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Applications for 2026-28 fellowship cycle have closed. Next cycle expected ~2028.
The Fields Artist Fellowship is a prestigious two-year, $150,000 award offered through a partnership between Oregon Humanities and the Oregon Community Foundation. The fellowship supports Oregon-based artists and culture bearers who use creative and cultural practice to drive social change in their communities. Up to four fellows are selected each cycle, with eight finalists receiving $10,000 each.
Eligible applicants must have at least five years of professional artistic practice, three years of Oregon residency, and demonstrated community engagement. Artists of all mediums may apply, including writers, filmmakers, visual artists, and performance artists. The selection process prioritizes underrepresented perspectives and geographic diversity across Oregon.
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Fields Artist Fellowship — Oregon Humanities A two-year, $150,000 fellowship to support Oregon artists and culture bearers The Fields Artist Fellowship is a partnership between Oregon Humanities (OH) and the Oregon Community Foundation (OCF), aimed at supporting individuals who address important issues in their communities and create meaningful change through creativity and cultural expression.
The fellowship launched in 2019, with the goal of bringing increased access, community impact, and visibility to Oregon-based artists. Fellowships are awarded every two years. In 2024, OCF and OH awarded four Fields Artist Fellows $150,000 each over a two-year period.
Fellows also receive robust professional development, networking, and community-building opportunities throughout the fellowship. In addition to the four fellows, eight finalists each receive $10,000 in support of their work. Applications for the 2026–28 fellowship have closed.
Meet our current Fields Artist Fellows or read about past Fields Artist Fellows . For more information about the fellowship, contact Aimee Craig, Program Administrator, at FieldsFellows@oregoncf. org Eligibility and Selection Artists of all mediums are encouraged to apply, including writers, filmmakers, visual artists, multimedia artists, culture bearers, and performance artists.
Eligibility requirements include the following: At least five years of professional practice in an artistic discipline or combination of disciplines At least three years of residence in Oregon (non-continuous) and the intent to reside in Oregon for the majority of the fellowship term (May 2024 to May 2026) Demonstrable evidence of artistic practice that can engage with community groups and organizations and/or address community concerns The Oregon Community Foundation and Oregon Humanities team will use an equity lens in the selection process for this fellowship, prioritizing and centering artists whose perspectives have been institutionally undervalued, ignored, generalized, or oppressed.
The program aims for representation from artists in different regions of the state, as possible, and artists who use their artistic or cultural practice to create social change within their communities.
The Selection Committee will also consider: The depth and resonance of applicants’ artistic or cultural practice The potential for the fellowship to advance the applicants’ artistic or cultural work and career The applicants’ demonstrated experience working towards social change through creative and cultural practices in Oregon The combination of all four invited Fellows’ communities, regions, and artistic disciplines What We Mean by Social Change This program was created to support individuals who address important issues in their communities and create meaningful change through creativity and cultural expression.
For this iteration of the fellowship we are utilizing a national framework by Animating Democracy; a program of Americans for the Arts that inspires, informs, promotes, and connects arts and culture as potent contributors to community, civic, and social change.
This framework uses the term social change as a broad umbrella to encompass a range of typical social and civic outcomes; from increased awareness and understanding, to attitudinal change, to increased civic participation, the building of public will, to policy change that corrects injustice.
Acknowledging that social change must start with the individual, the framework emphasizes impact that happens at a broader institutional, group, or community level.
We are using this framework to give applicants, internal stakeholders and our team of community panelists who review applications and interview finalists tools to help: 1) Increase mutual understanding of the program goals, 2) Create shared language and terminology, 3) Better understand and evaluate creative work at the intersection of arts and civic engagement, community development, and justice.
More information about Animating Democracy’s Aesthetic Perspective Framework can be found here: http://www. animatingdemocracy. org/place-start/what-social-change http://animatingdemocracy.
org/social-impact-indicators/typical-social-civic-outcomes http://www. animatingdemocracy. org/aesthetic-perspectives What We Mean by Culture Bearer We use the term Culture Bearer in reference to individuals who carry and share ancestral and cultural knowledge that is passed down intergenerationally as a life-long tradition.
Our intent is to hold an expansive view of who might be considered an artist or cultural practitioner that includes both tangible and intangible forms of artistic and cultural expression. Oregon Community Foundation is dedicated to improving life in Oregon and sees arts and culture as a valuable and necessary tool for that mission.
