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Opportunities That Support Research, Visibility, and Long-Term Growth

For artists and arts professionals, the right opportunity can do more than add a line to a résumé. It can open access to funding, institutional networks, curatorial development, or a stronger public platform for your work.

This week’s selection brings together three different kinds of opportunities: a museum-based curatorial fellowship, a New York art fair for independent artists, and a grant supporting new creative work connected to plants, gardens, and landscapes.


Read through and find the one that aligns best with your current direction:


1. Roy Lichtenstein Curatorial Fellow

Location: Columbus, Ohio

Opportunity Type: Award / Fellowship

Exhibition Dates: August 14 – October 14, 2026


Poster for Columbus Museum of Art Roy Lichtenstein Curatorial Fellow, deadline May 2026, Apply Now, over colorful hanging ribbons.

The Columbus Museum of Art is accepting applications for the Roy Lichtenstein Curatorial Fellowship, a two-year fellowship within the museum’s curatorial department. Funded by the Roy Lichtenstein Foundation, the program is designed for recent postgraduates in art history or related fields who are building a career in curatorial practice.

The fellowship offers hands-on training across exhibition development, collection research, public programs, publications, and museum administration. The selected fellow will work closely with CMA’s curatorial and exhibitions teams, while also collaborating with colleagues across the museum and external partners.

This opportunity is especially suited for emerging curators with a strong interest in modern and contemporary art. The role asks for someone who can combine research, writing, organization, and public engagement while helping connect artists, artworks, and audiences in meaningful ways.

The position is full-time, with a listed salary of $60,000, and requires a master’s degree in art history or a related discipline. A PhD is preferred, and previous museum or gallery experience is considered a plus.




2. Clio Art Fair - September 2026

Location: New York City Dates: September 17–20, 2026 & September 24–27, 2026

Early Bird Deadline: May 29, 2026


Surreal CLIO Art Fair poster: diver and shark underwater above seated man; text reads Early Bird Application Open, September 2026, deadline May 29, 2026.

Clio Art Fair has opened applications for its September 2026 editions in Chelsea, New York. Known as the “Anti-Fair for Independent Artists,” Clio focuses on artists without exclusive gallery representation and gives them direct access to collectors, curators, art professionals, and the public.

The September program will take place across two consecutive editions, each with a new roster of international artists and artist collectives. The fair accepts a wide range of contemporary practices, including painting, sculpture, photography, mixed media, installation, digital work, and performance.

Unlike traditional art fairs that are often shaped by gallery representation, Clio creates a more direct and approachable setting where artists can present their work independently. Each selected artist receives their own exhibition space, along with visibility through the fair’s online presence, social media exposure, and visitor engagement during the fair.

For artists looking to expand their audience, build collector relationships, and show in New York during the fall art season, Clio offers a strong platform with a clear focus on independence, visibility, and direct connection.




3. Eliza Moore Fellowship for Artistic Excellence

Location: Upperville, Virginia, United States

Deadline: May 31, 2026

Grant Amount: $10,000 individual grant


Blue watercolor poster for Oak Spring Garden Foundation: Eliza Moore Fellowship for Artistic Excellence, deadline May 31, 2026.

The Eliza Moore Fellowship for Artistic Excellence is awarded annually to one early-career artist developing new work related to plants, gardens, or landscapes in the broadest sense.

Offered by the Oak Spring Garden Foundation, the fellowship includes a $10,000 grant and a required 2–5 week stay at Oak Spring. During the residency, the selected fellow will have access to the foundation’s 700-acre landscape, sustainable land management initiatives, and rare book library, which holds more than 19,000 objects, including examples of botanical art.

The fellowship is open internationally to visual artists, literary artists, dancers, and musicians. It is best suited for artists whose work engages with the natural world, ecology, place, land, or the relationship between humans and the environment.

This is a strong opportunity for early-career artists who need time, space, funding, and research access to develop a thoughtful body of work rooted in landscape, nature, or environmental inquiry.



The best opportunity depends on where your practice is right now.

If you are building a curatorial career, the Roy Lichtenstein Fellowship offers institutional training and museum experience.

If you are looking for public visibility and direct exposure in New York, Clio Art Fair offers a platform built around independent artists.

If your work is connected to nature, plants, gardens, or landscapes, the Eliza Moore Fellowship provides funding, time, and space for deeper development.

Apply with intention. The strongest opportunities are the ones that match both your work and your next professional step.

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