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Find similar grantsWilliam B. Pratt Endowment (via Montana Community Foundation) is sponsored by Montana Community Foundation. Grants to benefit Montana Indigenous, folk, traditional, and media arts.
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Montana Community Foundation | William B. Pratt Endowment Fund William B. Pratt Endowment Fund More pages in this section William B.
Pratt Endowment Fund William B. Pratt Endowment Fund The William B. Pratt Endowment Fund was established as a legacy gift to the people of Montana to help them tell and share stories- especially the untold ones- about Montana's arts, culture, and history and to learn about the traditional art forms and cultures of Montana.
The grant cycle is January 1 - March 31, 2026. Each year, the fund awards grants to benefit Montana Traditional, Folk and Media Arts. The William B.
Pratt Endowment Fund will make grants to: Build awareness, involvement, and preservation of Traditional and Folk Arts in Montana. Encourage the education about, as well as the production and presentation of, Media Arts in Montana. Grants will range in size from $500 to $2,000.
Small grant requests less than $750 can apply using a simplified application form. Grant applications will be accepted from early January to late March. Grant announcements will be made in April/May and grants awards will be issued in July.
Eligible applicants include 501(c)(3) Organizations and governments including local, state, and tribal governments. Individual artists and other entities may apply under a fiscal sponsorship. Applicants are eligible to apply in one of two funding areas: Media Arts Education programs Montana’s Traditional and Folk Arts See a full list of the guidelines here for Media Arts here.
See a full list of the guidelines here for Traditional and Folk Arts in Montana here. The William B. Pratt Endowment supports small grants for projects that help Montanans tell and share stories about the state’s arts, culture, and history.
This webinar was recorded on February 10, 2026, and provides an overview of two grant programs, Traditional & Folk Arts and Media Arts, and explains what is eligible, what is not, and how to apply. Ready to apply for funding?
$2,000 to Montana Playwrights Network for the 5th Annual Winter Lodge Rendezvous, which presents contemporary tribal oral traditions, ideologies, and worldview to create a new modern narrative that specifically features Montana American Indian performers who reshape what non-Natives know about American Indian People.
The 5th Winter Lodge Rendezvous is significantly different from previous ones in that it will feature all female indigenous artists. $1,500 to the Montana Association of Weavers and Spinners (MAWS) is a nonprofit organization that fosters communication between individuals and groups engaged in handweaving and spinning.
The 2026 conference, "A Thread Runs Through It," will be held in Missoula, with the purpose of gathering and educating fiber artists by focusing on a traditional Swedish weaving style. This type of weaving showcases an integral part of the state’s history, represented by the Swedish settlers who engaged in this art form. $1,500 to the Sweetgrass Powwow.
Now in its 49th year, the Sweetgrass Powwow is a vibrant celebration of Native culture, tradition, and community. Hosted by the Sweetgrass Society, one of the oldest student-led organizations at Montana State University-Northern (MSUN), the annual event honors the values, voices, and heritage of Indigenous peoples.
The Sweetgrass Society welcomes both Native and non-Native students, working year-round to foster cultural understanding through mentoring, support, and celebration. Beyond MSUN, the Society actively engages with the Havre community and neighboring tribes, building bridges through shared experience. $2,000 to the MAP Media Institute.
Founded in 2004, MAPS Media Institute is a nonprofit organization dedicated to empowering Montana's youth through professional media arts instruction, mentorship, and community engagement. Funding will ensure that Native Indigenous youth in Fort Belknap continue to receive culturally responsive, high-quality instruction from professional Native Indigenous artists.
This project strengthens youth voices, honors community knowledge, and uses media arts to preserve, share, and celebrate the stories that matter most.
$2,000 to Montana Playwrights Network for the 4th Annual Winter Lodge Rendezvous which presents contemporary tribal oral traditions, ideologies, and worldview to create a new modern narrative that specifically features Montana American Indian performers who reshape what non-Natives know about American Indian People. $2,000 A Voice: Art Visions & Outreach to Community Education.
Production and distribution of a 200-page book of photography and writing by Two Eagle River School Indigenous students to honor the vision of these young photographers and writers. A copy will be sent gratis to each Flathead Nation community member, public and Tribal school, and Tribal college library in the state. $1,000 Missoula Community Radio – A/VClub.
This project will offer an intergenerational Media Arts Education learning opportunity to Western Montana practicing artists about technical topics in the audio and video arts.
$1,375 to Thresh Incorporated and Fort Peck Community College for First Voices, a digital storytelling project, working with students of reservation high schools and tribal colleges to create video-based performances of ancestral stories, which are published and distributed via an online portal.
$1,375 to Montana Playwrights Network for the 3rd Annual Winter Lodge Rendezvous which presents contemporary tribal oral traditions, ideologies, and worldview to create a new modern narrative that specifically features Montana American Indian performers who reshape what non-Natives know about American Indian People. $500 to Lewis and Clark Foundation for the 2023 Festival/Anniversary event.
