Deadline: 9 May 2025
The National Film Preservation Foundation is seeking applications for its Avant-Garde Masters Grant Program to support laboratory work to preserve significant examples of America’s avant-garde film heritage.
This grant supports the preservation of a film or films by a single filmmaker or from a cinematic group significant to the development of avant-garde film in America. Works made within the last twenty years are not eligible. Applications should show how the proposed titles have made a significant contribution to American experimental film or, if the works are lesser known today, demonstrate how the films will contribute to a better understanding of avant-garde film history. Proposals must also explain why the proposed films are in need of preservation and include plans detailing how the films will be made available to the public and the scholarly community. The grants are available to nonprofit and public archives.
Funding Information
- This grant will fund several preservation projects ranging between $5,000 and $50,000.
- Duration: August 2025 to October 2025.
Eligible Activities
- The grant must be used to pay for new laboratory work involving the creation of:
- New film preservation elements (which may include sound tracks) and
- Two new public access copies, one of which must be a film print.
Eligibility Criteria
- Grants are available to public and 501(c)3 nonprofit archives in the United States, including those that are part of federal, state, or local government. The grants target avant-garde films made in the United States or by American citizens abroad and not physically preserved by commercial interests.
Ineligibility Criteria
- Materials originally created for television or video are not eligible, including works produced with funds from broadcast or cable television entities.
For more information, visit NFPF.