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Small Grant and Artist Fellowship Recipients, September 2007. L-R: Penelope Gleason (TCAH Board Member), Meredith Nemirov (painter), Rebecca Pugh (Mountainbirth), Cindy Bellai (Telluride Lindy Society), Rachel Lackey (kindergarten teacher), Amanda Carlson (Telluride Dance Academy) Rube Felicelli (TCAH Board President), Andy Krueger (CoolSculpt), Valerie Madonia (Salon Dance), Lauren Bloemsma (Historical Museum). Not shown: Jeb Berrier, Telluride Institute (Photo by Renee Marr) |
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Grants Information |
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Small Grants & Artist Fellowships TCAH will give a Small Grants information session at the Library from 4-5.30 pm on Thur Feb. 28. General Grant Information: In two competitions, occurring in March and September of each year, the Telluride Council for the Arts awards over $25,000 in "mini"-grants to to a broad and diverse field of San Miguel County artists, performers, nonprofit organizations, schools, and individuals for local arts and humanities initiatives. Eligible projects include exhibitions, performances, touring productions, festivals, publications, residencies, and other community activities benefiting San Miguel County residents. Application deadlines are the first Thursdays of March and September, due at 5pm. Artists are notified within three to four weeks after submitting their application. Small Grants are competitively awarded for initiatives involving dance, folk arts, literary arts, music, theater, visual arts, local history, arts-in-schools and other arts or humanities events. Programs targeted to small communities and rural areas are a priority, and any project enriching Telluride's or San Miguel County's multicultural landscape. Awards are available up to $2,000 and must be matched by recipients with cash (ticket or membership income) or in-kind donations (donated time, salary, materials. Show each on your application, under budget). Art Grants are awarded to San Miguel County artists and arts organizations seeking supplementary support for their art projects, such as: architecture, dance, folk arts, literary arts, music, theatre, film and visual arts. Grant-supported activities must culminate in tangible services presented to the community, such as exhibitions, concerts, touring productions, festivals or publications. Public access to the project is a requirement (for literary pieces, exhibitions at the Library suffices). Please include the public access component to your arts grant in your application. Humanities Grants are awarded to San Miguel County individuals and humanities-based organizations seeking supplementary support for their humanities projects, such as: anthropology, ethics, gender studies, history and folklore, jurisprudence, language, linguistics, literary interpretation (not literary creation), philosophy, religious studies, and social sciences. The interpretation of humanities must be central to this type of grant. As with Art Grants, public access to the project is a requirement (fulfilled by exhibition or donation of copies of works to the local Library or Museum). Special consideration will be given to those projects designed to preserve and celebrate San Miguel County's rich heritage, foster appreciation of oral traditions, or foster discussion or contemporary social issues. Because TCAH cannot be the primary contributor of support for any organization or its activities, small grant applicants must clearly designate other sources of funding. Our small grants are designed to aid your receipt of additional funds from other sources (and encourage a diverse funding base). Artist Fellowships are awarded for individual adults seeking to continue their education in the arts or humanities through a community-college level or higher educational class (or class through an arts school, such as Anderson Ranch, or other similar art education-focused establishment) or further develop their skills through an individual show. Classes that will help artists contribute to the continuing growth of a vibrant and emerging arts scene are a priority. Tips: The grant review process is rigorous and applicants are encouraged to contact the Council's office for assistance and to schedule an appointment. Review the "Five Tips to Writing a Successful Grant Proposal" on this page for better success with your application. Note that if you have already received funds from CCAASE for this exact project, your eligibility is limited (scroll to "CCAASE Funding" below). *Please note: for the March 2008 Grant round, the Executive Director will give an information seminar at the Telluride Library on Thursday, February 28, from 4-5.30pm. The information session will be from 4-4.30, then individual appointments to review draft grants from 4.30-5.30 (no appointments will be available prior to this meeting, or the day grants are due). Contact info@telluridearts.org to schedule your 15-minute appointment.
