GIG Fund Archives - Arts Midwest https://artsmidwest.org/programs/gig-fund/ Tue, 29 Jul 2025 18:24:36 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.2 https://artsmidwest.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/cropped-AM–Favicon_Favicon-512x512-1-32x32.png GIG Fund Archives - Arts Midwest https://artsmidwest.org/programs/gig-fund/ 32 32 Now Accepting Applications: 2025-26 GIG Fund https://artsmidwest.org/about/updates/now-accepting-applications-2025-26-gig-fund/ Mon, 14 Jul 2025 14:59:37 +0000 https://artsmidwest.org/?post_type=update&p=11735 Grants for nonprofit organizations in the Midwest to bring professional artists into their community and host creative, engaging public activities.

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The GIG Fund is back, and applications are now open for the 2025–2026 cycle!

Through this grant, Midwestern organizations can now request up to $15,000 to bring a professional artist into their community and host creative, engaging public activities.

New this year: We’re thrilled to introduce GIG Fund: Arts and Wellness, a new opportunity that supports projects that connect art and wellness. This track also includes professional development sessions to support your team and your work.

We’re also continuing the regular GIG Fund, which seeks to ensure audiences across the Midwest have access to high quality arts activities. The grant amount has been increased to better serve a wider range of projects.

If you’re part of a Midwestern non-profit that wants to host an arts project or activity between December 2025 to June 2026, read on!

GIG Fund Overview

  • What is it? The GIG Fund is a grant of $2,000 – $15,000 that helps organizations bring artists into their community. This year, there are two tracks: GIG Fund and GIG Fund: Arts and Wellness.
  • Who can apply? 501c3 non-profit organizations, hospitals, and clinics; and tribal organizations.
    • GIG Fund is for organizations with budgets under $2 million annually whose projects reach underserved audiences.
    • GIG Fund: Arts and Wellness is for organizations of any budget size whose projects have an arts and wellness focus.
  • Where? Your organization must be located and operate in Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, North Dakota, Ohio, South Dakota, or Wisconsin, or the Native Nations that share this geography. 
  • When to apply? A mandatory Intent to Apply is due September 15, 2025, with final applications due September 29, 2025.

Read the Application Guidelines

Learn more about the two 2025-26 GIG Fund tracks.

GIG Fund GIG Fund: Arts and Wellness

Watch an Informational Webinar

Hear from Arts Midwest staff about the latest round of GIG Fund, including a new track for Arts & Wellness projects.

Watch the Webinar

An actor stands in the middle of the floor in a dark theater space, with rugs underfoot and multicolored string lights overhead. Audience members sit on sofas and armchairs, some wearing ornate masks.
Photo Credit: Zach Rosing, courtesy of Indianapolis Shakespeare Company

5 Tips for Combining Arts and Wellness in your Programming

Explore tips and examples for how to design arts programming that supports personal and community wellness.

Read More

Four older women around a steel drum.
Photo Credit: Thomas Sigel

Explore Past GIG Fund Projects

Read stories about select projects from the 2024-25 GIG Fund cycle.

Have questions about the GIG Fund?

Be sure to check out our FAQs, or contact our team

GIG Fund FAQ Contact Us

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Reimagining an Iconic American Ballet with Dancers of All Abilities https://artsmidwest.org/stories/rodeo-reimagined-dancing-wheels-cleveland-ohio/ Thu, 05 Jun 2025 15:05:35 +0000 https://artsmidwest.org/?p=11175 The historic ballet Rodeo gets a bold new retelling from Cleveland's Dancing Wheels, a physically integrated dance company reimagining inclusive artistry.

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In 1942, Agnes de Mille—one of America’s most influential choreographers—premiered Rodeo (pronounced row-DAY-oh). It’s a ballet that explores love, identity, and the social norms of the 19th century American Southwest.

Rodeo plays a pivotal part in ballet history. It helped define “American ballet,” setting it apart from predominant Russian influences of the time. And de Mille’s choreography introduced what she called “storytelling dance,” which transformed everyday gestures like cowboys riding horses or ropers throwing lassos into dance.

Now 80+ years on, Rodeo is being reimagined by Dancing Wheels, the nation’s first physically integrated dance company. Founded in 1980 and based in Cleveland, Ohio, the international touring group consists of 10 full-time professional dancers, with and without disabilities, from diverse dance backgrounds.

Dancers performing on stage with a moody lighting. Each dancer is in different pose with one lower to the ground and two in wheelchairs.
Photo Credit: Mark Horning / Dancing Wheels
Mary Verdi-Fletcher (pictured second from the left), Dancing Wheels’ president and founding artistic director, says that she’s inspired by Agnes de Mille and is drawn to westerns with strong female leads. “In the field of dance, people with disabilities weren’t as accepted quite a while ago, but it’s becoming more and more prevalent that everyone’s included. But when I started, it just wasn’t the case. So I had to be strong, motivated, and determined to be able to bring us to where we are today,” she said. Pictured: Dancing Wheels dancers performing in It Only Happens Once… Yesterday and Tomorrow (2024) choreographed by Tiffany Mills.

Mary Verdi-Fletcher, Dancing Wheels’ president and founding artistic director, says that she’s loved Rodeo ever since she first saw it staged by Cleveland Ballet in the ’80s. The vibrant movement and storyline, and de Mille’s approach to dance all resonated with her.  

“I really wanted to do Rodeo for years, but it wasn’t possible [for Dancing Wheels] to do the actual movement … the choreography at the time. So, I thought, “Why don’t we reimagine it, modernize it, put it in today’s mindset where inclusion is so important in dance,” she elaborates. 

Verdi-Fletcher says Dancing Wheel’s version of Rodeo represents a major milestone: It’s the first time a major ballet “master work” has been recreated to be physically integrated. “We’re pretty noted for taking on bigger projects,” she shares. 

A choreographer, standing with one arm raised in a curved shape, describes a turning arm movement for the dancers to try.
Photo Credit: Sara Lawrence-Sucato / Dancing Wheels
New York-based choreographer Amy Hall Garner (center back) spent time getting to know the dancers and their expertise as they worked through choreographing Rodeo Reimagined at Dancing Wheels in Cleveland, Ohio.

A Collaborative Transformation

Rodeo Reimagined incorporates different genres of dance, all to meet the expertise and experience of sit-down dancers in wheelchairs and stand-up dancers. It’s also being reenvisioned in other ways: a reworked score, a slightly different storyline, new costumes, and fewer cast members than the original.

To pull it off, Dancing Wheels collaborated with Cleveland Jazz Orchestra’s Paul Ferguson for the score and leading New York-based choreographer and director Amy Hall Garner.

“This has been a different process for me because we are telling a story. So, I have to make sure that stays in the forefront of all the movement,” says Garner, whose recent works lean non-narrative or abstract. “It’s really opening my creative voice in a different way and making sure that everything is clear and comfortable, and cohesive and precise.”

 

And how long did they have to create Rodeo Reimagined? Just two weeks and three days of intensive in-person choreography with Garner, plus a handful of rehearsals!

