What We Fund
ArtsWave’s grant programs support 150+ organizations, projects and artists each year, creating thousands of arts experiences throughout the Cincinnati region.
Nearly a century of community support has built a dynamic foundation for our region’s arts to thrive.
Since 1927, ArtsWave has been the primary way to fund Cincy’s arts. Each year, nearly 25,000 ArtsWave donors make it possible to invest in impact-based grants that reach virtually every neighborhood and community in the region.
Your gift supports more than 150 organizations—large and small—from Northern Kentucky to the northern suburbs and everywhere in between. Together, these organizations and artists produce thousands of performances, exhibitions, arts education programs, public art projects, and more, each helping to build a stronger economy and a more connected community.
Explore our Grant Programs
Click on the grant types below to discover how your dollars are supporting organizations and artists near you.
Sustaining Impact Grants provide unrestricted, general operating support in three-year cycles to arts organizations based on the goals of ArtsWave’s Blueprint for Collective Action. Sustaining Impact Grants are awarded in three-year cycles, with amounts determined by the organization’s budget size and related community impact.
Current Recipients:
$1 million+ operating budget
ArtWorks
The Carnegie
The Children’s Theatre of Cincinnati
Cincinnati Art Museum
Cincinnati Ballet
Cincinnati Landmark Productions
Cincinnati May Festival
Cincinnati Opera
Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park
Cincinnati Shakespeare Company
Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra
Contemporary Arts Center
Ensemble Theatre Cincinnati
Fitton Center for Creative Arts
Price Hill Will
Taft Museum of Art
$300,000 to $1 million operating budget
Behringer-Crawford Museum
Bi-Okoto
Cincinnati Boychoir
Cincinnati Chamber Orchestra
Cincinnati Youth Choir
Clifton Cultural Arts Center
Elementz
Kennedy Heights Arts Center
Kentucky Symphony Orchestra
Know Theatre of Cincinnati
Over-the-Rhine International Film Festival
Oxford Community Arts Center
Pyramid Hill Sculpture Park & Museum
Visionaries + Voices
Wyoming Fine Arts Center
Less than $300,000 operating budget
American Legacy Theatre
ArtsConnect
Cincinnati Men’s Chorus
Learning Through Art
Linton Chamber Music
A Mindful Moment/The Well
MUSE Cincinnati’s Women’s Choir
Mutual Dance Theatre and Arts Centers
My Nose Turns Red Youth Circus
PAR-Projects
Pones
Queen City Opera
Vocal Arts Ensemble
Young Professionals Choral Collective
Catalyzing Impact grants are awarded to new or expanded projects that support the goals of ArtsWave’s Blueprint for Collective Action and are funded by the community with support in part from the National Endowment of the Arts.
2026 Grant Recipients
African Professionals Network – APNET | Afrifest 2026
AfriFest 2026 is a free, public celebration of African arts and cultural heritage that activates Sawyer Point and surrounding community spaces in Cincinnati. The festival features live music and dance performances, visual arts, cultural showcases, and creative entrepreneurship, bringing together artists, vendors, and community members from diverse backgrounds. Building on the success of AfriFest 2025, which welcomed more than 7,500 attendees, the project creates an inclusive, welcoming environment that strengthens neighborhood vibrancy, bridges cultures, and connects residents through shared arts and cultural experiences.
Art Academy of Cincinnati | Cincinnati Intergenerational Art Initiative
The Cincinnati Intergenerational Art Initiative provides no-cost access to art workshops tailored to the needs of family groups and students of all ages. Taking place at the Art Academy of Cincinnati, four free, open-to-the-public events offer a series of unique opportunities for locals to participate in artmaking with family and community members. As a pilot project in Summer 2026, the Initiative will connect Cincinnati families to engaging visual art education guided by professional and working resident Artist Educators. These dynamic experiences will bolster the visual arts in Cincinnati and increase access to intergenerational community engagement opportunities for 500 community students.
ARTE | 17 Neighborhoods
The 17 Neighborhoods project is a community-wide public art initiative led by ARTE that brings residents together through the creation of a large-scale mural. The mural is composed of portable 4×8-foot panels that travel to all 17 neighborhoods of Hamilton, allowing each community to paint its own section. Youth, families, and residents collaborate with local artists to visually represent their neighborhood’s history, culture, and identity. Once completed, the panels will be assembled and permanently installed at a central community location, creating a shared artwork that celebrates unity, inclusion, and neighborhood pride while amplifying local voices across the city.
Bader+Simon | In Living Color: A Mural of Cincinnati’s Diverse Art History
An 80′ x 8′ mural, created in collaboration with Bader+Simon, Black Art Speaks, and the community, will be installed on the exterior of the Bader+Simon Gallery in Cincinnati. Set for completion by August 2026, the mural will honor the city’s cultural diversity, art history, and creative legacy. Featuring figures and symbols that reflect Cincinnati’s diverse artistic communities and Art Deco architecture, the mural will also serve as an educational tool within Bader+Simon’s art history curriculum. Community and youth involvement in its creation will emphasize inclusivity, representation, artistic collaboration, and cultural expression for all audiences.
Creative Aging Cincinnati | Arts Programming for Seniors
With recent funding from ArtsWave, Creative Aging Cincinnati is able to expand impact in the senior community. New cultural collaborations with BI-OKOTO African Heritage Cultural Institute and The Cultural Centre of India will offer demonstrations and greater insight into African and Indian customs. Two new complementary Outreach Programs will also be offered in 2026 to any senior-serving group, bringing several organizations together to enjoy an entertaining production and promote a sense of camaraderie and community. Funds will also be designated for a scholarship program that provides complimentary programs to facilities serving low income and minority seniors.
