Fusing Practice and Place: Spotlight on the Artist in the Community Scheme - GrantGunner Blog
Back to Blog
Arts & CultureCommunity DevelopmentProject GrantIrelandSocially Engaged Art

Fusing Practice and Place: Spotlight on the Artist in the Community Scheme

Discover the Artist in the Community Scheme, offering €3,500 to €15,000 for professional artists in the Republic of Ireland to develop high-quality arts projects in collaboration with non-arts communities.

267 views

Featured funding opportunity

This is one highlighted opportunity. GrantGunner lists many more like it - open the full listing for deadlines, eligibility, and how to apply, then explore the wider pipeline and switch on alerts for new matches.

Spotlight: Artist in the Community Scheme

For artists whose practice thrives at the intersection of formal training and genuine civic engagement, opportunities for sustained, collaborative work are invaluable. The Artist in the Community Scheme, supported by Arts Council Ireland and managed by Create-the national development agency for collaborative arts-offers exactly this pathway. It is specifically designed to foster deep partnerships between professional practitioners and non-arts communities of place or interest across the Republic of Ireland.

This spotlight explores the structure, opportunities, and preparation required to successfully apply for this vital funding stream, which moves beyond traditional exhibition models to embed artistic creation within social contexts.

What This Funding Supports

The scheme is flexible, recognizing that collaborative arts projects require different levels of investment at various stages. Awards range from €3,500 to €15,000.

Crucially, the funding supports two distinct phases of artistic development, allowing applicants to target their proposal to the appropriate level of need:

  1. Research and Development (R&D) Awards: These awards are ideal for initiating complex collaborations. They allow artists to dedicate time to building relationships, testing methodologies, and shaping the core concept before committing to full production. Awards may include options for mentoring support for artists needing guidance in navigating community partnerships.
  2. Project Realisation Awards: If the groundwork is laid and clear community partners are engaged, this award facilitates the full execution of the agreed-upon arts project.

For recent graduates, a dedicated Recent Graduate R&D Award (with mentoring) exists, providing a specialized route for launching collaborative practice immediately following formal education.

Eligibility: Who Needs to Apply?

The core eligibility requirement centers on the role of the applicant: you must be a professional artist actively working in collaboration with a community group within the Republic of Ireland.

  • The Professional Artist: Applicants must demonstrate an established, active practice. While the brief does not detail the specific metric for 'professional status,' applicants should prepare evidence reflecting sustained artistic practice, training, or recognition within the arts sector.
  • The Community Partner: The focus must be on collaboration with non-arts communities. This opens the door to working with local residents’ associations, specific interest groups (e.g., environmental advocates, health service users), or specific geographic areas. The project must clearly articulate mutual benefit.
  • Recent Graduates: A pathway exists for those who have completed an undergraduate arts degree within the last three years, offering them structured R&D opportunities paired with essential mentoring.

Target audiences encompass individuals, arts organizations looking to initiate community projects, and the community groups themselves who wish to partner with an artist.

Preparing for a Collaborative Application

Because this grant is fundamentally about partnership, preparation must go beyond the artistic vision and focus heavily on relationship dynamics and logistical planning. Here are key areas to address when structuring your proposal:

1. Define the Partnership Articulation

Clearly outline why the community partner needs an artist, and why the artist needs this specific community. Detail the decision-making process leading up to the application. Is there a shared vision document? Demonstrating genuine shared authorship-where outcomes are co-defined-is paramount for success in community-based funding.

2. Aligning Funding Level with Scope

Be honest about what stage you are at. If you are still in talks and need testing phases, apply for R&D funding within the €3,500 to €15,000 band. If you have a finalized scope and budget for production, apply for Project Realisation. Ensure the requested amount directly correlates with the activities outlined for that specific award type.

3. Evidence of Professional Status and Planning

For professional artists, ensure your portfolio showcases work that demonstrates capacity for managing complex projects. If applying for R&D, detail how mentorship (if included in the award type chosen) will be utilized strategically. For all applications, clear timelines that account for community engagement lead times, not just artistic production, are essential.

Take the Next Step

The Artist in the Community Scheme provides crucial seed funding and realization resources for artists dedicated to making work that responds directly to public and local contexts. If your practice bridges the gallery wall and the community centre, this opportunity warrants your immediate attention.

You can explore the full details, eligibility criteria, and access the application portal for the Artist in the Community Scheme directly on GrantGunner. We help you discover the funding landscape so you can focus on your creative work.

Sources & References