 90048
E-Mail Address: membership@scbwi.org
Website: www.scbwi.org/awards.htm
Application Deadline: March 15

Four Work-in-Progress Grants, one for a contemporary novel for young people, one for a work whose author has never had a book published, one for a general work-in-progress, and one for a nonfiction research project, will be awarded annually. Each grant is $1,500, and each category offers a runner-up award of $500. Applications must be sent between February 15 and March 15. The Grants are available to both full and associate members of the SCBWI. Write to W-I-P Grant Application at above address or see web site for additional information.

(CBW) Society of Children's Book Writers, Barbara Karlin Grant
8271 Beverly Boulevard, Los Angeles, CA 90048
E-Mail Address: membership@scbwi.org
Website: www.scbwi.org/awards.htm
Application Deadline: March 15
The Barbara Karlin Grant recognizes and encourages the work of aspiring picture-book writers who have never had a picture book published. One grant of $1,500 is awarded annually. Applications must be sent between February 15 and March 15. The Grants are available to both full and associate members of the SCBWI. Write to Barbara Karlin Grant Application at above address or see web site for additional information.

(W) Poetry Magazine
444 North Michigan Avenue, Suite 1850, Chicago, IL 60611
Website: www.poetrymagazine.org/about/prizes.html
Application Deadline: March 31
Five Ruth Lilly Poetry Fellowships of $15,000 each are given annually to undergraduate or graduate students enrolled in English or creative writing programs who will not have received an M.A. or M.F.A. degree as of December 31 of the year of the award. Program directors and department chairs in the U.S. should submit nominations on an official application form from Poetry. Applications must be postmarked during the month of March. See web site for more details. In addition, Poetry Magazine administers the Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize of $100,000 for outstanding poetic achievement, as well as eight Poetry Magazine Awards, ranging from $500 to $3,000, for poetry published in the magazine during the previous year. Applications are not accepted for these awards.

(HUMANITIES) National Endowment for the Humanities
1100 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, Washington, D.C. 20506
E-Mail Address: fellowships@neh.gov
Website: www.neh.gov/grants/guidelines/fellowships.html
Application Deadline: May 1
Fellowships with a stipend of $4,200 per month support individuals pursuing advanced research that is of value to scholars and general audiences in the humanities. Recipients usually produce articles, monographs, books, digital materials, archaeological site reports, translations, editions, and other scholarly tools. Fellowships support continuous full-time work for a period of six to twelve months. A number of other grants are also available. Write, e-mail, or see web site for further information on stipends, eligibility, and application procedures.

(W) Loft Literary Center, Minnesota Writers' Career Initiative Program
Suite 200, Open Book, 1011 Washington Avenue, South
Minneapolis, MN 55415
E-Mail Address: jsantek@loft.org
Website: www.loft.org/index.cfm?fuseaction=category.display&category_id=44
Application Deadline: March 5
The Minnesota Writers' Career Initiative Program provides financial support and professional assistance to advanced writers of poetry, fiction, creative nonfiction, or children's literature to develop and implement serious, multifaceted plans for the next phase of their career. This phase might involve, but is not limited to, greater recognition, increase in book sales, significant expansion of audience, or publication by a major press. As many as four winners receive grants of up to $8,000 and up to $1,500 in honoraria. Write to Career Initiative Program at address above or see web site for guidelines and application.

(THEATER) Children's Theatre Foundation of America, Founders Grants
1114 Red Oak Drive, Avon, IN 46123
E-Mail Address: dwebb@iupui.edu
Website:www.childrenstheatrefoundation.org/grants.html
Application Deadline: April 1
Founders Grants are available to individuals and organizations for a variety of needs. Write or see web site for specific guidelines and requirements.

(W) Center for Environmental Journalism
University of Colorado, 478 UCB, 1511 University Avenue
Boulder, Colorado 80309-0478
E-Mail Address: cej@colorado.edu
Website: www.colorado.edu/journalism/cej
Application Deadline: March 1
The Ted Scripps Environmental Fellowship Program blends classroom and field training at the University of Colorado's Center for Environmental Journalism to help professional journalists acquire knowledge to cover the environment more effectively and enrich public understanding. Fellowships are available to U.S. citizens with a minimum of five years of full-time professional journalism experience. Fellows receive tuition, fee payment, and a stipend of $47,000 for the nine-month academic year. Write or see web site for additional information.