She says her time with Dancing Wheels has been a gift “because you get so used to working in the vocabulary that you normally work in … It really is cool for me to figure out new ways of moving and consideration.”

This interpretation of the historic American ballet will premiere on June 14 at Dancing Wheels’ annual benefit gala.

Dancing Wheels’ production of Rodeo Reimagined is supported in part by Arts Midwest’s GIG Fund. The GIG Fund provides flexible grants for nonprofit organizations to support programs and activities featuring professional artists.

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Practicing the Art of Love, One Letter at a Time https://artsmidwest.org/stories/practicing-the-art-of-love-one-letter-at-a-time/ Wed, 09 Apr 2025 14:16:02 +0000 https://artsmidwest.org/?p=10298 In a small-town Minnesota, love became something to share out loud, thanks to a workshop from artist-in-residence JJ Kapur.

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When’s the last time you wrote a love letter—and then read it out loud to a room full of your neighbors?

That’s what happened in Granite Falls, Minnesota (population 2,600), during a recent artist residency featuring JJ Kapur, a theater performer turned psychology PhD student.

Over the course of a week, Kapur’s workshop, Letters of Love, invited participants to explore vulnerability through letter-writing and oral storytelling. Attendees spent two evenings writing heartfelt letters while sharing home-cooked Singaporean meals prepared by the artist’s father. The final night culminated in a public reading.

The love letters took many forms, including messages to partners, departed family members, and even the town itself.

“I did not expect people to open up the way that they did,” Kapur said. “There were folks who came up to me who literally didn’t know things about the people they’ve lived with in this community for years.”

A Space for Exchange

A person in a blue sweater speaks on stage in front of a group of 18 people in a storefont.
Photo Credit: Alana Horton
YES! House coordinator Luwaina Al-Otaibi speaks to the Letters of Love audience.

Based in Des Moines, Iowa, Kapur was invited to rural Granite Falls by Department of Public Transformation, a nonprofit arts organization that runs a unique space called The YES! House.

The YES! House is a creative, multi-use community gathering space on Main Street. Upstairs, two apartments host visiting artists. Downstairs, community members can attend events, hold meetings, cowork, or simply hang out. Each year, the space hosts up to 20 artists-in-residence—a number that continues to grow.

Kapur said that staying at The YES! House during his residency was essential to Letters of Love, allowing him and his father to connect with community members and share stories and food beyond workshop sessions.

“We made The YES! House our home. In our Indian culture, when people come to your house, you take off your shoes, you’re offered tea, and the first thing someone asks is: ‘Have you eaten?’ Not ‘How are you?’” he said. “We wanted people to feel they could write from that place—like they were sitting in their living room.”

The ability to offer that kind of care is what makes The YES! House special, says coordinator Luwaina Al-Otaibi.

“Deep work takes more than a one-off event,” she said. “It’s about the connection between artists and the community—and how we can facilitate that.”

Healing and Performance

Kapur, who is studying to become a counseling psychologist, is drawn to the intersection of therapy and theater.

“I’m interested in how groups can heal together,” he said. “How is the theater therapeutic and how is therapy kind of a form of theater?”

That resonance was felt by participants, including Al-Otaibi, who read a love letter to her cat of 23 years who was nearing the end of his life.

“I would never just have had that outlet,” she said. “There’s something healing about getting up and reading something like that in front of people.”

In a world that often asks us to guard our hearts, Letters of Love made space for Granite Falls residents to speak theirs out loud—and be heard.

JJ Kapur’s performance at The YES! House was made possible in part by Arts Midwest’s GIG Fund. The GIG Fund provides flexible grants for nonprofit organizations to support programs and activities featuring professional artists.

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Understanding Milwaukee History Through a Miniature House https://artsmidwest.org/stories/milwaukee-miniature-house/ Wed, 29 Jan 2025 20:39:22 +0000 https://artsmidwest.org/?p=9288 An art project by Mitchell Street Arts captures Milwaukee’s immigration history in the form of a miniature home.

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When you think about miniatures, what comes to mind? Tiny dollhouses? Model trains? While they’re often seen as cute toys, what if miniatures contained something bigger—like the history of immigration in a neighborhood?

As part of their most recent exhibit, Mitchell Street Arts created a miniature version of a real house in Milwaukee’s South Side neighborhood, as seen through two different eras of the home’s history. It’s meant to be a conversation starter about immigration, gentrification, cultural change, and what makes the South Side home.

Over the past 140 years, the area around Mitchell Street has welcomed waves of immigrants, including Germans, Poles, Norwegians, Soviet Jews, and, more recently, Hispanic and Middle Eastern families. What has stayed the same is the neighborhood’s houses–which led to the idea of making one in miniature.  

“I think miniatures inspire a sense of wonder and awe in a way that is unique amongst a lot of other art forms,” says Rew Gordon, Executive Director of Mitchell Street Arts. “It’s a perfect entry point into talking about the melting pot that is our city.”

A dollhouse in an art gallery.
The miniature house is on display in Mitchell Street Art’s exhibition space.

A Neighborhood-Wide Search

To find the right house to recreate, Mitchell Street Arts partnered with Dr. Jill Lackey of Urban Anthropology Center. Dr. Lackey’s team ventured across the near South Side, canvassing over 30 blocks to find a house whose style, lot size, and window dimensions might capture the essence of the neighborhood.

Once they had a list of potential addresses, they dove deep into the history of these homes, using databases from the Milwaukee County Historical Society and Ancestry.com. They uncovered fascinating details like who lived there, where they came from, how many children they had, and what work they did.

And then, they started work to build a miniature version of a duplex located at 1512/1514 S. 7th Street.

Two Families, Connected by a Home

The lower level of the miniature represents the 1950s, when the Polish-American Golec family lived there. Catherine Golec, a widow, shared the home with three of her six children.

The upper level depicts the 1985 home of the Acevedos, a Mexican-American family who lived in the house until 2010. The floors are filled with miniature furniture, outfitted to match each family’s story.

Mitchell Street Arts hopes that the miniature home can be a connector. So far, it’s having the intended effect. One visitor, a current renter of the house, was moved to tears by the exhibit.

“These are different periods and different groups of people, but we all have more in common than we realize. We’re living in the same kinds of units and making them our own,” says Bella Biwer, a local architect who helped to construct the miniature house. “I hope that it gives people a sense of belonging and pride in their community and their homes.”

The miniature house will be on display at Mitchell Street Arts through mid-March 2025, with additional programming around memory, community and documentation, including drop-in family photography sessions for neighbors.

The Milwaukee South Side Miniature Project was made possible in part by Arts Midwest’s GIG Fund. The GIG Fund provides flexible grants for nonprofit organizations to support programs and activities featuring professional artists.

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Announcing 99 New GIG Fund Recipients https://artsmidwest.org/about/updates/announcing-24-25-gig-fund-recipients/ Wed, 21 Aug 2024 16:21:49 +0000 https://artsmidwest.org/?post_type=update&p=7668 99 Midwestern organizations have received a total of $380,000 through the 2024-25 GIG Fund, a grant program from Arts Midwest. These awards will help organizations present artists and educational events in their community.