CET, Greater Cincinnati Educational Television | The Art Show
CET’s Emmy Award-winning, flagship series “The Art Show” grows Cincinnati’s recognition by beaming our homegrown artistry across the city, state and country. This season, CET will slide into sculptor Tom Tsuchiya’s public works; take a dive into OTR’s synchronized swim team; get abstract with painter Rebecca Barker; and more. New in-person events will foster inspiration, sensory connection and artful community.
Cincinnati Pride, Inc. | 2026 Cincinnati Pride Festival
The 2026 Cincinnati Pride Festival will include entertainment on three different stages, highlighting visual and performance art of all different varieties- including and not limited to singer/songwriters, drag artists, dance troupes, choral collectives, and more. The festival will kick off with the Cincinnati Pride Parade leading everyone to the festival grounds at Sawyer Point/Yeatman’s Cove on June 27, 2026!
Cindependent Film Festival (CIFF) | CindeNext
CindeNEXT is a hands-on youth filmmaking program presented by the Cindependent Film Festival and hosted at the University of Cincinnati’s College-Conservatory of Music (CCM). Serving high school students ages 14–17 from across the region, the program emphasizes inclusivity, mentorship, collaboration, and creative leadership. Guided by professional filmmakers and educators, participants build practical filmmaking skills while exploring career and college pathways. Working individually and in teams, students will create an original short film from concept to final cut. Completed films will be screened for live audiences at the Cindependent Film Festival, amplifying young voices and building confidence in the next generation of storytellers.
City of Blue Ash | Under the Canopy: Cultural Connections
Under the Canopy: Cultural Connections is a free, year-long cultural performance series taking place at Summit Park in Blue Ash, Ohio, throughout 2026. The series features nine live events showcasing music, dance, theatre, and storytelling rooted in Indian, Japanese, Irish, Hispanic/Latino, and other global traditions. Presented outdoors under Summit Park’s performance canopy, each event will invite audiences of all ages and abilities to experience culture together in a welcoming public space. Cultural Connections will transform everyday diversity into shared experiences that build understanding, connection, and community across the region.
Dancefix Foundation | Dancefix Foundation Summer on the Plaza Series
Join the Dancefix Foundation for our Summer on the Plaza Series, featuring free weekly adult community classes—R&B and Soul Line Dance and Seated Tap. Offered indoors and outdoors at the DANCEFIX studio in the Paramount Launch Plaza in Walnut Hills, these high energy, inclusive classes will welcome all levels and abilities. Move your body, meet your neighbors, and build community while having fun!
Film Cincinnati | The Business of Storytelling
Film Cincinnati is launching The Business of Storytelling, a program that will equip local creators with the knowledge needed to navigate the rapidly changing content landscape. In partnership with Christine Vachon, the University of Cincinnati, the business school, and the co-op program, this initiative will teach artists how to sustain their craft by understanding the business and commerce of content creation. As storytelling continues to evolve across new platforms, this program will build a foundation for long term training at the future film center and ensure that Cincinnati creators remain competitive and relevant for years to come.
Friends of the Harriet Beecher Stowe House | Centering African American Stories: Poetry, Storytelling, and Music at the Edgemont Inn
Centering African American Stories: Poetry, Storytelling, and Music at the Edgemont Inn will bring the historic spirit of the Edgemont Inn to life through poetry, spoken word, storytelling, and music at the Harriet Beecher Stowe House. Through open mic nights, a poetry slam, and a community jazz and storytelling concert, the project will celebrate African American history, creativity, and community. Rooted in Walnut Hills and inspired by the Edgemont Inn’s legacy as a gathering place, these events invite neighbors and visitors to experience history through living artistic expression.
Indigo Hippo | Material Play
Material Play is a creative workshop series exploring community, resilience, and sustainability through art making with upcycled materials. Indigo Hippo will partner with various community arts organizations and studios across Cincinnati and Northern Kentucky’s neighborhoods to offer free and accessible neighborhood-focused creative sessions for all ages, where participants will explore different creative mediums and learn new skills from local artists.
Jazz Alive | 2026 Jazz in the Camp at the American Sign Museum
Jazz Alive presents Jazz In the Camp at the American Sign Museum, a weekly jazz concert series in the Cincinnati neighborhood of Camp Washington. Held every Wednesday, the 2026 6-week series will feature well known jazz artists from the greater Cincinnati area and internationally known jazz artists. Each week attendees will reflect a mosaic of the greater Cincinnati community with families from various neighborhoods, seniors, jazz lovers, and members of the museum. Admission for Jazz In the Camp is free.
Lightship Foundation | Black Tech Week: The Creative Frequency Finale
CTRL + ALT + CREATE is the theme of Black Tech Week 2026, a multi-day conference celebrating the intersection of humanity, creativity, and technology in Cincinnati. As the cultural finale of the week, Black Tech Week: The Creative Frequency Finale will close the conference and feature a curated showcase of live music, visual art, and immersive creative activations by local and regional artists. Designed to center artistic expression within the innovative economy, the finale will invite attendees to experience how art, culture, and creativity influence technology and community.
May-We-Help | Cincinnati Adaptive Arts and Music Camp
May-We-Help is partnering with the Adaptive Arts & Music Project to present the Cincinnati Adaptive Arts and Music Camp (CAAMC) from July 19 to July 25, 2026, at Northern Kentucky University. Celebrating creativity, skills, and unique perspectives that artists with disabilities contribute to the arts, CAAMC welcomes children and adults with physical disabilities to join an inclusive community where everyone has access to musical instruments and artistic tools and can grow as musicians or visual artists, regardless of the number of fingers or hands they have available to create their art.
