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Find similar grantsFields Artist Fellowship is sponsored by Oregon Community Foundation and Oregon Humanities. Supports Oregon-based artists and culture bearers addressing community issues through creativity and cultural expression.
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Fields Artist Fellowship » Oregon Community Foundation Mic Crenshaw, 2019-2021 Fields Artst Fellow Advancing artists careers and sustaining their commitment to community. 2026 Application closed. Applications will reopen in 2027.
The Fields Artist Fellowship was created to support individuals who address important issues in their communities and create meaningful change through creativity and cultural expression.
The program was established in partnership with Oregon Humanities in 2019 to bring increased access, community impact, and visibility to Oregon-based artists and culture bearers while helping OCF and OH explore support structures for cultural leaders across the state. Learn more about the program and awarded Fellows on our Community Impact page .
Oregon Community Foundation (OCF) and Oregon Humanities (OH) are collaborating to invest in individual artists, culture bearers, and their communities through the Fields Artist Fellowship. In May of 2026, OCF and OH will award 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.
The current cohort of the Fields Artist Fellowship aims to support artists and culture bearers who are at a pivotal moment or inflection point in their careers, where the fellowship can provide meaningful impact over the two-year term. This program was created to support individuals who address important issues in their communities and create meaningful change through creativity and cultural expression.
The current goals of the fellowship are to: Enable Fields Artist Fellows to advance their artistic work and careers Honor and sustain their commitment to creating social change within their community To be considered for a Fields Artist Fellowship, applicants should have: At least five years of professional practice in an artistic discipline or combination of disciplines At least three years of residence in Oregon (noncontinuous) and the intent to reside in Oregon for the majority of the fellowship term (May of 2026 to May of 2028) Demonstrable evidence of artistic practice that can engage with community groups and organizations and/or address community concerns An informational webinar was held online on Monday, June 2 at 3 p.
m. PDT to provide a program overview and answer questions. If you were unable to attend, we have posted a recording of the webinar along with a transcript here .
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, when possible, and artists who use their artistic or cultural practice to create social change within their communities.
The Selection Committee will consider the following in reviewing applications: 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 The Fields Artist Fellowship was created to support individuals who address important issues in their communities and create meaningful change through creativity and cultural expression.
For this cohort 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 the community members 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 through these resources: https://www. animatingdemocracy. org/place-start/what-social-change https://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. Fellowship Commitments and Benefits For this iteration of the program, twelve (12) finalists will be selected and four (4) will be invited as the next Fields Artist Fellows. Eight (8) finalists will each receive a one-time recognition award of $10,000.
Four (4) invited Fields Artist Fellows will receive $150,000, distributed across the two-year term Additional benefits and expectations for Fellows include: Attend five multi-day convenings across Oregon as a cohort of fellows during the two year fellowship term centered on relationship-building and peer learning Participate in regular reflection conversations and evaluation efforts to articulate the impact of fellows’ work and the value of this program Access to professional development, networking, technical assistance and community building opportunities.
Past examples include: Participating in community events and engagements facilitated by OCF and OH Learning opportunities through OCF and OH partners PR and marketing opportunities through OCF and OH networks Collaborating with OH to build stories for publication on OH platforms; and build narrative around arts, community building and the humanities 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.
The program was established in partnership with Oregon Humanities in 2019 to bring increased access, community impact, and visibility to Oregon-based artists and culture bearers while helping OCF and OH explore support structures for cultural leaders across the state.
Scoring criteria used to review proposals for this grant.
According to the current listing, eligibility includes: Artists with at least five years of professional practice and three years of residence in Oregon. Confirm the full requirements in the official notice before applying.
The current listing shows $150,000 over two years. Verify award ceilings, matching requirements, and allowable costs in the official notice.
Fields Artist Fellowship is funded by Oregon Community Foundation and Oregon Humanities. Verify program details on the funder's official page before applying.
This opportunity targets applicants in Oregon. If your organization operates elsewhere, check the official notice for location requirements.
Start from the official opportunity page linked in this listing — it carries the sponsor's submission instructions.
Past winners and funding trends for this program
Jerome Early-Career Project Grants is a grant from Forecast Public Art, funded by the Jerome Foundation, that funds the creation of new public art projects by early-career artists based in Minnesota. Two grants of $8,000 each are awarded annually to support temporary or permanent public artworks anywhere in Minnesota. Projects may be supported by public or nonprofit agencies but private commissions are not eligible, and a secured project site is required at the time of application. The program places special emphasis on supporting BIPOC and Native artists, LGBTQIA+ artists, women artists, immigrant artists, rural artists, and artists with disabilities. Eligible applicants are Minnesota-based individual artists with 2–10 years of generative experience. The application deadline was October 15, 2025.
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