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Find similar grantsApplications requests due December 31; completed applications due first Monday in March annually. No specific year deadline shown.
National Capital Arts and Cultural Affairs Grant Program is sponsored by U.S. Commission of Fine Arts. This program supports larger artistic and cultural institutions operating in the District of Columbia.
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National Capital Arts and Cultural Affairs | Commission of Fine Arts The next Commission of Fine Arts meeting, scheduled for 19 March, will be held in person only at the Commission's offices in the National Building Museum, 401 F Street, NW, Suite 312, Washington, D. C. All applicants and all members of the public wishing to speak at the meeting must attend in person.
For the latest information and to register to view the meeting stream online, click here . National Capital Arts and Cultural Affairs The National Capital Arts and Cultural Affairs program supports larger arts institutions in Washington, D. C.
Left: Ford’s Theatre production of Fly by Trey Ellis and Ricardo Khan, 2012; center: Exhibit gallery in the Sant Building of The Phillips Collection, 2006; right: Washington Ballet production of Annabelle Lopez Ochoa’s Sueno de Marmol from ¡Noche Latina! , 2010. (Image credits: left: Scott Suchman; center: Robert Lautman, courtesy of The Phillips Collection; right: Brianne Bland for The Washington Ballet.)
The National Capital Arts and Cultural Affairs (NCACA) grant program (Public Law 99-190, as amended, 20 USC 956a ) supports larger artistic and cultural institutions operating in the District of Columbia. NCACA grants are intended to provide general operating support to organizations whose primary mission is performing, exhibiting, and/or presenting the arts operating principally in Washington, DC.
Recipients of past NCACA grants include such institutions as the Arena Stage, the National Building Museum, the Washington Performing Arts Society, and the Phillips Collection. The program is not intended to support organizations that receive substantial federal support.
To be eligible for a grant from the National Capital Arts and Cultural Affairs program, applicants must satisfy all the following criteria: The organization must have its principal place of business in the District of Columbia and in a facility or facilities located in the District of Columbia; The organization must be engaged primarily in performing, exhibiting and/or presenting the arts: Performing is the public presentation before a live audience of dance, theater, opera, music and related forms.
Exhibiting is the public display to a live audience of the visual arts, including, but not limited to painting, sculpture, photography, works on paper, textiles, crafts, cultural artifacts, and media arts.
Presenting is the programming and/or presentation of Performing or Exhibiting as defined above; The organization must devote at least 51 percent of its annual budget to performing, exhibiting and/or presenting the arts at the professional level in the District of Columbia, and must have been located in the District of Columbia for at least ten years; The organization must be a not-for-profit, non-academic institution of demonstrated national repute; The organization must have an annual income, exclusive of federal or pass-through federal funds, in excess of $1 million for each of the three years prior to the year of application; and The organization must not receive more than 50 percent of its annual budget from direct line-item federal appropriations and/or other government funding.
Organizations affiliated with institutions that receive more than 50 percent of their annual budgets from direct line-item federal appropriations and/or other government funding shall also be deemed not eligible. The NCACA grant program is funded by direct appropriation from Congress.
Since the late 1980s, the program has been funded each year at between two and ten million dollars, and the awards are distributed according to the following formula: 70 percent will be distributed equally among all eligible organizations submitting applications; the remaining 30 percent will be distributed based on the amount of the organization's total annual income, exclusive of federal funds, when compared to the combined total of the annual income, exclusive of federal funds, of all eligible organizations submitting applications.
No organization may receive a grant larger than $650,000 and no grant may exceed 25 percent of an institution’s annual income budget. The grant period is from October 1 through September 30 of the following year (corresponding to the schedule of the federal fiscal year). Requests for Applications Requests for applications must be submitted in writing and received before 31 December.
Application packages will be sent out in the first full week of January. Requests should be emailed to: Completed applications must be received no later than the first Monday in March. Depending on availability of funds, grants are to be awarded no earlier than 30 April, or 30 days from the date of enactment of the appropriation legislation.
Applications will be reviewed by a panel consisting of the chairmen of the Commission of Fine Arts, the National Endowment for the Arts, and the National Endowment for the Humanities. The panel will verify the eligibility of applicant organizations to receive grants, based on the program's legislated eligibility criteria. For more additional information, contact the Commission of Fine Arts staff by emailing NCACAGrants@CFA.
gov or by calling (202) 504-2200. 2025 Grant Recipients (PDF, 130 KB) 2024 Grant Recipients (PDF, 118 KB) 2023 Grant Recipients (PDF, 46 KB) 2022 Grant Recipients (PDF, 88 KB) 2021 Grant Recipients (PDF, 140 KB)
According to the current listing, eligibility includes: Nonprofit, non-academic DC arts institutions with 10+ years in DC, annual income exceeding $1M (exclusive of federal funds) for three prior years, and at least 51% of budget devoted to professional arts activities. Confirm the full requirements in the official notice before applying.
The current listing shows up to $650,000 (individual cap); $2M–$10M distributed annually. Verify award ceilings, matching requirements, and allowable costs in the official notice.
National Capital Arts and Cultural Affairs Grant Program is funded by U.S. Commission of Fine Arts. Verify program details on the funder's official page before applying.
This opportunity targets applicants in District of Columbia. If your organization operates elsewhere, check the official notice for location requirements.
Applications go through the funder's official portal — the Apply Now link on this page goes there directly.
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.
The Local Cultural Council Program is a grant from the Massachusetts Cultural Council distributing $1,000 to $10,000 through a statewide network of 329 Local Cultural Councils (LCCs) representing every city and town in the Commonwealth. Each LCC awards funds based on local community cultural needs as assessed by council members. Eligible applicants include artists, nonprofits, schools, and organizations pursuing arts, humanities, and science projects. Applications are submitted directly to local councils and are typically due by October 16. Grants from most LCCs are reimbursement-based. Massachusetts Cultural Council funds the LCCs centrally, which then regrant to community projects.
NEA Grants for Arts Projects runs its second FY cycle with a July 9 Part 1 (Grants.gov) deadline and a July 21 Part 2 (Applicant Portal) deadline. Awards run $10,000–$100,000 against a mandatory 1:1 match, and only 501(c)(3)s with five years of arts programming qualify. Here's how the two-step submission, the match math, and the five-year rule decide who actually gets funded.
Read articleRoundhouse funds rural Oregon and Tribal communities exclusively, across arts, education, environmental stewardship, and social services. Its Spring 2026 Open Call alone moved $1.6M to 125 organizations. The Fall Open Call runs June 10 to August 14, 2026. Here is how a place-based family foundation actually evaluates applicants — and how rural nonprofits should approach it.
Read articleThe OpenAI Foundation opened applications June 15 for $50M in unrestricted, one-time grants to U.S. 501(c)(3) public charities — but a tight $500K–$10M operating-budget band, a 10-percent-of-budget award ceiling, and an explicit ban on fiscal-sponsorship arrangements have made eligibility a sharper filter than the AI-curiosity test most applicants are focused on. Here is the strategic landscape, the three program lanes, and what the October notification timeline means for nonprofits considering a Q4 launch.
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