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The GIG Fund provides $2,000-$4,000 grants to support the arts throughout the Midwest. The fund supports small to mid-sized nonprofit organizations located in Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, North Dakota, Ohio, South Dakota, Wisconsin and the Native nations that share this geography.

The GIG Fund provides flexible grants to support activities featuring professional artists. The selected artists must take part in at least two public events as part of their GIG Fund project. Funds may also be used for project costs such as accessibility accommodations and marketing.

The GIG Fund prioritizes organizations that are led by or engage artists from historically underrepresented or marginalized communities, rural communities, and under-funded areas. 53% of this round’s organizations have never been funded by Arts Midwest in the past. 25% of the organizations are from rural areas, according to the National Endowment for the Arts definition. All funded organizations this round had organizational budgets below $1 million.

We work with a panel to help us review applications and distribute grants annually. With limited funding, Arts Midwest was not able to award all projects.

  • 99

    GIG Fund Grantees received awards this cycle

  • 53%

    Have never been funded by Arts Midwest in the past

  • 25%

    Are organizations from rural areas

“Arts Midwest is thrilled to support these organizations as they bring diverse programming featuring talented artists to so many Midwestern communities.”

JOSHUA FEIST, GRANTS OFFICER AT ARTS MIDWEST

Explore 2024-25 GIG Fund Projects

Learn more about the organizations funded in this round and see if this opportunity might be a fit for your community in the future!
  • An audience in a speakeasy-decorated space watching two musicians perform on a small stage.

    Western Illinois Museum

    GIG Fund

    FY2025
    Illinois

    In October 2024, the Museum will host The Blind Swine Speakeasy, featuring two nights of music and cultural activities tied to local Prohibition-era history. The grant supports bluegrass singer EmiSunshine and swing musicians Gina DeGregorio and Paul Asaro. Guests can participate in educational activities designed to immerse them in the celebrations and challenges of 1920s and 30s rural life.

  • Six people standing on an outdoor stage with two people dancing in the center.

    Indianapolis Shakespeare Co

    GIG Fund

    FY2025
    Indiana

    Indy Shakes presents trans artist Will Wilhelm performing their one-person show GENDER PLAY OR WHAT YOU WILL by Will Wilhelm and Erin Murray. Will and Erin passionately take the play to states that passed legislation harmful to the LGBTQ+ community. To inform patrons, we will incorporate post-show discussions moderated by local organizations that provide support to the LGBTQ+ community.

  • Six youth holding guitars and drumsticks posing outdoors.

    Eastern Iowa Arts Academy

    GIG Fund

    FY2025
    Iowa

    People with disabilities will have the opportunity to attend multiple sessions of songwriting and recording workshops at TalkBack Studios, gaining studio experience alongside professional, performing artist Evan Stock. Also, participants will have the opportunity to perform their creative ballads for the community on stage, alongside the Evan Stock Band.

  • A cowboy hat in a circle with a superimposed desert scene featuring a cactus.

    Adrian Symphony Orchestra

    GIG Fund

    FY2025
    Michigan

    Funding supports the artist fees associated with the Oct 2024 concert and events featuring piano soloist Henry Kramer and composer Jennifer Higdon. Pulitzer Prize and three-time Grammy-winning composer Higdon will lead a discussion of her work. The concert week also includes a young professionals networking event, open rehearsal, masterclass, pre-concert talk, and artists meet-and-mingle event.

  • A pot pouring red-hot molten metal into a stone mold.

    Chicago Avenue Fire Arts Center

    GIG Fund

    FY2025
    Minnesota

    Chicago Avenue Fire Arts Center (CAFAC) will host workshops with visiting Danish blacksmith, Lars Mørch, in September 2024, focused on traditional blacksmithing techniques and knife-making. Workshops are open to beginners and experienced blacksmiths. Motivated by his passion to share his years of knowledge and skills, Lars will also lead a demonstration of forge-welding techniques, open to all.

  • A circle of ballerinas wearing fairy wings kneel down on a stage decorated to look like a forest.

    Western Plains Opera

    GIG Fund

    FY2025
    North Dakota

    The Western Plains Opera brings Puccini’s beloved opera, La Boheme, to the Ann Nicole Nelson stage on the campus of Minot State University. The production on September 6th & 7th, will include six international solo artists, along with local singers, a children’s choir, the Minot Chamber Chorale, and a full orchestra.

  • A group of youth and dancers in front of a stage, learning a dance.

    ORMACO

    GIG Fund

    FY2025
    Ohio

    Highlighting music of the Caribbean, ORMACO’s fall 2024 World Tour of Music Residency will provide hands-on experience for incarcerated youth, concerts in rural schools and community homes, and culminate in a concert that is open to the public.

  • A group of youth building a tipi frame.

    Lakota Youth Development

    GIG Fund

    FY2025
    South Dakota

    Lakota Youth Development plans a transformative storytelling workshop, for youth and adults to preserve our rich Lakota cultural heritage. Guided by Lakota Authors and storytellers, participants immerse themselves in profound narratives that define our identity. Together, we ensure that the timeless wisdom, values, and traditions of our ancestors continue to shape and inspire future generations

  • Performance shot featuring actors with arms raised

    Black Arts MKE

    GIG Fund

    FY2025
    Wisconsin

    Black Arts MKE’s Black Nativity celebrates the timeless work of Langston Hughes story of the Nativity retold through a combination of poetry, dance & song from an African American perspective, with a twist of being set in MKE & highlighting culturally relevant issues. Project includes: Community Night w/tickets 50% off, cast/crew talkbacks, FREE student matinees w/resources, ASL performance& more.