Music Resource Center-Cincinnati | Community Studio: Bringing Music to West Side Youth
The Music Resource Center will expand its mobile recording and music-creation program to the West Side through the Gamble-Nippert and Clippard YMCAs. Using new professional-grade equipment, teens will produce original music, collaborate with local artists, and host community sharing events. This project brings accessible arts to youth who often lack creative outlets, helping them build confidence, develop skills, and connect with peers and caring adults. ArtsWave funding supports outreach instruction and teen-centered creative experiences.
Musicians for Health | Cash: The Business of Art and the Art of Business
Business and art blend harmoniously together at this unique career development seminar. Valarie Shephard, former Group Vice President, Treasurer, and Controller at The Procter & Gamble Company, and Ixi Chen, Second Clarinet in the Cincinnati Symphony and active artist consultant and mentor, will present a panel and discussion to introduce creatives of any medium to the financial structures and practices that will be the foundation for a sustainable career in the arts. Specifically tailored to early-career artists, Ms. Sheppard and Ms. Chen will address the creative’s responsibilities and possibilities as an entrepreneur.
Ohio Arts Professionals Network (OAPN) | Ohio Arts Professionals Network 2026 Conference
From October 18–20, 2026, the Ohio Arts Professionals Network Conference will bring together presenters from across Ohio and the region with touring artists and agencies from around the world. Held entirely at the Fitton Center for the Creative Arts in Hamilton, the conference features juried showcases, an exhibit hall, professional development sessions, and dedicated networking. This event strengthens industry connections, drives future bookings, and supports presenters as they build their upcoming seasons.
Ohio Justice and Policy Center | Just Art Initiative: Voices from the Inside
The Just Art Initiative will use visual art and storytelling created by incarcerated and formerly incarcerated individuals – especially women – to build community connection and understanding. Through exhibits, school workshops, and community events, the project brings justice-impacted artists into dialogue with youth and the broader public. In 2026, OJPC will host four public exhibits and six school-based programs, expanding statewide reach and fostering empathy, learning, and cultural connection across divides and a focus in Cincinnati.
ProjectArt | ProjectArt Cincinnati
ProjectArt will empower youth, artists, and communities through free visual arts education in public libraries. Launched in Cincinnati in 2023 in partnership with the Cincinnati and Hamilton County Public Library, ProjectArt began at the Avondale and West End branches. In the 2025–2026 school year, ProjectArt will expand its Cincinnati footprint with the launch of a third full program site at the Bond Hill branch, including the addition of a third Resident Teaching Artist and a new schedule of weekly classes. This expansion will establish Bond Hill as a permanent program site – significantly increasing geographic reach, instructional capacity, and neighborhood-level impact across Cincinnati.
Q-KIDZ Dance Team | Stop The Violence: Youth In Motion Prevention Project
The Stop the Violence: Youth in Motion Prevention Project will use performance as a prevention strategy to address youth exposure to violence, substance use, trauma, and negative peer influence. Many young people witness these challenges daily in their schools, neighborhoods, and homes but lack safe, creative spaces to process their experiences or learn healthier responses. Through this project, youth will create, write, and perform a prevention-based stage production rooted in real situations they face. Using storytelling, movement, and dialogue, the performance highlights consequences while demonstrating positive, preventable outcomes that encourage nonviolence, emotional wellness, and positive decision-making through peer-to-peer messaging.
Soulful Change | The 3rd Annual Africa Day Celebration: Next-Gen Leadership, Global Impact, and Influence
Cincinnati’s 3rd Annual Africa Day Celebration will be an immersive arts and cultural experience honoring Cincinnati’s African community through music, art, and connection. Celebrated globally on May 25th, Africa Day commemorates the founding of the African Unity (OAU) in 1963.
Talk Low Music Festival | Talk Low Music Festival, Community Workshops, and Performances
In 2026, the Talk Low Music Festival will present a unified series of immersive performances and participatory workshops that bring internationally recognized artists to Cincinnati. Award-winning turntablist Maria Chavez will lead a hands-on sound workshop followed by a live performance, while ambient music pioneer William Basinski’s performance will be paired with a Deep Listening workshop facilitated by Innerspace Listening Lab. Together, these events position Cincinnati as a destination for innovative, world-class arts experiences.
The Clifton Community Players | Where We Are Planted: A Verbatim Theatre Performance
This project will engage high schoolers and community members in an innovative form of environmental education and community building through theatre. Using a form of documentary theatre called the Verbatim technique, students at the School for Creative and Performing Arts (SCPA) will be guided through the process of bringing stories about human-environmental interactions in Cincinnati to life on stage. In interpreting and embodying these local environmental stories, these students will strengthen their artistic skills while using knowledge of Cincinnati’s past to reflect on their place in the city’s environmental future.
The Harmon Museum | Lebanon Festival of the Arts 2026
The Lebanon Festival is a collaboration between the Harmon Museum, Warren County Foundation, the City of Lebanon, Artscape and Soul Sidekick Studio. This strong collaboration will create a public Arts Festival in Warren County showcasing the visual and performing arts, providing diverse and interdisciplinary performances and exhibits for all age groups.
TransForming Families Ministries | West Chester/Liberty Township Juneteenth Celebration
TransForming Families Ministries’ Juneteenth event will celebrate the significance of this historic African American holiday through arts, culture, and community engagement. Featuring African American artists, music, and spoken word, the event is designed to be fun, family-friendly, interactive, and engaging for all ages. Educational components highlight the history and enduring relevance of Juneteenth while artistic expression helps foster cross-cultural understanding. By bringing people together in a welcoming environment, the event will strengthen community connections and build shared appreciation for African American history and cultural heritage.
Walnut Hills Redevelopment Foundation | Walnut Hills Arts & Culture Series
The Walnut Hills community will host an Arts & Culture event series that showcases the rich cultural heritage of our neighborhood. These after-work events will feature DJs and live music performances along with dance and artmaking. The Spring/Summer series will demonstrate the strong, diverse collaborative relationships we’re building with creative organizations, businesses, and rising artists.
