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Find similar grantsSouth Arts Grants is sponsored by South Arts. South Arts offers a variety of grant opportunities to artists, communities, and organizations located within its service region states, which include Alabama.
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Grants & Opportunities | South Arts Supporting artists, organizations, and communities across Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Tennessee.
Open and Upcoming Grants & Opportunities Community & Organizations This free, ongoing, webinar series offers timely, topic-driven sessions that respond to the evolving needs of the field, providing practical tools, insights, and industry best practices.
Rolling Deadline through April 30, 2027 Open to organizations in rural, isolated, or small communities, the Arts in Rural Places Grant program offers expedited awards of up to $3,000 supporting community engagement projects.
Rolling Deadline through April 30, 2027 Professional Development Grants for Arts Organizations These grants offer up to $1,000 to support the professional development needs of Southern arts organizations with operating budgets of $500,000 or less.
Rolling Deadline through April 30, 2027 Southern Artist Spotlight Grant Southern Artist Spotlight Grants provide funding for arts and community organizations to present Southern artists from the South Arts roster through public performances, screenings, exhibitions, and community engagement activities.
Call for Presenters and Venues We are looking for presenters of all types, from jazz clubs to places of worship to performing arts centers to house concerts to non-traditional presenters, and communities from rural or isolated to urban. Jazz Road Creative Residencies Jazz artists, apply for a grant to explore your work in new ways.
Grants of $5,000-$40,000 available to support a residency you propose & develop for artistic creation or connecting with audiences. Closed and Archived Grants & Opportunities If you would like to reference a recently closed or archived opportunity, please click here .
View our Recently Closed Grants and Opportunities Meet Our Grant and Fellowship Recipients Meet South Arts' grant and fellowship recipients, and search through the projects we have funded.
Key questions and narrative sections extracted from the solicitation.
Project synopsis
Relevance and value of the project
Audience engagement strategy
Feasibility of the project
Outcomes and learning
Organizational capacity
Strategic ecosystem contribution
Scoring criteria used to review proposals for this grant.
According to the current listing, eligibility includes: Artists, communities, and organizations located within the South Arts Service region states, including Alabama. Confirm the full requirements in the official notice before applying.
South Arts Grants is funded by South Arts. Verify program details on the funder's official page before applying.
This opportunity targets applicants in Alabama. 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.
Presentation Grants is a program from South Arts that provides fee support for organizations in the nine-state Southern region (AL, FL, GA, KY, LA, MS, NC, SC, TN) to present Southern guest artists in performing arts, literary arts, visual arts, or film. Grants are up to $9,500 for modern dance and contemporary ballet, or up to $7,500 for other disciplines. A dollar-for-dollar cash match is required. Projects must include a public presentation and an educational or community engagement component. The minimum grant request is $1,000 and the minimum artist fee is $2,000. Eligible applicants are tax-exempt nonprofits or official government units based within South Arts' nine-state region that present guest artists who also reside within the region. Applications are reviewed on criteria including artistic excellence, project merit, audience development, accessibility, and organizational capacity. Applications for the 2024–25 cycle were due March 1, 2024; projects ran July 2024 – June 2025.
Accessibility Grants (South Arts, Inc.) is sponsored by South Arts, Inc.. These grants are offered to nonprofit organizations in the Southeast to enhance accessibility in arts programs for individuals with disabilities. The grants aim to foster inclusivity by supporting projects that engage disabled artists and audiences. While focused on arts, projects could involve assistive technology for participation.
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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