See all 2024 GIG Fund Grantees

OrganizationCityStateGrant Award
Civic Music Association (CMA)Des MoinesIA$4,000
Eastern Iowa Arts AcademyCedar RapidsIA$4,000
Red Cedar Chamber MusicMarionIA$4,000
Southeast Iowa Symphony OrchestraMt PleasantIA$4,000
Supporters of the Fairfield Arts & Convention CenterFairfieldIA$4,000
Wieting TheatreToledoIA$4,000
Windsor Theatre Development CorporationHamptonIA$2,000
Altepee en ChicagoChicagoIL$4,000
ARTSIE INCEvanstonIL$4,000
Chicago Art DepartmentChicagoIL$4,000
Joel Hall Dancers & CenterChicagoIL$4,000
Chicago Heights Drama GroupChicago HeightsIL$4,000
Chicago Latino Theater AllianceChicagoIL$4,000
Chicago Tap TheatreChicagoIL$4,000
CampanellaWheelingIL$4,000
D-ComposedChicagoIL$4,000
DuPage Symphony OrchestraNapervilleIL$4,000
Global Girls, Inc.ChicagoIL$4,000
Hyde Park Jazz FestivalChicagoIL$4,000
The Midwest Writing CenterRock IslandIL$4,000
Chicago Danztheatre EnsembleChicagoIL$4,000
Railroad Tracks Music AcademyChicagoIL$4,000
South Asia InstituteChicagoIL$4,000
Third Coast International Audio FestivalChicagoIL$4,000
Western Illinois MuseumMacombIL$2,000
Still Waters Adult Day CenterIndianapolisIN$2,500
FAMEFort WayneIN$4,000
Indianapolis Jazz FoundationIndianapolisIN$4,000
Indianapolis Shakespeare CoIndianapolisIN$4,000
Lotus Education and Arts FoundationBloomingtonIN$4,000
Miller Beach Arts & Creative DistrictGaryIN$3,000
Philharmonic Orchestra of Indianapolis, Inc.IndianapolisIN$3,000
Southern Indiana Taiko IncColumbusIN$4,000
SPACE: Supporting Playwrights and Creative ExpressionKimmellIN$4,000
Lubeznik Center for the ArtsMichigan CityIN$2,000
The Point TheaterCarmelIN$4,000
Accent PontiacPontiacMI$4,000
APG AUDIO VISUAL MENTORING INC.AdrianMI$4,000
Artists Creating Together (ACT)Grand RapidsMI$4,000
Erickson Center for the ArtsCurtisMI$4,000
The GhostLight TheatreBenton HarborMI$4,000
Great Lakes Chamber OrchestraPetoskeyMI$4,000
Heritage WorksDetroitMI$4,000
Adrian Symphony OrchestraAdrianMI$4,000
Mackinac Arts CouncilMackinac IslandMI$4,000
Michigan Festival of Sacred MusicKalamazooMI$3,160
People for Palmer ParkDetroitMI$4,000
Play House LaboratoriesDetroitMI$4,000
Polynesian Arts Advocacy Council of MichiganNoviMI$4,000
Pure WindsLansingMI$4,000
Que Blackout Media Arts Youth TheaterDetroitMI$4,000
Temate InstituteDetroitMI$4,000
the Poetics LabOssinekeMI$4,000
Vista CenterFlintMI$3,500
Miikanan Gallery at Watermark Art CenterBemidjiMN$4,000
Chicago Avenue Fire Arts CenterMinneapolisMN$3,695
Department of Public TransformationGranite FallsMN$4,000
Exposed Brick TheatreSt PaulMN$4,000
Foci Minnesota Center for Glass ArtsMinneapolisMN$4,000
Friends of the Fergus Falls Public LibraryFergus FallsMN$2,544
Frozen River Film FestivalWinonaMN$3,725
MiznaSaint PaulMN$4,000
Open Eye TheatreMinneapolisMN$4,000
eMartin DanceMinneapolisMN$4,000
Kori ArtGrand ForksND$4,000
North Dakota Asian-American Arts and Cultural Initiative or NDAAACIMandanND$4,000
Northern Valley Youth OrchestrasGrand ForksND$4,000
Western Plains OperaMinotND$4,000
ArtSpace/LimaLimaOH$4,000
Belmont Eastmont Hearthstone Community CouncilDaytonOH$4,000
Black Swamp Arts FestivalBowling GreenOH$4,000
Brite WinterClevelandOH$4,000
Buckeye Book FairWoosterOH$4,000
Cincinnati Youth ChoirCincinnatiOH$4,000
Summermusik (Cincinnati Chamber Orchestra)CincinnatiOH$4,000
Cleveland Classical Guitar SocietyClevelandOH$4,000
Federal Valley Resource Center (FVRC)StewartOH$4,000
Literary ClevelandClevelandOH$4,000
The Movement ProjectFairview ParkOH$4,000
OhioDanceColumbusOH$4,000
ORMACOHomervilleOH$4,000
Passion WorksAthensOH$4,000
The Dancing Wheels Company & SchoolClevelandOH$4,000
The Youngstown PlayhouseYoungstownOH$4,000
Aberdeen Area Arts CouncilAberdeenSD$3,000
Lakota Youth DevelopmentHerrickSD$4,000
Mitchell Area Council of the ArtsMitchellSD$1,000
The Premiere PlayhouseSioux FallsSD$4,000
The Matthews Opera House and Arts Center (MOHAC)SpearfishSD$4,000
ARTS for ALL WisconsinMadisonWI$4,000
Ashland Chamber Music Society (ACMS)AshlandWI$2,290.68
Black Arts MKEMilwaukeeWI$4,000
Campanile Center for the ArtsMinocquaWI$4,000
Cultural Connections, Inc.MadisonWI$4,000
Early Music NowMilwaukeeWI$4,000
Kanopy DanceMadisonWI$4,000
Ko-Thi Dance CompanyMilwaukeeWI$4,000
Pump House Regional Arts CenterLa CrosseWI$4,000
(W)here in the World Dance FestivalMilwaukeeWI$4,000

Want to learn more about the GIG Fund?

Visit the GIG Fund page or sign up for our newsletter for updates on all Arts Midwest grant opportunities.

Sign Up for the Newsletter Visit the GIG Fund Page

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Now Accepting Applications: 2024-25 GIG Fund https://artsmidwest.org/about/updates/now-accepting-applications-gig-fund-2025/ Mon, 29 Apr 2024 10:35:00 +0000 https://artsmidwest.org/?post_type=update&p=6707 Does your Midwestern nonprofit want to present performing and visual arts activities between September 2024—May 2025? If so, consider applying for a GIG Fund grant!

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Arts Midwest is now accepting applications for the 2024-2025 cycle of the GIG Fund. Through this grant, Midwestern organizations may request up to $4,000 to contract with a professional artist and offer activities to their community.

If you’re part of a small to medium-sized Midwestern non-profit that wants to host performing and visual arts activities between September 2024 to May 2025, read on!

GIG Fund Overview

  • What: The GIG Fund is a grant of $2,000 – $4,000 that helps organizations bring artists into their community. Curious about what kinds of projects have been funded as part of the GIG Fund? Explore recent GIG Fund grantees in our filterable database.
  • When: Intent to Apply is due May 23, 2024 (required). Applications are due June 12, 2024. Funded activities should take place between September 2024 and May 2025.
  • Where: Non-profit organizations located in Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, North Dakota, Ohio, South Dakota, Wisconsin and the Native nations that share this geography can apply.
  • Who: This funding is available to non-profit and tribal organizations with a budget of $1 million or less looking to present at least two community activities featuring an artist.

Explore Past Projects

Read stories about select projects from the 2023-24 GIG Fund cycle.

Key Dates + Deadlines

Intent to Apply (Required): May 23, 2024 @ 11:59 p.m. Central Time 

Application Deadline: June 12, 2024 @ 11:59 p.m. Central Time

Notification of Award Decisions: Late July 2024

GIG Fund Activities Take Place: September 1, 2024 – May 31, 2025

Learn More

Children point to bass instrument held by musician.
Photo Credit: Photo by Fran Dwight, courtesy of Relic

Read the Application Guidelines

Learn more about the GIG Fund, eligibility requirements, how to write your application, and how submit your application.