Warren County Arts Council dba ArtScape Lebanon | Expanding Ceramics Access for Underserved Children and Adults
ArtScape Lebanon will expand ceramics access for underserved children and adults by creating comprehensive scholarship programs, adaptive programming for individuals with disabilities, and culturally responsive workshops. This project will eliminate financial and physical barriers to pottery education, serving 150-200 underserved community members, including low-income children, at-risk youth, families in poverty, adults with disabilities, and isolated seniors. We will transform our pottery studio into an inclusive space where Warren County’s most vulnerable populations experience creative empowerment.
Wave Pool Corp | Wave Pool Incubator Residency
Wave Pool will launch Wave Pool Incubator, a six-month residency for Cincinnati-area socially engaged artists developing ambitious, long-term community-centered initiatives. Selected residents receive a $4,000 stipend, $1,000 project budget, studio/office space, and mentorship to shape early-stage ideas into creative businesses, nonprofits, sustained community projects, coops, or other lasting structures. The first cohort will begin April 2026 with two artists sponsored through this funding.
About the Northern Kentucky Creative Placemaking Grant
The Northern Kentucky Creative Placemaking Grants are a collaborative initiative between ArtsWave and meetNKY, designed to leverage the power of the arts to shape stronger, more vibrant communities across Boone, Campbell and Kenton counties. The grants support projects that celebrate Northern Kentucky’s cultural identity, stimulate economic growth and enhance public spaces through artistic expression. Since its launch, the program has supported festivals, performances, installations, and other creative experiences that enrich community life and boost tourism.
2025 Grant Recipients
Bi-Okoto | Afrika On The Move: A Pop-Up Cultural Festival Series
Afrika On The Move is a traveling cultural festival designed to enliven Northern Kentucky neighborhoods with dynamic African arts, music, dance and culinary experiences. The festivals will be immersive, single-day events in two neighborhoods, with performances, workshops, a marketplace and more. Bi-Okoto, a leader in African cultural arts for over 30 years, will curate and lead the programming, ensuring authenticity, engagement and accessibility.
The Center for Great Neighborhoods | Sparks in the Park
The Center for Great Neighborhoods, in partnership with the Eastside Plus Neighborhood Association, will host a series of 5 community events for youth and families during the summer. Each event will consist of food, music, arts and cultural programming, and community engagement activities aimed at a multigenerational audience. These events will take place in the Eastern Neighborhoods of Covington, supporting Eastside residents to developing and activating a quality-of-life plan that consists of youth/family development, housing, economic development, greenspace, transportation and arts & culture.
Cincinnati Shakespeare Company | FREE Shakespeare in the Park in NKY
Cincinnati Shakespeare Company’s FREE Shakespeare in the Park tour is one of the nation’s largest free Shakespeare programs. CSC partners with local parks, municipalities and organizations to transform outdoor spaces, bringing professional, high-quality theater directly to Northern Kentucky residents. The program enhances public spaces, and strengthens community identity through live performance.
Kentucky African Women Association | The African Art Showcase
Organized by the Kentucky African Women Association (KAWA), this dynamic celebration of African artistic expression will be a platform for African and African diaspora artists to share their work with the broader Northern Kentucky community. Twice a year, the event will feature visual art, live performances and storytelling that highlight the richness of African heritage while fostering cultural appreciation and understanding.
Kentucky Symphony Orchestra | 2025-26 KSO/NKY Public Library Tour
The NKY Public Library Tour establishes new partnerships between the KSO and Northern Kentucky’s three public county library systems. Two KSO subsidiary groups will perform a total of six free, themed concerts, increasing the variety and frequency of arts experiences accessible to all NKY residents at two branches within each county’s library system. The KSO’s Flood Wall Jazz Quartet and Men in Black brass quintet will perform at these free concerts.
Queer Kentucky | Arts and Culture in NKY Digital Magazine
Queer Kentucky will create a digital magazine promoting the arts and culture scene in NKY. The publication will feature original stories, artwork and photography, highlighting local artists, businesses and attractions and encouraging people to visit and engage with the art and artists of Northern Kentucky. Queer Kentucky will highlight the strong artist community of the region with artist-on-artist interviews and stories about the innovation, culture, street art, food and welcoming spirit that make the region special.
ReNewport | The Orchard Project
A growing creative presence in Newport tracks from Monmouth to York and several places in between. Orchard Street connects them all. Embracing this alley and flooding it with light, murals and people capitalizes on that presence to build community. It will bring color and life to a beautiful alleyway, encouraging visitors and bringing attention to local businesses. The spot will come to live with farmer’s markets, flea markets, local business crawls, creative showcases, and mural dedications.
Southbank Shakespeare | Southbank Shakespeare Summer Season
Southbank Shakespeare is expanding their season, adding more performances to more communities in Northern Kentucky. Southbank Shakespeare productions make theatre more accessible and relevant to Northern Kentuckians from all walks of life. The outdoor setting creates an inclusive environment where everyone can come together and experience the power of live performance. These productions encourage community connection, boost local pride and stimulate public interest in the arts, ultimately enhancing the cultural landscape of the region.
Urban Appalachian Community Coalition | UACC Place Keepers – Woven Branches Project
Inspired by the irrepressible spirit of Appalachian people, the Woven Branches project is a social arts platform for young adults to creatively explore Northern Kentucky’s diverse migration heritage and home place themes through visual art and writing collaborations with established arts educators. This collaborative arts initiative will extend branches of cultural curiosity and craft-based practice into Kenton and Campbell County neighborhoods, inspiring younger generations to grow roots that will strengthen their sense of arts community belonging.
