Art and Design School Scholarships

There’s good news! Hundreds and hundreds of art and design scholarships are available to students, and you’re probably eligible for more than a few of them.  Now, the bad news. None of them are going to jump up and grab you. So, where can you find these scholarships? More importantly, how can you win them?

This article offers a practical game plan for those of you who are trying to track down and win Art Scholarships that will help you on the path to a career in the visual arts. Get ready, though, because there’s a lot to do before you can even think about filling out applications and putting together a portfolio.

PART 1: WHERE TO LOOK FOR ART SCHOLARSHIPS

Start a list…it could get big! Here’s a sample of groups and organizations that often offer art and design scholarships:

School, College and University Art Departments
Community and Civic Groups
Professional Organizations
Your Employer, Local Businesses and National Chains
Charitable Foundations
Arts Festivals and Competitions

The first step for you will be to identify as many of these possibilities as you can. I’d suggest starting with the phone book to really hone in on the local ones; you’ll want to search the Internet, too, of course – but (believe it or not) an awful lot of the local groups that offer your best chances of winning still aren’t on the Web.

Next – start a table, a chart or a spreadsheet with columns like “Sponsor,” “Scholarship Name,” “Contact Name,” “Phone number,” “Amount,” “Requirements,” and (very importantly) “Deadline.”

Of course, you only want to put your valuable time into applying for the scholarships which best suit your ambitions… or the ones you can make out to fit your ambitions (we’ll get to that in the section below on “Winning Art Scholarships”). For now, though, put down everything you come across that’s even close, and once you’ve finished your list, you’ll be able to take a good, hard look at which options are most worth your efforts.

Hopefully, the ideas in the next section will get you going with a good list of choices.

Excellent Starting Points

Your High School

Talk to your high school Guidance Counselor to see what kinds of scholarships and awards are available. Many of them consider it part of their job to help you find scholarship opportunities, so they keep a file of them or a bulletin board with recent flyers they’ve received. This could prove to be a treasure trove of opportunities for Art Scholarships!

Check in with your high school Art Teacher, too. Many of them also keep half an eye on this sort of information, or they may also be members of professional organizations that have scholarship opportunities for art students (see the section below on Professional Organizations).

Very often, the high schools themselves offer monetary rewards for the best students in the arts, or the most dedicated from clubs and activities, which could include an art-oriented club. If your high school doesn’t offer a scholarship or award of its own, then at the very least, either your Counselor or your Art Teacher should be able to steer you toward other sources because they hear about stuff like that all of the time.

Your University

Most Art Departments offer scholarships to students attending their schools, either directly through the school or through business, benefactors and foundations that support the school. Many schools also offer them to prospective students.

If you’re attending or planning to attend a university, BE ABSOLUTELY CERTAIN to contact your Program Advisor to ask what scholarships may be available through the school or department (if you’re already attending, definitely check in with your Art Instructors, too!). Don’t forget to look for scholarship opportunities on the university department’s web site or on a bulletin board near the Art Department office on-campus, where they also are often posted. Here are some typical departmental scholarship listings:

Baum School of Art
Birmingham Southern College
Cranbrook Academy of Art
Goshen College
Hendrix College
St. Lawrence University

Most universities do offer scholarships to students attending their schools. That’s because they really, really want to keep you there. These kinds of scholarships are the easiest to find out about, but somehow overlooked by many students who could benefit greatly from the funding…and from the prestige of winning!

Just to reinforce this idea of funding from your university or college, the Department of Education reports that at public universities, scholarship and fellowship expenditures have risen consistently from 1980 through 1995.

This may be an indication that there are opportunities waiting for you. Again, at the very least, you should ask your Advisor about other sources if there are none available at your university for your circumstance.

Your Employer (or Your Parent’s Employer)

Many, many businesses offer some kind of funding program for their employees and their employee’s children, as part of the benefits package. This might be in the form of “reimbursable tuition,” “continuing education” or even internal grants, scholarships or awards. Even if you’re only working part-time, you still might be eligible.

Somehow, this is another fabulous financial outlet for academic funding that is overlooked year after year by many students. All you have to do is ask!

Community and Civic Groups

Chances are, there are some local community groups that are involved in the arts, whether it’s a “friends” organization to support a local gallery or museum, or a group of people who get together every other week to paint and share stories. Very often, members of these groups pay dues, hold art shows and auctions, organize fund-raisers, and then…. Guess what? They offer scholarships to local people like you who want to pursue an education in the arts!

These kinds of groups may not be easy to find because they generally keep to themselves, but you might try the following:

Check your local yellow pages for art organizations
Check in with your City Hall and ask about what community groups involved in the arts are registered or where you can find out
Look in the local newspaper’s calendar section for art-related events, and mark down the sponsoring groups…or, better yet, call the arts editor or reporter and ask them what they know
Scan the web with a search for towns in your area or your county and your area of interest in the arts

But these aren’t the only groups to try in your community! There are many other local groups that may not appear to be directly involved with the arts, but have a definite interest – or maybe they simply want to support artistic endeavors.

Leave a comment

Your comment