Apply Now

Two individuals painting a section of a mural on a brick wall
Photo Credit: Mary Anne Quiroz

Explore Past GIG Fund Projects

Want to see some of the projects supported by the GIG Fund in the past? Check out our filterable grantee database.

Read More

Two people in yellow outfits performing outside in front of children and adults. They leap joyously through the air with smiles on their faces.
Photo Credit: Public Space One

Have questions about the GIG Fund?

We’re happy to answer any questions you have about the GIG Fund. Be sure to check out our FAQs, and if you’d like to talk to us, we’re just an email or a phone call away. 

Read FAQs Contact Our Team

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Across the Upper Midwest, Communities Converge Around Norway’s Hardanger Fiddle https://artsmidwest.org/stories/across-the-upper-midwest-communities-converge-around-norways-hardanger-fiddle/ Thu, 04 Apr 2024 17:08:41 +0000 https://artsmidwest.org/?p=6382 In North Dakota and Minnesota, a new generation continues a centuries-old tradition.

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In Norway, the hardingfele, or the Hardanger fiddle, is deeply woven into the nation’s cultural tapestry. From the earliest known iteration made in 1651 by Ole Jonsen Jaastad, the instrument originates from its namesake region, the western district of Hardanger, where it was traditionally used to play wedding music, dances, and other songs.

A Hardanger fiddle looks at first glance like an intricately ornamented violin, with a fingerboard and tailpiece often inlaid with mother-of-pearl, ebony, or bone. It is more lightweight, however, with four slimmer strings, ink decorations on the wooden body, and the scroll at the end often carved into the likeness of a dragon or wild animal.

A person with light skin and braided brown hair wearing a white and red blouse, playing an intricately decorated fiddle.
Photo Credit: Gabby Clavo
Elsa-Ruth Pryor playing the fiddle she made.

Another key element of a Hardanger fiddle is the addition of sympathetic strings, which sit in a layer below those that the bow touches, vibrating when the instrument is played and adding a richness to the sound. “You are playing, generally, two notes at once whenever you play a Hardanger fiddle,” says luthier Robert “Bud” Larsen, a side effect of the instrument’s flat bridge. 

Larsen, who is based in Brainerd, Minnesota, was introduced to the art of fiddle-making and restoration with the help of local violin-maker Gunnar Helland. Helland had emigrated to the U.S. from Norway in 1901. After stints in Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin, and Minneapolis, he established a shop in Fargo, North Dakota, to carry on his family’s craft tradition.

“Our family moved into the same building where Gunnar had his shop,” Larsen says. “We hung out a lot, and I was very interested in what he was building. When I was in the seventh grade, he gave me an old violin and helped me through the process of restoring it.” 

Larsen’s lifelong love for the instrument was born. Over the next several decades, he would build at least 40 Hardanger fiddles and restore more than twice that many.

Preserving, and Evolving, Tradition

Troyd Geist, state folklorist of North Dakota, is a big fan of traditional culture and history. He focuses not only on the heritage of traditional arts but also sees the potential for craft to contribute to health and a sense of wellbeing. He heads an apprenticeship program where a master artist is paired with a younger person in order to pass along knowledge. 

A grid of nine photos of various stages of the fiddle-making process.
Master luthier Robert “Bud” Larsen teaches fiddle-making all over the tri-state area.

Geist is fascinated by how U.S. makers have gradually evolved the Hardanger fiddle over time. Though the instruments have maintained many of their recognizable features, their designs have become distinctly American.

“For instance, the fiddles in Norway would have different rosemaling designs and different flowers that they really focus on,” Geist says. “And the head above the fret is often carved, in Norway, like a lion or a dragon. They do that here, too, but they also carve, instead of a lion or a dog head on the end of it, a buffalo head.”

Larsen and others in the community who are passionate about the Hardanger fiddle liken the craft to being similar to language.

“We know that a language that is not willing to change will soon die,” says Larsen, who was a linguist in Papua New Guinea for more than 20 years before turning to fiddle making. “If people say a language should be prescriptive and you should write it the way the dictionary tells you to, and speak it that way, then the language will die out because it can’t change. And that’s the same with Hardanger fiddle music. Because new music is being written, and it’s being used in different genres as well, it will stay with us for a long time because the music has learned to adapt to people’s interests and cultures.”

Both Geist and Larsen agree that it’s important to continue to teach others how to make the fiddles, which can sometimes take a novice apprentice up to two years to complete. Some makers seek to protect their secrets, but “if you’re not willing to share broadly and freely, the tradition is going to die,” Geist says.

“[The music] is a symbol of Norwegian culture and heritage, and even more than that, it’s a symbol of Midwest culture.”

MARKUS KRUEGER, HISTORICAL AND CULTURAL SOCIETY OF CLAY COUNTY

A Generational History 

First comes the making of a fiddle and then, of course, comes the playing. Arts Midwest’s GIG Fund recently supported an event at the Historical and Cultural Society of Clay County (HCS) where more than 220 people attended a concert performed by the Fargo Spelemannslag.

A spelemannslag is a group of folk musicians, often dominated by fiddles. 

The wintertime concert featured a song written two centuries ago by Eirik Medås. “Eirik’s direct descendant, a high school student named Elsa Ruth Pryor, played a new song that she wrote herself, on a Hardanger Fiddle that she made herself,” says Markus Krueger, programming director of HCS.

8 people on stage playing intricately decorated fiddles in front of a crowd.
Photo Credit: Gabby Clavo
Musicians on stage at the Fargo Spelemannslag concert.

“Minnesota and North Dakota are the two most Norwegian states in America. For a lot of people in our community, this is the music of their childhood that they remember their parents and grandparents playing,” Krueger says, reflecting on the significance of the event. “It’s a symbol of Norwegian culture and heritage, and even more than that, it’s a symbol of Midwest culture.” 

The concert featured performances by Bud Larsen and Loretta Kelley, the president of the Hardanger Fiddle Association of America. It was a meaningful showcase of a living tradition, passed down through generations.  

“The immigrants brought their fiddles with them, and they kept playing them in America, says Krueger. “They kept making them in America. We still make them and play them today.”

Loretta Kelley’s performance at the Historical and Cultural Society of Clay County was made possible in part by the GIG Fund. The GIG Fund provides flexible grants for nonprofit organizations to support programs and activities featuring professional artists.

The GIG Fund is a program of Arts Midwest that is funded by the National Endowment for the Arts, with additional contributions from the Illinois Arts Council Agency, Indiana Arts Commission, Iowa Arts Council, Michigan Arts and Culture Council, Minnesota State Arts Board, North Dakota Council on the Arts, Ohio Arts Council, South Dakota Arts Council, and Wisconsin Arts Board.

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In Columbus, April Sunami’s Portraits Honor Creative Women of Color https://artsmidwest.org/stories/in-columbus-april-sunamis-portraits-honor-creative-women-of-color/ Mon, 18 Mar 2024 18:48:35 +0000 https://artsmidwest.org/?p=6349 A mixed-media celebration of art and family at the Peggy R. McConnell Arts Center.