ArtsWave’s Circle Grants strengthen the capacity and sustainability of arts organizations led by, or predominantly serving, Black Cincinnatians. They are funded in part by gifts to the ArtsWave Campaign by members of the Circle of African American Leaders for the Arts.
2026 Recipients:
ARTE | TRANSITION
TRANSITION is a new ARTE Program in South Avondale to help kids transition from elementary to middle school by building confidence, encouraging self-expression, and creating a supportive community.
Arts Equity Collective | 5th Annual “I Don’t Look Like What I’ve Been Through” Survivor’s Workshops, Awards, & Fashion Show
Arts Equity Collective’s 5th Annual, “I Don’t Look Like What I’ve Been Through” Survivor’s Workshops, Awards, & Fashion Show includes open mic, transformative spoken word/interactive workshops, visual arts session, and fashion show, turning pain into power and celebrating endurance, resilience, and recovery during its two-day event hosted at the Community Action Agency in Bond Hill.
Cincinnati Opera Association | Visions of the Future: A LALOVAVI Community Mural Series
Visions of the Future: A LALOVAVI Community Mural Series is a community engagement opportunity for Cincinnati Opera’s LALOVAVI, an Afrofuturist opera premiering in summer 2026, that invites local residents to co-create two murals envisioning a vibrant, inclusive future.
Jazz Alive | Cincinnati Jazz Girls Day
Cincinnati Jazz Girls Day is a two-day event inclusive of performance, mentoring and workshops for girls and women in jazz, providing an inclusive forum that allows for the participants to express deepening feelings of engagement and connection to the community of female jazz artists.
Juneteenth Cincinnati | 39th Annual Cincinnati Juneteenth Festival
Juneteenth is a celebration of the historical significance of slavery, emancipation, and of the continuing struggle to develop a truly diverse and accepting community and society. The festival, which takes place on June 20 and 21, 2026, promotes cross-cultural understanding by providing a non-threatening environment in which all participants can increase their appreciation of the complex history and diverse cultures of the Americas and the Caribbean.
Kennedy Heights Arts Center | Voices of Freedom
In its sixth year, Voices of Freedom is a multidisciplinary series from February to April 2026 elevating Black experiences with exhibitions, performances, and workshops at Kennedy Heights Arts Center, in partnership with Juneteenth Cincinnati.
Q-KIDZ Dance Team | Q-KIDZ in the Park: Shakespeare Through Dance and Theater
Q-KIDZ in the Park is a cross-disciplinary collaboration between the Q-KIDZ Dance Team and the Cincinnati Shakespeare Company, blending the timeless storytelling of Shakespeare with the energy of African American youth dance, featuring stand-alone pre-show dance performances that travel with Shakespeare in the Park to over 30 outdoor venues across the tri-state region beginning June 1, 2026.
The Robert O’Neal Multicultural Art Center (ROMAC) | Young, Talented, and Gifted Showcase Series (YTG)
ROMAC’s Young, Talented and Gifted Showcase program empowers young artists and entrepreneurs (ages 14-25) with mentorship, paid showcases, and skill-building workshops, transforming narratives through creative expression and community engagement, culminating in a series of paid showcases and exhibitions from December 2025 to June 2026.
SoundArt Technology Lab: K-Drama Music | Producer Playground – SoundArt Technology Lab Music Production Summer Camp
SoundArt Technology Lab Music Production Summer Camp is a music summer camp that will teach ages 10–17 to make beats, build confidence, and explore music industry opportunities through hands-on production, mentorship, and career-focused training.
Sweet Sistah Splash | AfroSwag Hair and Fashion Show
AfroSwag Hair and Fashion Show showcases Black hair, fashion, and performance as Art by combining heritage and creativity and will take place in Spring, 2026 in Downtown/ Over-The-Rhine, Cincinnati.
ArtsWave Pride grants support programs that promote and celebrate the LGBTQIA+ community in the Cincinnati region. Grants are made possible by the donations of ArtsWave Pride members to the ArtsWave Community Campaign.
2026 Recipients:
Art Equals | The Threads of Self-Expression
The Threads of Self-Expression is a series of workshops and a fashion show empowering the LGBTQIA+ community through clothing alteration, self-expression, and skill-building.
Bi-Okoto Drum & Dance Theatre | Voices between the lines: Amplifying LGBTQ+ voices and identities through Cultural Expression
A series of Identity-centered sessions using African arts and storytelling to uplift LGBTQ+ voices, build cultural pride, and foster inclusion across generations.
Cincinnati Art Museum | Lola Flash: A Major Public Program at the Cincinnati Art Museum
In major public events at the Cincinnati Art Museum, New York-based photographer and activist Lola Flash shares their 40+-year career celebrating queer life through art.
Cincinnati Men’s Chorus | Collaborative Concert with MUSE, Celebrating Women’s History Month
Cincinnati Men’s Chorus and MUSE: Cincinnati’s Women’s Choir join voices in a unique concert celebrating Women’s History Month, through powerful, shared musical expression.
Cincinnati Shakespeare Company | ShakesQueer – A Bawdy, Bard-y Burlesque and Drag Show
ShakesQueer transforms Shakespeare’s legacy of gender exploration into Bawdy, Bard-y Burlesque and Drag Show, celebrating all expressions of self, gender, identity, and sexuality.
Contemporary Arts Center | CAC Artist-in-Residence: Bear Vogt
Queer, non-binary artist Bear Vogt will lead Artist-in-Residence workshops that transform found materials into art, exploring queer community and environmental justice across Cincinnati.
Ensemble Theatre Cincinnati | Growing Gold: Honoring the Stories that Came Before Us
Elder members of our LGBTQIA+ community share their life stories and lessons in “Growing Gold,” enriching our connections and inspiring our Apprentice Company to create.