(W) Bread Loaf Writers' Conference
Middlebury College, Middlebury, VT 05753
E-Mail Address: blwc@middlebury.edu
Website: www.middlebury.edu/academics/blwc
Application Deadline: March 1
The Conference awards fellowships and scholarships to candidates applying to attend a session of the Conference. Candidates for fellowships must have a first original book published within three years of filing their application. Scholarship candidates must have published in major literary periodicals or newspapers. See web site for nomination and application procedures.

(W) Eastern Frontier Education Foundation: Residency in Norton Island, Maine
446 Long Ridge Road, Bedford, NY 10506
E-Mail Address: webmaster@easternfrontier.com
Website: www.easternfrontier.com
Application Deadline: March 1
The Eastern Frontier Residency Program annually offers two residency periods lasting two weeks during the summer to selected artists and writers, in the picturesque setting of Norton Island, Maine, for developing their work. There is a $25 application fee. Send writing samples with application. Apply to Stephen T. Dunn, Chairman, at above address or see web site for more details and online application.

(SCREENWRITING) Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences
Nicholl Fellowships
1313 N. Vine Street, Hollywood, CA 90028-8107
E-Mail Address: nicholl@oscars.org
Website: www.oscars.org/nicholl
Application Deadline: To Be Announced
Up to five Don and Gee Nicholl Screenwriting Fellowships, of $30,000 each, are available annually for original, full-length feature scripts of 100 to 130 pages, with the understanding that the recipients will complete a new feature screenplay during the fellowship year. Entries must be in English (no translations) and must display exceptional craft and engaging storytelling. Writers must not have sold or optioned a feature screenplay or teleplay, or earned more than $5,000 for writing one. There is a $30 entry fee. Contact the Academy from January through April or consult the web site year-round for further information.

(PERF. ARTS) Princess Grace Foundation / Call for Applications
Working in conjunction with nominating schools and non-profit companies, the Princess Grace Awards recognize the talent of individual artists in theater, dance, and film.
This unique collaborative process fills vast voids in the artistic community: scholarships, apprenticeships, and fellowships give emerging artists the financial assistance and moral encouragement to focus on artistic excellence; monetary support for the nominating organizations eases fund raising challenges, directing resources toward the creative process.
Theater: Scholarships for students at non-profit schools; apprenticeships and fellowships for artists at non-profit theaters
Playwriting: One fellowship for an individual playwright, including residency at New Dramatists
Dance: Scholarships for students at non-profit schools; fellowships for dancers at non-profit companies
Choreography: Fellowships for collaborations with non-profit dance companies
Film: Scholarships for undergraduate or graduate thesis films (open to select film schools by invitation only)

Full list of deadlines and more information at: www.pgfusa.org
Princess Grace Foundation-USA, 150 East 58th Street, 25th Floor
New York, New York 10155 212/317-1470
Theater Deadline: 3/31/09 Playwrighting Deadline: 3/31/09
Dance: Performance: 4/30/09 Dance: Choreography: 4/30/09
Film: 6/1/09
Deadline: June, 1, 2009

(ALL) Native Arts @ NEFA / National Native Artist Exchange / Call to Artists
The National Native Artist Exchange, a program of the New England Foundation for the Arts (NEFA), provides support for Native artists residing in any of the 50 United States to travel to different regions of the country so that they may exchange artistic knowledge and skills with other Native artists. Travel grants will be awarded up to $1500.
Deadline: 4/1/09
This fund is designed to encourage and assist American Indian, Alaskan Native and Native Hawaiian artists, and provides an opportunity for Native artists to teach, learn, and collaborate in traditional and/or contemporary Native art forms through travel from one region to another across the nation. Program information at: http://www.nefa.org/grantprog/nativearts/nativeartistexchange.html
Website: www.nefa.org
Deadline: April, 1, 2009

(ALL) Bellagio Study & Conference Center / Residencies / Seeks Applicants
Bellagio creative arts residencies in Italy – for composers, novelists, playwrights, poets, video/filmmakers and visual artists – provide time for disciplined work, individual reflection, and collegial engagement, uninterrupted by the usual professional and personal demands. Deadline: 2/11/09 (for residencies occurring between mid-August through November 26, 2009.)
The Center typically offers one-month stays for no more than 3-5 individual artists at a time. Artists of significant achievement, from any country, are welcome to apply.
Further information at: www.rockfound.org/bellagio
Deadline: February, 11, 2009

