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Applications for Curb Center funding now open

The Curb Center

The is offering multiple funding opportunities for creatives in the Vanderbilt community. Available to graduate students across disciplines, the provides a two-year grant of $2,500 for public-facing creative projects, while the awards various levels of funding ranging from $500 to $2,500 and is open to undergraduate students, graduate students, faculty and staff. Both applications are now open.

Public Scholars Program

The Public Scholars Program for Vanderbilt graduate students is now accepting applications for the 2024鈥25 cohort after a yearlong hiatus. Public Scholars supported by the Curb Center will receive a two-year grant of $2,500 and access to Curb space, materials and equipment to support them as they implement a public-facing project with a creative focus.

The Public Scholars Program has been fortunate to support several outstanding projects since its inception. One such project is the , an organization run by and for first-generation/low-income students. Open Book Collective began as a Public Scholar project spearheaded by Kelly Cunningham, a former graduate student in philosophy, and has featured creative projects by FGLI students, built innovative mentorship structures for undergraduates, graduate students and faculty, and blossomed into a thriving student organization now led by Erica Scarpitti, Ph.D. candidate in earth and environmental sciences. 鈥淭he success of the Open Book Collective and its importance for first-generation low-income students demonstrate how the Public Scholars Program enables graduate students to make a lasting impact on the Vanderbilt community,鈥 Curb Center Director Leah Lowe said. 鈥淲e are eager to support a new cohort of Public Scholars as they continue to develop and implement creative projects with public-facing impact.鈥

Applicants to the Public Scholars Program must have completed at least one year of their degree and have at least two years remaining, have their adviser鈥檚 approval, a concept that can be planned and executed by April 2026, and be available for three group meetings and one individual meeting per semester. The Curb Center will provide support during the scholars鈥 second year for their work to be presented at a conference. .

Creative Inquiry Grants

The Curb Center awards to support Vanderbilt students, faculty and staff as they engage in arts-based inquiry and action on Vanderbilt鈥檚 campus and in the local community. The Curb Center has supported more than 100 projects with Creative Inquiry Grants throughout the program鈥檚 history. Last year鈥檚 projects included ayu: A Narrative Medicine Journal, which publishes creative work written by unhoused individuals and those who offer medical care; the , a student project spearheaded by executive producer Benedict Ballman that became an official selection for the National Film Festival for Talented Youth, where it won the Audience Choice Award, and the Nashville Film Festival; and 鈥淒ueling With Death,鈥 Leah Lomotey-Nakon鈥檚 mixed-media series highlighting the lived experiences of birth workers and the communities they serve.

The Curb Center is committed to offering vital support to creative projects that position art as a mode of inquiry into issues facing Vanderbilt and local communities. for projects that will be completed in the 2024鈥25 academic year are now open.

If you have any questions about funding opportunities at the Curb Center, please contact Rachel Thompson.