Ohio Lesbian Archives | LGBTQ+ History in Action
The Ohio Lesbian Archives will spark intergenerational connections with events blending history, art, and storytelling to celebrate and strengthen Cincinnati’s LGBTQ+ community.
Queen City Freedom Band | Existence is Resistance
Queen City Freedom Band’s community musicians will perform a free concert, titled “Existence is Resistance,” uplifting vulnerable and traditionally underrepresented voices through music.
Queer Kentucky | Queer Kentucky and Nymph(o) Magazine
A groundbreaking collaborative magazine between nationally recognized nonprofit Queer Kentucky and beloved local magazine Nymph(o) will explore LGBTQ+ art and equity in Greater Cincinnati.
Revolution Dance Theatre | Hot Chocolate: The House That Joy Built
A revolutionary holiday performance fusing ballet with ballroom, and Black joy to center queer artistry and reclaim a traditional stage for radical celebration.
The Carnegie | LA CAGE AUX FOLLES Immersive Preshow Experience
Before LA CAGE AUX FOLLES, audiences will step into an immersive preshow experience that transports them into the nightclub and highlights local queer talent.
Visionaries + Voices | “Joy Fuel” Inclusive Art Workshops
“Joy Fuel” is an accessible and inclusive art workshop series celebrating the rich tapestry of identities and experiences within Greater Cincinnati’s queer community.
Young Professionals Choral Collective (YPCC) | The LGBTQIA+ City That Sings: Year 2
The LGBTQIA+ City That Sings celebrates the queer experience through community engagement events and commissioned work written by a transgender composer, premiering at BLINK 2026.
ArtsWave YP Grants support programs that engage young professionals in the Cincinnati region. Grants are made possible by the donations of young professionals to the ArtsWave Community Campaign.
2026 Recipients
Bi-Okoto Drum & Dance Theatre | Rhythm in Harmony: Celebrating Culture, Empowering Leaders
Through Rhythm in Harmony: Celebrating Culture, Empowering Leaders, Cincinnati Young Professionals explore African arts, mentorship, and leadership in action – fun, immersive, and culturally inspiring.
Cincinnati Music & Wellness Coalition | Wellness & Culture for Young Professionals
Cincinnati Music & Wellness Coalition is bringing together young professionals from Greater Cincinnati with dancers, visual artists, and musical performers to understand cultures.
Cincinnati Opera Association | Cincinnati Opera Young Professionals (COYP)
Led by young professionals, COYP fosters community, creativity, and connection by introducing new audiences to opera through engaging programs and social gatherings throughout the year.
Cincinnati Shakespeare Company | Cincy Shakes YP Preview Night
YP Preview Night offers Cincinnati’s Young Professionals a discounted ticket to attend a CSC performance along with a complimentary drink and talk-back with the cast.
Ensemble Theatre Cincinnati | Show Up!
Ensemble Theatre Cincinnati’s Show Up! series for arts and networking with fellow YPs provides the opportunity to enjoy performances, bites, & drinks.
Generation NOW | Creative Collab Series: Engaging Young Professionals Through Arts & Culture
Young professionals collaborate with Black Art Speaks, ROMAC, and Elements to co-create and showcase art at quarterly networking nights featuring music, panels, and fashion.
The Ghostlight Stage Company | 25/26 Season: Shining a Light Workshop and Lecture Series
The Ghostlight Stage Company’s Shining a Light program is a dynamic, educational series, designed specifically for Young Professionals in Cincinnati to network and learn together.
Girls Rock Cincinnati | Girls Rock Remix 2026
Girls Rock Remix is a weekend program where young professionals form bands, write songs, and build community through music and arts workshops.
Nrityarpana School of Performing Arts (NSPA) | Young Artists Forum
Through Young Artist Forum, NSPA will host a series of programs that motivate young professionals to stay in Greater Cincinnati by providing cultural activities providing a variety of activities based on North Indian Classical Music.
Sweet Sistah Splash | AfroArt After Dark
Each Summer, AfroArt After Dark transforms Over-The-Rhine with Black creativity, immersive installations, live performances, and social experiences that connect young professionals through art and culture.
The Well | The Practice of Presence: Mindful Poetry for Young Professionals
Mindful Poetry Moments provides an opportunity for young professionals to gather weekly in April (National Poetry Month) to connect, become present, write and publish.
Young Professionals Choral Collective (YPCC) | Create, Engage, Connect
Create, Engage, Connect offers young professionals access to collaborative art-making experiences and performance, linking participatory & social experiences with Cincinnati’s vibrant arts ecosystem.
ArtsWave’s Inspire Artist Grant program supports local artists in the Cincinnati region who interpret the themes of our times. It is one way that ArtsWave works to increase the sustainability of organizations and artists that focus on the preservation and advancement of BIPOC arts and culture. The program is made possible by the ArtsWave Campaign, in partnership with the City of Cincinnati, Duke Energy, Greater Cincinnati Foundation, and Contemporary Arts Center.
2026 Recipients:
Markus Cook | How to Resurrect a Loved One
Facing the trauma of a death in the family is never easy; what would you do if your loved one came back to life, for one night, one last meal? How To Resurrect a Loved One is a film that delves into the ramifications of just that. The film depicts the fractured and divided Evans Family, as they grapple with the mysterious return of their matriarch one dark Sunday evening.
Bertha Davis | The 90’s: A Documentary for the Ages
The 90’s: A Documentary for The Ages is a series of interviews with individuals born in the 1990’s and individuals 90+ years of age. The film introduces six individuals who share their story, their perspective on life and mental health. Those aged 90+ experienced the beginning of widespread use of telephones, and those born in the 1990’s were on the cusp of a digital revolution. What does each group see as their biggest challenge? Do they approach mental wellness the same? Viewers will leave the film with tools for coping in challenging times and hope for their future.
