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Averitt Center receives grant from Georgia Council for the Arts

The first-round of grant funding for fiscal year 2024 includes a total of 269 grants across 47 counties in three funding categories. The bridge grant will provide funding for operating support to 162 nonprofit arts organizations, including the Averitt Center.
Averitt Center – Featured Image
Averitt Center for the Arts Credit: Averitt Center / Averitt Center for the Arts

The Averitt Center for the Arts was recently awarded a bridge grant by the Georgia Council for the Arts (GCA), a strategic arm of the Georgia Department of Economic Development.

“These vital funds bring life into communities all across the state. Music, theatre, dance, and visual art attract tourists, bring community members together, teach children self-confidence, revitalize downtowns, and more,” said GCA executive director Tina Lilly. “Through this program, GCA is able to support vibrant communities where people want to live and businesses want to locate.”

This first-round grant funding for fiscal year 2024 includes a total of 269 grants across 47 counties in three funding categories, which range from COVID-19 recovery support to specific projects to educational programming. 

The FY23 first-round funding includes bridge, project, and arts education grants. The bridge grant will provide funding for operating support to 162 nonprofit arts organizations, many of which may have been negatively affected by COVID-19.

The project grant will help fund 44 single art projects, which may include an art exhibit, a theatre production, a series of children’s workshops, an artist residency, or may be used for capacity building projects, such as developing a strategic plan, creating a development plan, or providing professional development.

The arts education program grant will be distributed to 63 organizations to support the arts in K-12 education, and may include a variety of disciplines, from visual art to music or theatre, to dance and creative writing.  

Funds awarded by GCA include appropriations from the Georgia General Assembly and the National Endowment for the Arts. 

GCA uses peer review panels to judge and review applications following standard practices set by the National Endowment for the Arts. Panelists are GCA council members and fellow professionals who are experienced in the arts discipline or type of grant being reviewed, or are citizens with a record of arts activities, experience, and knowledge.

Grant recipients include theaters, dance companies, museums, cities, colleges, and multi-discipline arts entities. 

According to the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis, arts and cultural production in Georgia account for $29.2 billion in the state, totaling 4.2% of Georgia’s economy, and accounting for more than 149,000 jobs. For more information, click here