Arts Scholarships

Find Arts scholarships for students looking for funding in this field. Compare deadlines, award amounts, GPA requirements, eligibility rules, and application steps before applying.

Showing 667–675 of 1106 scholarships

Available Arts scholarships

Browse available arts scholarships below or use filters to refine your results by deadline, award amount, GPA, eligibility, and requirements.

NEW

Post Anthropology Fellowship

offers this scholarship to help cover education costs. The listed award is R$ 8,479.20/month. Plan to apply by June 23rd.

R$ 8,479.20/month

Award Amount

Jun 23

None

Requirements

Study in: Brazil
ArtsHumanitiesSTEMFew RequirementsPhDGraduate
NEW

M. Woodruff Fellowship

offers this scholarship to help cover education costs. The listed award is $10.000 USDUSD. Plan to apply by November 1.

$10.000 USD

Award Amount

Non-monetary

Nov 1

1 requirement

Requirements

ArtsHumanitiesFew RequirementsPhDGraduateNon-monetaryNY
NEW

Welch University Scholarship-essay Contest

offers this scholarship to help cover education costs. The listed award is Over Over $8.500 USDUSD. Plan to apply by June 30.

Over $8.500 USD

Award Amount

Jun 30

1 requirement

Requirements

Study in: United States
ArtsHumanitiesSTEMFew Requirements
NEW

Traveling Fellowship Program

offers this scholarship to help cover education costs. The listed award is $20.000 - $50.000 USD- $20.000 - $50.000 USDUSD. Plan to apply by July 18.

$20.000 - $50.000 USD

Award Amount

Non-monetary

Jul 18

1 requirement

Requirements

Study in: United States
ArtsFew RequirementsUndergraduateGraduateNon-monetary
NEW

The SOM , Design and Urban Design Traveling Fellowship

offers this scholarship to help cover education costs. The listed award is $20,000-$50,000. Plan to apply by July 23.

$20.000-$50.000

Award Amount

Non-monetary

Jul 23

1 requirement

Requirements

Study in: United States
ArtsFew RequirementsUndergraduateGraduateNon-monetary

How this page works

Compare scholarships with the listing tools above

This page helps you review arts scholarships from the ScholarshipTop catalog. Use filters to narrow results by deadline, award amount, GPA, eligibility, location, and application requirements before opening provider details.

How to increase your chances

Choose applications with a stronger fit

  • Focus first on arts scholarships where your background matches the listed eligibility requirements.
  • Compare deadlines and required materials before choosing which applications to prioritize.
  • Prepare essays, transcripts, recommendation requests, and proof of enrollment before the final week.
  • Confirm official provider requirements and submission instructions before applying.

Frequently asked questions about arts scholarships

Who can apply for arts scholarships?
Arts scholarship eligibility depends on the provider and the discipline. Some awards support visual arts, design, photography, film, theater, dance, creative writing, or interdisciplinary work, while others are open to any student with a strong creative portfolio. Providers may ask for samples, an artist statement, school enrollment, GPA, financial need, local residency, or plans to continue studying or practicing the arts.
What should I prepare before applying for arts scholarships?
Start by organizing a small portfolio that matches the scholarship instructions. This may include images, videos, writing samples, performance links, project descriptions, or a resume of exhibitions, productions, publications, classes, or community arts work. Many arts scholarships also ask for an artist statement, so be ready to explain your influences, process, goals, and why the award would support your next step.
Do arts scholarships require a specific major?
Some arts scholarships require applicants to major in an arts-related field, but many do not. A provider may care more about demonstrated creative work, a portfolio, community involvement, or plans to keep developing as an artist. If you are undecided or combining art with another field, look for awards that accept creative practice, extracurricular work, or career goals rather than a strict major requirement.