Clifford Fenell | Many Voices: Stories of Us
Many Voices: Stories of Us is an anthology film highlighting the diverse experiences of people of color in Cincinnati. Through personal monologues paired with poetry, dance, and music, we celebrate authentic voices and foster community dialogue. This project aims to deepen understanding, bridge divides, and amplify underrepresented perspectives.
Ashley Glass | SDOH (The Social Determinants of Health) Short Documentary/Trailer
SDOH is a short film that shines a light on the social determinants of health—the everyday factors like housing, access to care, and education that shape how we live and thrive. Through real stories from Black and Brown Cincinnatians, this project amplifies voices often left out of the health conversation. Using art as advocacy, the film will educate, inspire empathy, and spark change.
Brandon Isaac | Pride in my Heritage: Coming Home to Yourself
Pride in My Heritage: Coming Home to Yourself is a creative storytelling and film project that blends hip-hop, poetry, and documentary to explore identity, legacy, and pride. The project guides young Black and Brown boys through workshops where they document family stories and learn to express themselves through media arts. Alongside their journey, Brandon creates and performs original pieces inspired by their growth—showing how art can heal, connect, and transform. The final film and performance will honor both the youth voices and Brandon’s evolution as a storyteller and filmmaker.
Julia Orquera Bianco | Iluminar
Iluminar is a solo exhibition and film by artist and ecologist Julia Orquera Bianco. Exploring migration, family and ancestral heritage, and plant knowledge from both hemispheres, the project will present a new interdisciplinary and multi-sensory body of work. Through her unique lens, Orquera Bianco seeks to illuminate the complexity, resilience, and beauty of the migrant experience, inviting the audience to reflect on human movement and the building of belonging through creative storytelling.
Derrick Smith | Building a Nest in a Dying Tree
Building a Nest in a Dying Tree is a short film that shares the same title as the album that it accompanies. It follows the story of a radio show host who must listen to the troubles (mostly pertaining to housing) of listeners and give advice while still navigating his own issues. The film itself will be 6-12 minutes and feature 3 original songs from the album. There will also be a 5-12 minute, behind the scenes mini documentary about the making of the short film and album.
Jori An Cotton | Voices of Resilience: Amplifying Stories, Art, and Healing Across Sheltered Communities
Voices of Resilience: Amplifying Stories, Art, and Healing Across Sheltered Communities brings poetry, visual storytelling, and performance into the lives of individuals and families experiencing homelessness. Through guided workshops at local shelters, participants explore their voices, emotions, and experiences and transform these insights into a professionally produced multimedia performance. Combining spoken word, original music, and projected visuals, the final showcase honors the resilience, joy, and humanity of these communities. This project fosters healing, celebrates lived Black and Brown experiences, and bridges art with social impact — creating space for empathy, understanding, and creative connection.
Gabriel Martinez Rubio | Free-Dom
Free-Dom (taken from “Freedom and Domination”) is a two-part project. There will be two bilingual, Spanish and English, workshops for members of the community introducing them to modern dance. The workshops will be a safe and accepting space where participants can learn more about dance techniques and movement and how it can be used to express themselves. The second part is an original 30-minute modern dance work aimed for a general audience, with a main theme that focuses on how the media conditions and manipulates society as it relates to the Latine community and the conversation around immigration.
Geri P | Broken Kids
Broken Kids is a five-song EP and live showcase that connects artists through sound, storytelling, and community. Written and produced by Cincinnati-based artist Geri P, the project transforms themes of healing, growth, and self-discovery into music that bridges experience and emotion. Through collaboration, mentorship, and shared creative processes, Broken Kids will become more than an album—it will be a safe space for people to feel, reflect, and heal together. Each song represents a step in the journey toward self-worth and creative liberation.
Roberto | SI DIOS QUIERE
A partially autobiographical, partially biographical album told from a rotating first person omniscient perspective with each song named after and narrated from the point-of-view of individuals that the author can cognitively empathize with through lived experience. This narration pays homage to the folklore depicted in regional Mexican norteña music. Throughout the project are nods to Mexican/Chicano cultures, which take the form of de la soul Esque skits inspired by viral moments and classic cinema from the Mexican diaspora. All employed composition techniques and musical stylings were contributed to or popularized by artists of Mexican heritage on either side of the border.
K.A. Simpson | You Should Have Been There: Things That Sounded Funnier in My Head
This project is a spoken-word album that lives at the crossroads of poetry, music, and truth where words breathe, rhythms speak, and stories carry us forward. Inspired by the spirit of Nikki Giovanni’s ‘Truth Is on Its Way,’ this project will explore memory, identity, and the Black experience in Northern Kentucky and beyond. Each track will be a reflection, a conversation, a heartbeat that connects the personal and the universal, bringing these poems to life in sound, crafting an album that resonates, uplifts, and reminds us that our truths are not just heard, but they are also felt.
The Silent Poet| Threads of Solidarity: A Collective Manifesto in Word and Action
Threads of Solidarity: A Collective Manifesto in Word and Action is a writing and community art project uplifting cross-racial solidarity between Black and Brown communities. Through three creative workshops held at WordPlay Cincy, participants will share stories, reflect on justice, and imagine new ways to stand together. Insights from these sessions will inspire an original poem—my artistic manifesto—brought to life as a large-scale scroll installation. This project blends poetry, visual art, and community engagement to spark conversation and action toward collective healing and liberation.
Noam Denenberg | Carbon Dreams
Carbon Dreams is a decade distilled into fragments of the artist’s journey as a gay, Jewish, Israeli-born immigrant artist carving his own path. It’s a visual meditation on transformation, expressed through series of paintings tracing the arcs of awareness, discovery, connection, reflection, and renewal. Each chapter captures moments of learning to love—myself and others—the echoes of relationships, and the tension between pain and joy, resilience and rediscovery, vulnerability and strength. Through layered body prints, diverse materials, and resin, the work explores the ways we move through states of being—celebrating the beauty of living unapologetically as ourselves.