Five Tips to Writing a Successful Grant Proposal: Tip #1: Meet with TCAH. You are strongly encouraged to discuss your project and proposal with the Council's Executive Director before the grant deadline. By doing so, you may help reduce the chance of making technical errors or omitting critical information from your request. It is also an opportunity to learn about possible changes in the commission's grant policies, the application process, and available funds. Because the Executive Director does not participate in award decisions, she is available to explain grant policies and provide assistance in grant writing. Our staff is your advocate and advisor, ready to lend a helping hand. First-time applicants may find it useful to read well-written proposals prepared by previous grantees. Download a sample artist fellowship or small grant before taking the plunge. Make sure to schedule an appointment with our staff. Appointments are fifteen minutes in length, so please come prepared with a draft application. Request a meeting after the February/August information seminar at the library. Tip #2: Timing. Carefully consider the commission's application dates (first Thursday in March and September) in order to match your proposed project with the appropriate grant competition. Apply in March for projects taking place between April and September. Apply in September for projects taking place between October and March. Think about submitting your proposal earlier than the deadline. Most unsuccessful applicants concede that their proposals were casualties of last-minute scrambles. Bear this in mind! Tip #3: Narrative. Develop an easy-to-understand, organized, fully-developed narrative which explains what you are proposing to do and how you plan to do it. Most requests suffer from too little detail rather than too much. Provide a clear description of the planned activity including specific dates, times, locations, and the names and qualifications of participating artists. Be mindful that there are seven Council board members who will read your submission. Don't assume they know more than they do about you and your project. Also, think about injecting some excitement into your proposal. Tuck in a short quote by a participating artist or organizer to perk up your narrative. The enthusiasm you and others express about your project can be infectious. Tip #4. Impact. Successful proposals are ones which clearly articulate the desired results that the project will have on your immediate audiences, neighborhood, or other service area. The Council is also interested in knowing more about the lasting, positive impact you hope your project will have on the larger community. Make sure to include photos of work you have done, and if the grant is speculative, a sketch of your finished project as you envision it. Finally, keep to page limits. They are there for a reason. If you exceed the page limits, this looks bad; don't overload your proposal with redundant information. Attach only one page of samples (all on one page). Keep your resume short, too. Please note that the Council gives special consideration to proposals which serve rural areas and outlying communities in San Miguel County. Tip #5: Budget. The most commonly made mistakes in proposal writing occur in the math department. Don't ignore your budget pages! Your figures should be realistic and accurate. Check and recheck your addition, then bring your draft Budget when you meet with the Council's Executive Director. Above all else, make sure that your projected cash income equals your projected cash expenditures. If your budget includes admission fees or other earned revenue as cash income, or if it includes personnel fees attributable to the project, be certain to include it. This is a requirement, so you won't want to overlook it.
CCAASE Funding: Because we receive grant funds from CCAASE (and Telluride Foundation and San Miguel County) to fund our Small Grants program, we are contractually unable to fund you or your organization if you already receive funds from CCAASE. However, we are able to fund you if (1) your funds from CCAASE are for general operating expenses and this is a new program that wasn't part of your grant application with CCAASE last year ("first-time program") or (2) you request in your grant application that, although you receive funds from CCAASE for this project, you are requesting your small grant award to come from Telluride Foundation funds, which is a more competitive grant review and needs-focused review ("foundation-sourced"). Note that if your "first time" program is successful, please include it in your application to CCAASE the following year. To be clear: CCAASE can fund nonprofits, and non-501c3's, but not individuals. Telluride Foundation can fund nonprofits only if they are also 501c3's. TCAH steps in to fund those who would otherwise be in the gap. So, if you are an individual not funded by anyone, you are eligible for the grant, no restrictions. If you are neither funded by Telluride Foundation nor CCAASE, you are eligible for the grant, no restrictions. If you are funded by Telluride Foundation but not CCAASE, you are eligible for the grant, no restrictions. If you are funded by CCAASE (and any other organization), you are eligible providing that you check the boxes entitled "I request these funds be allocated from the Telluride Foundation source" on the First Page (and you are aware that this is a more heavily-scrutinized grant for the needs of the organization and the effectiveness of the program).
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Small Grant 2005: The Hatch (2005, 17 minutes), a film by Ben Knight and Travis Rummel, depicting the annual epic insect hatch on the Black Canyon of the Gunnison in Colorado and the ensuing trout-fishing bonanza. Watch online: |
Small Grant 2006: Scholarships for
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Small Grant 2005: Life's A Beach (2006, 6 minutes), a film written and directed by Suzan Beraza and starring Jacqueline Chaiban, asking the question: What happens if America takes just a little too much?
Shown at Cannes, Short Film Selection, May 2007 |
![]() Homegrown Grant: Telluride Dance Academy
Homegrown Grant Society
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Homegrown Performance Series Grants
Telluride audiences love live performances, whether of area youngsters pirouetting across the stage, the Repertory Theatre presenting their latest cutting-edge play, or local writers slamming their spoken word. TCAH supports these activities through the Homegrown Performance Series, which is now a subset of the Small Grants program. Homegrown Performance Small Grants focus on locally-grown artistic endeavors and reach over 2,000 audience members annually. For 2007 and 2008 performances, please apply per the Small Grant rules above.
In 2006-2007, TCAH funded over 9 local performing arts groups. In addition to other small grantees, recipients are shown on our "Calendar" page. Performing arts are important to Telluride and the county, and we encourage applications and public support! |
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Telluride Council for the Arts and Humanities P.O. Box 152 | 283 South Fir St. | Telluride, CO 81435 |TEL. 970.728.3930 | FAX 970.728.8959 www.telluridearts.org
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| © 2007 Telluride Council for the Arts and Humanities | |||||