A customized collection of grant news from foundations and the federal government from around the Web.
The grants range from $10,000 to $100,000 and support a wide variety of projects in 15 artistic disciplines and fields, the Washington Post reports.
"I encourage everyone to explore these projects and the ways they help provide inspiration, understanding, and opportunities for us to live more artful lives," says Maria Rosario Jackson, the chair of the NEA's board, in a statement.
Among the recipients: Children's Theatre of Cincinnati: $15,000 to produce a play about Shirley Chisholm, the first black woman elected to the United States Congress.
The play will tour to schools in the greater Cincinnati region and be made available for virtual streaming.
Currents New Media: $25,000 to support the Currents New Media Festival, connecting public audiences with technology-focused media arts experiences such as immersive and interactive art installations, multimedia performances, and concerts, virtual and augmented reality experiences, artist talks, and free youth education programming.
Gallaudet University: $20,000 to support the development and presentation of a performance piece with an interdisciplinary cohort of electrical engineering and dance students at Washington, DC's Gallaudet University.
Juneau Arts and Humanities Council in Alaska: $60,000...
Read the Entire ArticleSelected Grant News Headlines
If you can't make it to the Blue Ridge Mountains in time for Friday night, you can still score a $90 dinner at one of the area's top restaurants.
The restaurant, Clouds, is holding its annual...more
When Kaycee Anseth died of cancer four years ago, she left behind a legacy of collage that is now on display in Bend, Ore.
Anseth's death journal is on display at the Scalehouse through May...more
Foundation: Tulsa Community Foundation
Thirteen Oklahoma teachers have been awarded fellowships that will allow them to travel to Italy, Costa Rica, England, South Africa, and more this summer.
The Oklahoma Foundation for Excellence,...more
Kids tend to be sensitive to group leaders who don't follow group norms, a new study suggests.
Researchers from the University of Massachusetts at Amherst report in the Proceedings of the...more
Imagine a world where you don't have to leave your house to get help.
That's the idea behind the U1st Vision, a self-contained pop-up medical unit being showcased at VivaTech in Paris this week,...more
The Los Angeles Times calls it "the largest art event in the United States."
The Los Angeles Times calls it "the largest art event in the United States."
Now in its 40th year, the Pacific...more
When Sara de Blas Hern ? ndez sat down to write her master's thesis on the Spanish-speaking peasantry of Kilvenmani, a small village in central Spain, she didn't think she'd end up in a...more
When Shuler Hensley graduated from the Manhattan School of Music's musical theater program in 2012, she had no idea she'd become a two-time Tony Award-winner, a Grammy-winning jazz bassist, and the...more
"Experiential learning is the best way to get at the nuance and complexity of fields like philanthropy or business," Brian Goebel, managing director of Emory University's Business & Society...more
"You guys should really audition for this ArtSmart program," Philadelphia teen Journae Barnes tells NPR.
"And I actually just took the chance and followed through with it."
Barnes, from a...more
Global companies like General Motors, Wal-Mart, Bloomberg, Facebook, Hewlett-Packard, Intel, Johnson & Johnson, Mars, Novelis, Sprint, Proctor and Gamble and REI are calling out for necessary market changes to make it easier to buy and access more renewable energy.