Drea | Rankin House, tribute to the successful journey
A fashion installation 3D art piece, Rankin House, tribute to the successful journey is an artistic fashion piece created with the story of all 2,000 successful trips of enslaved African Americans on their way to freedom through the underground railroad. One stop in particular was the John Rankin House. The fashion creations will be hand painted with details of the history, struggle and resilience for those Black and Brown individuals who made the journey. This project is a tribute of creativity, style, and elegance in a way that captures the story and how far we have come today as a culture in the United States.
Ximena Flores | Inti Echoes
Inti Echoes is an immersive art project inspired by Inti, the Inca Sun deity, celebrating harmony, balance, and the cyclical flow of life. Using natural and repurposed materials like fibers, bark, and dried flowers, these sculptural installations and participatory mandalas invite audiences to reflect on ancestral wisdom and our connection to nature. Rooted in the principles of Ayni—sacred reciprocity—this project merges art, sustainability, and community engagement. Through shared creation and contemplation, Inti Echoes illuminates how the echoes of Incas teaching continue to guide us toward gratitude, respect, and a deeper relationship with the Earth.
Jeni Jenkins | Here in The Middle: Colors of Colorism, Bodies in Margins
This project explores what it means to live in the in-between — to carry many shades, stories, and lineages within one body. Through community workshops, conversations, and portrait sessions with mixed-race women, this socially engaged project confronts colorism, belonging, and the politics of visibility. Here In The Middle is both personal and collective — a space to name what has been silenced and to honor the complexity of identity. The final exhibition will weave together story, sound, and images to celebrate resilience and reclaim the beauty of difference. The hope is to foster understanding.
Jay Kalagayan | St. Malo: First Filipinos in North America
St. Malo is a historical fiction comic series that uncovers the forgotten story of the first Filipinos in North America. This project shines a light on the Manilamen, sailors who escaped Spanish oppression in the 1700s and established a free settlement in Louisiana, including a fight with with Jean Lafitte’s men in the Battle of New Orleans.
This comic is being created to challenge history, celebrate the Filipino diaspora, and ensure Asian Pacific Americans are seen as the heroes of their own complex, haunted, and hunted stories. This is about representation, history, and visibility.
Noel Bassam Mohammad Maghathe | Between Us
Between Us moves through what stays and what fades. It explores how light shifts, memory hides, and what the body needs to heal. For this series, working with light and land to create tri-color cyanotypes, the artist uses an alternative photographic process that traces the body, memory, and earth through ritual and repetition. Using what the earth provides, the artist will gather sunlight and ground herbs to create layered images of cyan, magenta, and yellow, mimicking the screen-printing process through light. Each print rests in a protective hand-carved wooden frame, embedded with personal messages and sigils, a private mantra, a language for the artist, their land, and their light.
Lisa Merida-Paytes | The Paroxysm-Tree Project
The Paroxysm-Tree Project is a vehicle examining health discrepancies, ancestral weaving techniques, concepts and materials with traditional, hand-dyed threads to create an immersive installation telling a story of Hispanic cultural and personal narratives. The installation utilizes physical elements of lights, dramatic shadows, traditional and contemporary materials/techniques enhancing the viewer’s visceral experience while inviting touch and movement. The site-specific installation will provide emotional engagement, transform the space and create a captivating environment for viewers to contemplate our connection. This project’s intention is to expose juxtaposed ideas to reveal blurred distinctions between connections and dysfunction exhibited in multi-media multivalent invocations of the body.
Rebecca Nava Soto | The Land Remembers: We Were Always Here
The Land Remembers: We Were Always Here is a community-based art project and installation led by artist Rebecca Nava Soto. In collaboration with Indigenous Mexican, Central American, and migrant families in Cincinnati, the project explores migration as sacred continuity, not exile. Participants emboss stories into found metallics—transforming soda cans and scraps into contemporary milagritos and retablos—and join a projected sound and video installation illuminating local landmarks. Together, these works honor resilience and belonging, reminding us that the people called “migrants” and “illegal aliens” are returning through ancestral lands that have always remembered them.
Christina Sifri | Land and Body
Throughout the last several years, the artist has begun dissecting the ways in which her body has felt like a battleground similar to her homeland. The land of Palestine has experienced decades of apartheid along with the people, and this work is an exploration of the interconnectedness between the artist’s land and body, calling attention to how her experiences living in America reflect the passed down experiences of her ancestors. Through these iterations, the healing process will begin, realizing the generational and empathetic connection that humans hold with the natural world.
Janyla Smith | The Essence of My World
The Essence of My World celebrates the artist’s skin, culture, and the beauty that comes from both joy and struggle. Through a series of 10-12 paintings of familiar faces in the community, the work will showcase not only their expressions but also their actions and their essence. Through her art, the artist mixes realism and fantasy to show the truth of who we are—strong, soft, and full of story. People will see the power in color, history, and creativity, and each piece will reflect their happiness, struggles, sadness, and anger, telling the full story of all of our lives.
Ingrid Woode | Twilight Sanctuaries
Twilight Sanctuaries will transform an hour once marked by fear into a space of rest and remembrance. This series of original work pairs large format 4×5 film portraits and 360 video vignettes of Black rest at dusk, as acts of dignity and peace, accompanied by original music arrangements serving as a soundtrack for this series. Inspired by my grandmother’s journey with Alzheimer’s disease, Twilight Sanctuaries will explore memory’s fragility and endurance through light, breath, and sound. Each immersive sanctuary honors stillness as sacred, reminding us that Black rest is not an exception, it is a right.