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One of the things April Sunami enjoys most about being an artist is the ability to spark a dialogue or experience for viewers. In a way, each piece is like the start of a conversation. “Other people, they bring or they’re informed by their own experiences, and they add on extra layers of meaning by bringing their interpretation to the work, so that’s always really cool,” Sunami says. 

The artist uses materials like shells, beads, and other decorative objects that swirl around portraits of confident subjects in dreamlike settings. Resin holds the pieces together, adding depth and gloss.

Sunami’s recent exhibition I Am Because You/We Are, was hosted by the Peggy R. McConnell Arts Center (MAC) in Columbus, Ohio. Pieces were inspired by the artist’s community, especially the role that her mother and other influential women have played in shaping her into the person and artist she is today.

A crowd of people in an art gallery standing around a person of dark skin giving a talk.
Photo Credit: Peggy R. McConnell Arts Center
Artist April Sunami leads a guided gallery tour through her exhibit “I Am Because You/We Are” in the McConnell Arts Center.

Creating Through Collaboration 

Part solo show and part curatorial endeavor, the exhibition combines Sunami’s poignant mixed-media works with pieces made by members of a local art collective called Creative Women of Color.

The collective was fairly small when Sunami first joined, and she describes it as “kind of like a salon. A handful of us would get together and rotate at each other’s homes and talk about art and what we were working on.” Over time, it became more formal, and the group organized events like exhibitions and talks. 

“In that collective, I really started to find my voice as an artist,” says Sunami. “So, it felt right to have their work as a part of the show.”

In addition to the exhibition, Sunami presented a free resin workshop. With support from Arts Midwest’s GIG Fund, the workshop was among a series of events that enabled people to participate in the event and work with the materials for free, boosting the MAC’s commitment to accessibility.

The MAC focuses on showcasing the work of living, Columbus-based artists in its gallery. Michelle Tavenner, who joined the organization as director of programming in Autumn 2021, jumped right in to set up a show with Sunami. 

“They had had just two artists programmed for moving forward,” she says. “So one of the first things I needed to do was to start scheduling some artists. In the first month that I started my position, I had numerous people telling me you have to get April Sunami. I saw April’s work, and I was mesmerized by it.”

When Tavenner met Sunami, ideas flowed from the get-go. Sunami already had some thoughts about the body of work she’d like to exhibit, and over time, the project evolved into a collaborative and multifaceted presentation.

The Women Who Make Us Who We Are

“For the show, I landed on this term, ‘I am because you are.’ It really stuck out to me,” Sunami says about how the title of the show emerged. “It was something really personal—something I actually had said to my mother in the last days of her life… Everything I am is because of this woman. And then if I look at it, everything is because of all of the women—all women in my family.”

The phrase “I am because you/we are” is also traced to a powerful pan-African philosophy summed up in the Bantu word Ubuntu, emphasizing the interconnectedness of individuals within a society and an understanding of humanity as a collective. 

Asked why presenting this show was important for the community of Columbus, Sunami pointed to a text she got recently from a friend who was grappling with the significance of art.

“We live in these really difficult times. Being an artist, is it important what we do?” Sunami asks, but the answer is clear: “Yes, yes, it is! It’s what I tell myself all the time. Art is always on the forefront of cultural shifts and cultural changes. And I think this exhibition is also a part of that.”

At the core of Sunami’s show is honor and respect for those who have been pivotal in the artist’s own life. At the same time, it also highlights her approach to support networks, the local community, and inspiring the next generation.

“I feel like it’s so important for the community to see this work by primarily Black women artists,” she says, “I want everybody to see themselves or see something they can relate to, and really just have a moment to connect with each other’s humanity in this work. That’s the most important thing to do right now.”

April Sunami’s exhibit at the Peggy R. McConnell Arts Center was made possible in part by the GIG Fund. The GIG Fund provides flexible grants for nonprofit organizations to support programs and activities featuring professional artists.

The GIG Fund is a program of Arts Midwest that is funded by the National Endowment for the Arts, with additional contributions from the Illinois Arts Council Agency, Indiana Arts Commission, Iowa Arts Council, Michigan Arts and Culture Council, Minnesota State Arts Board, North Dakota Council on the Arts, Ohio Arts Council, South Dakota Arts Council, and Wisconsin Arts Board.

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This Nonprofit is on a Mission to Platform Asian Culture and Artists in North Dakota https://artsmidwest.org/stories/this-nonprofit-is-on-a-mission-to-platform-asian-culture-and-artists-in-north-dakota/ Tue, 13 Feb 2024 15:21:22 +0000 https://artsmidwest.org/?p=6022 As part of the fastest growing Asian population in the country, the co-founders of North Dakota Asian-American Arts and Culture Initiative are creating welcoming spaces for new residents and showcasing diverse Asian cultures to the community at-large.

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Crista McCandless and Joan Klein, residents of the Bismarck/Mandan area in North Dakota, wanted to showcase Asian art and culture in their community. In 2022, the duo—originally from the Philippines—co-founded the North Dakota Asian-American Arts and Culture Initiative (NDAAACI) to meet their vision. In a short span of time, their organizing efforts through this nonprofit initiative has paid off in big ways.

Humble Beginnings

The organization holds numerous events throughout the year from family game nights to community conversations. Without a brick-and-mortar for their nonprofit, McCandless and Klein meet in coffee shops, restaurants or in each other’s homes to organize NDAAACI’s cultural programs and other gatherings to welcome new Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders to the community.  

Every May, during Asian American Pacific Islander Cultural Heritage month, they hold an expo highlighting Asian and Pacific Island culture. The event grows larger every year and presents culture, art and dance from countries such as India, Indonesia, Philippines and Pacific Islands to name a few. Recently, at the request of the Mandan Morton County Library, the nonprofit started a series of ‘Know My Culture’ talks featuring different Asian and Pacific Island populations living in the Bismarck area.

A group of people seated in chairs face a panel of speakers. In the distance, a TV screen displays text that reads "know my culture Philippines"
Photo Credit: NDAAACI
Last year, at the request of the Mandan Morton County Library, the North Dakota Asian-American Arts and Culture Initiative started a series of ‘Know My Culture’ talks featuring different Asian and Pacific Island populations living in the Bismarck area.

The first ‘Know My Culture’ event in November 2023 featured the islands of the Philippines. It included an art showcase, along with handmade crafts, food and fellowship with the help of volunteers and sponsors. A panel discussion was held with co-founder Crista McCandless as the moderator, followed by questions from the audience. Co-founder Joan Klein’s art pieces were on display, along with other artwork from members of the Filipino community. Klein has a background in art and a career in architecture, using her talent and abilities to sketch and draw blueprints. She also uses oil paints, watercolors, multimedia and photography in her artwork. 