(ART HIST./MUSEUM STUDIES) Andrew W. Mellon Fellowship / Seeks Applicants
The Philadelphia Museum of Art seeks applicants specializing in modern and contemporary art for a post-doctoral fellowship, funded by The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, and offered beginning June 2009. Deadline: 3/1/08
Available to outstanding scholars who wish to pursue a curatorial career in art museums, this two-year fellowship, with a possible third year renewal, will provide curatorial training while also supporting scholarly research related to the renowned collections of modern and contemporary art at the Philadelphia Museum of Art.
Further details and application guidelines at: http://www.philamuseum.org/jobs/
Contact Info: Human Resources
Philadelphia Museum of Art, P.O. Box 7646
Philadelphia, PA 19101
Website: www.philamuseum.org
Deadline: March, 1, 2009

(ALL) City of Seattle / 2009 CityArtists Projects / Call to Artists
The Seattle Mayor’s Office of Arts & Cultural Affairs seeks applications for its CityArtists Projects, a program which provides funding for artists to develop and present work. Awards ranging up to $10,000 support new works, works-in-progress or finished works, and all projects include a public presentation. A broad range of artistic and cultural expression that reflects Seattle's diversity are encouraged. Deadline: 2/17/09
Further information and online application at: http://www.seattle.gov/arts/
Deadline: February, 17, 2009

(A, DESIGN) Beam Camp / Seeks Proposals for Ambitious Collaborative Projects
THE PROJECT
Each summer Beam commissions a Project Master to design a unique large-scale collaborative endeavor that campers produce and enjoy. The Project can range from the conceptual to the structural. We are looking for big ideas that will challenge and excite our campers and staff. Our Project Management Team will work with the Master to "translate" the Master's project blueprint into the camp context.
THE CAMP
Beam Camp is a 4-week summer program (July 18-August 16) for boys and girls aged 7-17 in Strafford, New Hampshire. Beam Campers cultivate hands-on skills while exploring innovative thinking, design and the creative process. They transform ideas into artifacts and personal achievement into community success. Teams of campers work on different aspects of the Project each morning. In the afternoons, they participate in Domains, mini-courses in arts, athletics, science and nature studies.
Go to http://www.beamcamp.com/project-proposal/ to fill out the Project Proposal form or send an email to brian@beamcamp.com.
WHAT'S THE PROJECT BUDGET?
We generally spend $10,000 on Project-specific materials including any necessary new tools/machines.
WHAT ARE THE MASTER'S TIME REQUIREMENTS?
Upon selection of a Project, Masters have until May 1st to create a blueprint or working plan for the project. We ask that the Master be available for at least two pre-camp planning meetings and join us for at least three days during the camp session.
DO I GET PAID? Project Masters receive a $2,500 stipend plus travel costs.
Proposals due: March 1, 2009.
For more info on Beam: http://www.beamcamp.com
For further inquiries contact: Brian Cohen – brian@beamcamp.com

(A) Black Rock Arts Foundation / 2009 Grant Cycle / Call to Artists
Black Rock Arts Foundation's seeks submissions from artists for their 2009 grant cycle. BRAF grants to individual artists or artist collectives that create interactive artworks and involves the audience in its creation.
Application and guidelines at: blackrockarts.org/grants/2009-grant-cycle
Contact Information:
Josie Schimke, Program Development Assistant
Black Rock Arts Foundation, 1900 Third Street, First Floor
San Francisco CA 94158.
Email: josie@blackrockarts.org, Phone: 415/626-1248
Deadline: March, 13, 2009

(A) James Washington Fdn / Washington Artist in Residency / Call for Applications
The James & Janie Washington Foundation is dedicated to supporting emerging visual artists by providing them an opportunity to have time and space to create. The Foundation offers one month residencies to visual artists living in King County and Washington State. The residency will be open to artists who work in all mediums, but who are interested in focusing on sculpture during the residency. For application information, please visit: www.jameswashington.org.
Deadline March 1, 2009
 
© 2009 artist info and museum | Powered by Blogger | Built on the Blogger Template Framework | Design: Choen