Oregon Humanities is committed to inviting diverse perspectives, exploring challenging questions, and striving for more just communities, and values innovative and imaginative ways to achieve this vision. OCF and OH believe that collaborating on the Fields Artist Fellowship program will advance community dialogues and both visions in meaningful ways. The Fields Artist Fellowship is supported by The Fred W.
Fields Fund of the Oregon Community Foundation. The fund was established in 2012 with gifts totaling roughly $150 million from the estate of Fred W. Fields to support education and the arts.
Born in Alexandria, Indiana, Fred Fields studied engineering at Indiana University and Purdue University. In 1947, Fields went to work for Coe Manufacturing Company, which designed and constructed machinery that milled veneer, plywood, and other products. Fields purchased Coe in 1976 and headed the company until 2000, when he sold it.
Fields met and married Suzanne Schoenfeldt in 1958. He and Sue believed that art stretches the imagination and drives new ideas. “Fred’s humble roots shaped his life.
He was never extravagant, though he had the means to be. He instead wanted to use his wealth to support causes that he and his wife, Sue, felt strongly about. His bequest will continue this legacy of generosity and we will be a better state for it,” said Fields estate trustee Bill Tagmyer.
Fields Artist Fellowship , Humanities Action Fellowship Community Storytelling Fellowship Meet the 2026 Community Storytelling Fellows Past Community Storytelling Fellows Meet the 2026–28 Fields Artist Fellows Past Fields Artists Fellows
Scoring criteria used to review proposals for this grant.
Based on current listing details, eligibility includes: Oregon-based artists with minimum 5 years professional artistic practice, at least 3 years Oregon residence. Writers, filmmakers, visual artists, multimedia artists, culture bearers, and performance artists. Must demonstrate community engagement through artistic work. Applicants should confirm final requirements in the official notice before submission.
Current published award information indicates $150,000 over two years; finalists receive $10,000 each Always verify allowable costs, matching requirements, and funding caps directly in the sponsor documentation.
The current target date is January 1, 2027. Build your timeline backwards from this date to cover registrations, approvals, attachments, and final submission checks.
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The Trail Blazers Foundation Fund is a grant from the Oregon Community Foundation, supported by the Portland Trail Blazers, that funds nonprofit organizations throughout Oregon and southwest Washington serving youth and families from historically underserved and marginalized communities. Grants are available through three funding streams: LIVE Greener (connecting youth with the environment for education, preservation, or employment), LEARN (supporting youth through high school), and PLAY (getting kids and families active). Organizations may apply for general operating or program-specific support but may only apply for one funding stream per year. Eligible applicants are nonprofit organizations in Oregon and southwest Washington. The 2026 application window ran from March 9 to April 3, with award notifications expected in mid-July. Award amounts vary.
Oregon Community Foundation (OCF) and The Ford Family Foundation offer Out of School Time Program Grants supporting a three-year structured quality improvement Learning Community for afterschool programs across Oregon. Selected programs receive $25,000–$40,000 per year in general support. Grants target programs serving middle school youth from low-income families, youth of color, and rural communities with a strong social-emotional learning (SEL) focus. Eligible applicants include 501(c)(3) organizations, Tribal entities, government entities, and organizations with fiscal sponsors. The 2026 application deadline is April 30, 2026.
Midlands Gives (Giving Day Campaign) is a grant from Central Carolina Community Foundation, a year-round online giving platform and community fundraising initiative serving nonprofits across 11 counties in the Midlands region of South Carolina. Since 2014, the campaign has raised more than $32 million for hundreds of local nonprofits through 18,000 or more annual donations. Eligible participants are nonprofits operating in the Midlands region supported by the Foundation, which holds over $275 million in assets and more than 500 charitable funds. The most recent campaign deadline was March 12, 2026.
The Disability Foundation 2026 Grant Cycle is a grant from The Disability Foundation, a supporting organization of The Dayton Foundation, providing competitive funding for direct services to people with disabilities. Eligible projects include accessibility equipment, housing modifications, transportation assistance, and expansion of support services. Organizations serving residents in Clark, Montgomery, Miami, Greene, Hamilton, Butler, Preble, and Warren counties in Ohio may apply. The foundation prioritizes programs that increase independence, community integration, and quality of life for individuals with physical, developmental, or cognitive disabilities.