A Growing Population

North Dakota has one of the fastest growing populations of Asians in the country, with close to 12,000 residents according to the last census. Klein says that they know of a few thousand Filipinos in the area, many of whom are nurses and teachers. “We send our money back home and support our families,” Klein says. “We don’t care where we are, as long as we are in the US working and helping our community, family and friends in the Philippines.” 

She says if there was just one thing she could share with the community about her culture, it would be their passion. “We are passionate about everything. We love people, art, food, music, and we love to share. That’s who we are. Our love language is giving. We welcome everybody. We are proud of our heritage, and we love to celebrate us, as Filipino people. We want to share that with everyone.”

“We are passionate about everything. We love people, art, food, music, and we love to share. That’s who we are. Our love language is giving.”

JOAN KLEIN, CO-FOUNDER, NORTH DAKOTA ASIAN-AMERICAN ARTS AND CULTURE INITIATIVE

During the panel discussion at the library, when asked about the one thing they could keep about their culture, the panelists’ response was language. The main language spoken in the Philippines is English, but Bisaya and Tagalog/Filipino are also widely spoken in the three regions and 7,000 islands that make up the country. 

“Even though we live in America, we want to be able to speak our language from back home. Knowing our language and passing that on to the next generations will help them to understand culture and artistic expression,” says Klein. 

A Growing Vision 

As the Asian-American population grows in the state, the NDAAACI will continue to grow their work and vision. “I could see where we (NDAAACI) could act as a resource center, where new Asian Americans can get oriented about the Bismarck/Mandan community, but also to be seen as a place for AAPI artists to sell their artwork or have a gallery space,” says Klein. 

The nonprofit was recently named as a 2024 GIG Fund recipient. It is a grant through Arts Midwest that prioritizes organizations that are led by or engage artists from historically underrepresented or marginalized communities, rural communities, and under-funded areas.

A person of light skin tone wearing a traditional Japanese robe demonstrates the making of tea while sitting on a mat. They are holding a bowl-like vessel in one hand and a small bamboo whisk in the other.
Photo Credit: NDAAACI
Residents in the Bismarck area get to share different aspects of their culture with the rest of the community through events hosted by NDAAACI.

“We are very excited to use this grant to highlight these artists and their creativity, their ethnic backgrounds, and how their artworks define their identities,” she adds.

The GIG Fund will be used to organize the annual Asian-American Cultural Expo in Bismarck that will invite professional artists from the Chicago, Illinois, area to showcase their art pieces and offer demonstrations of their techniques to the local artist community. The cultural expo this spring will also showcase many Asian and Pacific Island cultures and artists from the area. The organization plans to continue the ‘Know My Culture’ events at the Mandan Morton County Library and feature China, India, and Indonesia in early 2024. 

“Asia is the biggest continent in the world. A really big vision is to represent every Asian community that lives here in North Dakota and to showcase them—here we are, this is what we can do. Learn from us. Have that experience with us.”

The post This Nonprofit is on a Mission to Platform Asian Culture and Artists in North Dakota appeared first on Arts Midwest.

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Announcing the 2024 GIG Fund Recipients https://artsmidwest.org/about/updates/announcing-the-2024-gig-fund-recipients/ Mon, 20 Nov 2023 18:21:39 +0000 https://artsmidwest.org/?post_type=update&p=5362 103 Midwestern organizations have received a total of $375,000 through the 2024 GIG Fund, a grant program from Arts Midwest. These awards will help organizations present artists and educational events in their community.

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The GIG Fund provides $2,000-$4,000 grants to support the arts throughout the Midwest. The fund supports small to mid-sized nonprofit organizations located in Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, North Dakota, Ohio, South Dakota, Wisconsin and the Native nations that share this geography.

The GIG Fund provides flexible grants to support activities featuring professional artists. The selected artists must take part in at least two public events as part of their GIG Fund project. Funds may also be used for project costs such as accessibility accommodations and marketing.

The GIG Fund prioritizes organizations that are led by or engage artists from historically underrepresented or marginalized communities, rural communities, and under-funded areas. 49% of this round’s organizations have never been funded by Arts Midwest in the past. 25% of the organizations are from rural areas, according to the National Endowment for the Arts definition. All funded organizations this round had organizational budgets below $1 million.

We work with a panel to help us review applications and distribute grants annually. With limited funding, Arts Midwest was not able to award all projects.

  • 103

    GIG Fund Grantees received awards this cycle

  • 49%

    Have never been funded by Arts Midwest in the past

  • 25%

    Are organizations from rural areas

“Arts Midwest is thrilled to support these organizations as they bring diverse programming featuring talented artists to so many Midwestern communities.”

Joshua Feist, Director of Grantmaking at Arts Midwest

Explore 2024 GIG Fund Projects

Learn more about the organizations funded in this round and see if this opportunity might be a fit for your community in the future!
  • A view of the exterior of ArtHaus, showing a vibrant painted mural

    Arthaus Inc

    GIG Fund

    FY2024
    Iowa

    Sensory Friendly Saturdays at ArtHaus reaches an underserved population of artists who desire or need a low stimulation environment to create, without the overwhelm of music, bright lights, and a…

  • A photo of a medium dark skinned woman with a shaved head looking at the camera.

    Black Alphabet

    GIG Fund

    FY2024
    Illinois

    BA will produce and present a documentary film that follows Dianna Tyler’s (Black LGBTQ+ poet, spoken word artist, and activist) transformation into Goddess Warrior The Poet: a journey that began…

  • A photo of a full solar eclipse.

    Perceptions

    GIG Fund

    FY2024
    Indiana

    During the weekend and day of the total eclipse, April 6,7 and 8, Perceptions will be hosting a variety of community arts events. Regional artists are invited to participate in…

  • A black and white photo of an Iraqi woman with medium-light skin a and long dark hair smiling for the camera.

    Iraqi and American Reconciliation Project

    GIG Fund

    FY2024
    Minnesota

    Iraqi Canadian artist asmaa al-issa will take part in the multimedia exhibition “Today, Tomorrow”, showcasing 21 Iraqi identifying artists reclaiming historic narratives, redefining legacies, and imagining possibilities. The exhibition, co-presented…

  • An aerial shot of Eliza Howell Park featuring a stickwork by Patrick Dougherty.

    Sidewalk Detroit

    GIG Fund

    FY2024
    Michigan

    The inaugural Eco Artist Residency will seamlessly merge art and environmental education, spotlighting the Rouge River significance and advocating for community stewardship, drawing statewide attention to the park’s vital role…

  • Two women stand in front of a display of art in an indoor gallery.

    North Dakota Asian-American Arts and Cultural Initiative

    GIG Fund

    FY2024
    North Dakota

    3-4 Asian American (or of Asian descent) artists will be invited to showcase their artwork and engage community through a 1-hour panel discussion. The project involves two components – an…

  • A collage of images of people participating in a spoken word event or listening to speakers.

    Healing Broken Circles Inc

    GIG Fund

    FY2024
    Ohio

    The BackWall: Art Uncuffed is a performance series that amplifies the talents, voices, & experiences of justice-impacted artists, while shifting public perceptions and dispelling myths about individuals involved in the…

  • A promo image of a five person rock back, in black and white with blurred edges.

