Tuesday was a big day for grant announcements
S.C. arts orgs, one artist benefit from NEA, South Arts funding
Within hours of each other yesterday, the National Endowment for the Arts and regional arts organization South Arts made their first 2023 grant announcements that will find an artist and several arts organizations in South Carolina.
The NEA went first, announcing more than $34 million in funding to support the arts nationwide. This is the first of the NEA’s two major grant announcements each fiscal year and includes grants to organizations through the NEA’s Grants for Arts Projects, Challenge America, and Research Awards categories. This announcement also includes grants to individuals for Literature Fellowships in creative writing (poetry) and translation.
Evelyn Berry, a writer from Aiken, was among those latter awards, getting a creative writing fellowship of $25,000. Additional grants awarded in South Carolina include:
- Coker University in Hartsville (Grants for Arts Projects – Presenting & Multidisciplinary Works; $10,000)
- Colour of Music, Inc. in Mount Pleasant (Grants for Arts Projects – Music; $10,000)
- Hub City Writers Project in Spartanburg (Grants for Arts Projects – Literary Arts; $35,000)
- Puppetry Arts Theatre in Charleston (aka Tuffy Tiger Productions) in Ravenel (Challenge America; $10,000)
- Spoleto Festival USA in Charleston (Grants for Arts Projects – Presenting & Multidisciplinary Works; $10,000)
- Trustus, Inc. in Columbia (Grants for Arts Projects – Theatre; $10,000)
- Warehouse Theatre (aka Greenville Community Warehouse Theatre) in Greenville (Challenge America; $10,000)
“Together, these grants show the NEA’s support nationwide for strengthening our arts and cultural ecosystems, providing equitable opportunities for arts participation and practice, and contributing to the health of our communities and our economy,” said NEA Chair Maria Rosario Jackson, PhD. “I encourage everyone to explore these projects and the ways they help provide inspiration, understanding, and opportunities for us to live more artful lives.”
The full list of recommended grants is available in a state-by-state listing and organized by grant category/discipline. Additional information about the projects can be found using the NEA’s Grant Search.
By afternoon, it was South Arts’ turn, making (rightful) hay over 16 new Cross-Sector Impact Grant recipients for 2023. These organizations are each receiving up to $15,000 to support “arts and…” projects developed by partners—one arts organization or artist, and one non-arts organization—harnessing the power of collaboration.
Vaughn Newman Dance of Greenville is the lone South Carolina recipient.
Cross-Sector Impact Grants are offered each year as part of South Arts’ portfolio of programming to support artists, arts organizations, and communities across the south. These projects support collaborative efforts that connect the arts with non-arts aspects of local communities.
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