Partnering with the Lewis & Clark Interpretive Center, the event will include several Native American interpreters and performing artists. $3,250 Extreme History Project: The Story of Us: The Women Who Shaped Montana. Two 30-minute documentations will feature six diverse and historic Montana women to help viewers better understand women’s roles in Montana history.
$1,250 Wild Excellence Films- Native Peoples’ Ancient Lives Revealed in the Greater Yellowstone. This documentary tells the developing, timely story that is occurring in the rugged Beartooth Mountains, the heart of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem. In the cold, arid, picturesque plains, shadowy valleys, and the rocky elevations, ice patches are melting and revealing treasured artifacts.
$2,000 to Montana Playwrights Network (Clancy) to support live performances by Montana traditional tribal artists in the 2nd Annual Winter Lodge Rendezvous to be held on December 2 and 3 at the Helena Avenue Theatre.
$500 to the Lewis and Clark Foundation (Great Falls) to support the performance and interpretative activities of dancer Louie Plant Sr., Ksanka [Standing Arrow Band] of the Ktunaxa (Kootenai) Tribe of the Confederated Salish and Kootenai tribes of the Flathead Nation, at the Lewis and Clark Festival. $2,000 to the Playwrights Network to support episode 3 of a four-part radio series called “Montanans at Work”.
The episode is titled “Montanans as Play: Humor in Indian Country” and explores how humor plays an important role in American Indian cultures and identity. $1,800 to the Fork Peck Community College to support the Buffalo Chasers Podcast. $1,700 to Big Sky Film Festival to support the Native Filmmakers Initiative Film Club.
$1,500 to the Blackfeet Community College to support Piikani oral history through songs. $1,000 to the Big Sky Film Festival to support the documentary “When They Were Here,” a documentary on the Missing and Murdered Women and Girls crisis in Montana.
Myrna Loy (Helena)- $1,500 for Music of the Medicine Line, a 4-day festival about Metis music and culture that acknowledges the artistic, musical and social contributions of the Metis and Little Shell People to Montana. Tobacco Valley Board of History (Eureka)- $500 for a History Suitcase on Hand Quilting to be used by local elementary, middle and K-8 schools, as well as by the local home school association.
Big Sky Film Festival (Missoula)- $1,500 for the Native Filmmakers Club that takes a selection of Indigenous-made documentary films and their filmmakers into classrooms across the state. The William B. Pratt Endowment Fund was established by William B.
Pratt who has a life-long interest in Indigenous, Folk, and Traditional arts, with experience as a musician working in the folk tradition and as a living history and production artisan in forged iron.
This fund also honors his work in documentary and industrial film/video production, fostering community video efforts, and his extensive experience in grants administration, the development of arts and nonprofit organizations, and fostering philanthropy in the state. For additional help, questions or comments, contact us at 406-443-8313
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Key questions and narrative sections extracted from the solicitation.
From which culture, community, tribe, ethnic, or occupational group does this traditional art form originate?
What is the traditional art form practiced by this group that is the focus of your application, and what purpose do they serve beyond aesthetics?
Who is the recognized practitioner(s) of this art form, and how is their expertise demonstrated? How and from whom did the artist learn this art form?
Describe the public event or outreach component of this project aimed at educating the public about the art form and its cultural significance.
If a festival or event, when and where (community and venue) the event will take place.
Scoring criteria used to review proposals for this grant.
Based on current listing details, eligibility includes: 501(c)(3) nonprofits, local/state/tribal governments, or individuals through fiscal sponsors for media arts and traditional/folk arts projects in Montana. Applicants should confirm final requirements in the official notice before submission.
Current published award information indicates $500-$2,000 Always verify allowable costs, matching requirements, and funding caps directly in the sponsor documentation.
The current target date is March 31, 2026. Build your timeline backwards from this date to cover registrations, approvals, attachments, and final submission checks.
Federal grant success rates typically range from 10-30%, varying by agency and program. Build a strong proposal with clear objectives, measurable outcomes, and a well-justified budget to improve your chances.
Requirements vary by sponsor, but typically include a project narrative, budget justification, organizational capability statement, and key personnel CVs. Check the official notice for the complete list of required attachments.
Yes — AI tools like Granted can help research funders, draft proposal sections, and check compliance. However, always review and customize AI-generated content to reflect your organization's unique strengths and the specific requirements of the solicitation.
Review timelines vary by funder. Federal agencies typically take 3-6 months from submission to award notification. Foundation grants may be faster, often 1-3 months. Check the program's timeline in the official solicitation for specific dates.
Many federal programs offer multi-year funding or allow competitive renewals. Check the official solicitation for continuation and renewal policies. Non-competing continuation applications are common for multi-year awards.