    Vermillion Cultural Association

    GIG Fund

    FY2024
    South Dakota

    The Vermillion Cultural Association is cohosting the inaugural South by South Dakota (SXSD) Music Festival with Vermillion’s new downtown venue, the AV Lounge. We have two goals for SXSD: spotlight…

  • A person, seen from the back, looks at a wide selection of wood blocks arranged in wooden trays.

    Hamilton Wood Type & Printing Museum

    GIG Fund

    FY2024
    Wisconsin

    With the BIWOC Residency at the Hamilton Wood Type & Printing Museum, we aim to address the underrepresentation of BIWOC artists in the museum’s collections. The residency will bring together…

See all 2024 GIG Fund Grantees

OrganizationCityStateGrant Award
Hearst Center for the ArtsCedar FallsIA $3,000
Arthaus IncDecorahIA $4,000
CMADes MoinesIA $4,000
Iowa Stage Theatre CompanyDes MoinesIA $4,000
Iowa City PoetryIowa CityIA $4,000
Public Space OneIowa CityIA $4,000
HICGSNorwalkIA $2,000
Artspace 304CarbondaleIL $3,000
Centralia Cultural SocietyCentraliaIL $4,000
Black Alphabet NfpChicagoIL $4,000
Burst Into BooksChicagoIL $3,000
ChiMOPChicagoIL $2,800
Guarneri Hall NfpChicagoIL $4,000
KPACChicagoIL $4,000
Still InspiredChicagoIL $4,000
The WasteshedChicagoIL $4,000
Catfish Jazz SocietyEast MolineIL $2,500
Evanston Symphony Orchestra AssociationEvanstonIL $2,500
UCIMCUrbanaIL $4,000
Subtext Studio TCWarrenvilleIL $4,000
LotusBloomingtonIN $4,000
Viva! Maya Culture FestivalBloomingtonIN $4,000
Columbus Area Arts CouncilColumbusIN $4,000
Fort Wayne Dance CollectiveFort WayneIN $4,000
Beachfront Dance SchoolGaryIN $3,000
Fonseca Theatre CompanyIndianapolisIN $4,000
Indianapolis Chamber Orchestra IncIndianapolisIN $4,000
IndyFringeIndianapolisIN $4,000
Lubeznik Center for the ArtsMichigan CityIN $2,500
Under the Beams Concert SeriesNew HarmonyIN $4,000
PerceptionsNorth VernonIN $4,000
The Allegan Chapter of the K’zoo Folklife OrganizationAlleganMI $4,000
Erickson Center for the ArtsCurtisMI $2,000
City Of Asylum/DetroitDetroitMI $4,000
Detroit SoundDetroitMI $4,000
People For Palmer ParkDetroitMI $4,000
Sidewalk DetroitDetroitMI $4,000
ACTGrand RapidsMI $4,000
Good Hart Artist Residency IncHarbor SpgsMI $4,000
Hessel School House – Avery Arts & Nature Learning CenterHesselMI $3,100
Friends Of The Dawn Theater Of Hillsdale MichiganHillsdaleMI $2,700
Kalamazoo Junior Symphony Orchestras; KJSOKalamazooMI $4,000
Merze Tate ExplorersKalamazooMI $4,000
Capital City Film FestivalLansingMI $4,000
Casa de RosadoLansingMI $4,000
Mackinac Arts CouncilMackinac IslandMI $4,000
MSOMarquetteMI $4,000
Franke Center for the ArtsMarshallMI $4,000
Polynesian Arts Advocacy Council Of MichiganNoviMI $4,000
Accent Pontiac IncPontiacMI $2,500
Katha Dance TheatreCrystalMN $4,000
La Grande BandeGaylordMN $3,000
Lanesboro ArtsLanesboroMN $4,000
Twin Cities Jazz FestivalMaplewoodMN $4,000
Alliance Française Mpls/St Paul (AFMSP)MinneapolisMN $2,000
Heart of the Beast, HOBTMinneapolisMN $2,500
Iraqi and American Reconciliation ProjectMinneapolisMN $3,500
Taikoarts MidwestMinneapolisMN $4,000
Historical And Cultural Society Of Clay CountyMoorheadMN $2,200
2024 Little Africa Festival and ParadeSaint PaulMN $4,000
Ballet Co-LaboratorySaint PaulMN $4,000
St Paul Conservatory Of MusicSaint PaulMN $4,000
BrownbodyVadnais HtsMN $4,000
Frozen River Film FestivalWinonaMN $4,000
Lake Region Arts CenterDevils LakeND $4,000
ArtWiseGrand ForksND $4,000
NDAAACIMandanND $4,000
Bi-Okoto Drum & Dance TheatreCincinnatiOH $4,000
Mutual Dance Theatre and Arts CentersCincinnatiOH $4,000
DANCEClevelandClevelandOH $4,000
Julia De Burgos Cultural Arts CenterClevelandOH $4,000
WIRClevelandOH $4,000
Lake Erie Ink- A Writing Space For YouthCleveland HtsOH $4,000
Actors’ Summer Theatre CompanyColumbusOH $2,500
Art Possible OhioColumbusOH $3,200
Healing Broken Circles IncColumbusOH $4,000
Kingdom Image ArtsColumbusOH $4,000
OhiodanceColumbusOH $4,000
Cleveland Classical Guitar SocietyEuclidOH $4,000
Gahanna Area Arts CouncilGahannaOH $4,000
Legacy ArtsLimaOH $4,000
NACNorwalkOH $4,000
FVRCStewartOH $4,000
McConnell Arts CenterWorthingtonOH $2,000
Opera Western Reserve’s Emerging Artists: Educational OutreachYoungstownOH $4,000
Laura Ingalls Wilder Pageant SocietyDe SmetSD $2,000
Grand River Arts CouncilLemmonSD $4,000
South Dakota Historical Society FoundationPierreSD $4,000
Vermillion Cultural AssociationVermillionSD $4,000
Folklore VillageDodgevilleWI $2,000
Gale-Ettrick-Trempealeau School District Performing Arts CenterGalesvilleWI $3,000
Thrasher Opera House CorporationGreen LakeWI $4,000
Pump House Regional Arts CenterLa CrosseWI $3,000
LunART FestivalMadisonWI $4,000
Black Arts MKEMilwaukeeWI $4,000
Flutes At Dawn IncMilwaukeeWI $4,000
Mitchell Street Arts (MiSA)MilwaukeeWI $4,000
Monroe Arts Center IncMonroeWI $2,500
Li Chiao Ping DanceOregonWI $4,000
Philadelphia Community Farm IncOsceolaWI $4,000
River Arts Inc.Prairie Du SacWI $4,000
Hamilton Wood Type & Printing MuseumTwo RiversWI $4,000
Wausau Conservatory Of Music IncWausauWI $3,000

Want to learn more about the GIG Fund?

Visit the GIG Fund page or sign up for our newsletter for updates on all Arts Midwest grant opportunities.

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