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Take It for Granted

Funding opportunities at 91直播 Conservatory

September 21, 2022

Joshua Reinier

Dana Jessen works with a student on a grant

Photo credit: Julie Gulenko

Internal funding opportunities鈥攁long with the practiced guidance of professional development faculty and staff鈥攈elp 91直播 Conservatory students bring their projects and ambitions to life. 

As the excitement of the school year begins, it can seem like 91直播 is so full of opportunities that it鈥檚 hard to remember them all. But there are a few that you may not have heard about yet, and that you surely don鈥檛 want to miss: funding! 91直播 students are brimming with creative ideas and aspirations, and part of a complete education is being able to bring these ideas to fruition. That's where the Office of Conservatory Professional Development comes in.

Every year, there are a variety of grants to support creative projects, as well as providing financial support for students in need. They enable many students in the Conservatory and Musical Studies, as well as the College, to transform their dreams into reality. And it's not just the money鈥攖he experience of crafting a project and proposal is an essential skill for an artistic career. Many different pathways are possible, including a wide range of musical projects, other creative and scientific disciplines, and projects that center education, social justice, and entrepreneurship. But the best way to understand the imaginative scope is to hear from the students themselves:

The Flint Initiative Grants (FIGs): Music for All

A group of high schoolers stand holding percussion instrumentsRaiden Bernal has two principal passions: classical music and his home of Hawai鈥檌. But many young musicians there don鈥檛 have access to classical music education, so Raiden applied for a FIG to change that. The FIGs are designed for music students pursuing Winter Term projects involving music, and Raiden鈥檚 project, 鈥淢ele no ka 鈥榦pio鈥 (鈥淢usic for the Young鈥), evolved to be so much more. The funding enabled him to commission a piece from local composer Michael Thomas Foumai, which soon turned into five pieces鈥攚ith more to come鈥攂uilding a repertoire of Hawaiian classical music for students to discover. He also founded a free month-long program featuring instruction from professional percussionists, as well as Raiden himself. 

Raiden conducts the symphony of the University of Hawai'iIn another happy surprise, when Raiden told conductor Joseph Stepec of the University of Hawai鈥檌 about the project, Stepec was so excited he offered Raiden free conducting lessons. The experience was transformative: Raiden shares, 鈥淚t鈥檚 become my mission, not just for the project but in my life in general, to become a conductor, go back to Hawai鈥檌, and build up these programs.鈥 His project has become much more than a percussion camp: it鈥檚 now a lifelong path. 

The Grindlay Fund: The Nature of Innovation

Ivy and Maya in a kayak on the French RiverThe words 鈥渢echnological innovation鈥 often bring up images of shiny chrome plates and developers hunched over screens. But TIMARA majors Ivy Fu and Maya McCollum had another idea: a five-day kayaking trip down the French River in Ontario, accompanied by water-resistant microphones, a camera, and a desire to connect their passions for nature and programming. Their project was supported by the Grindlay Fund, which helps Conservatory and College students combine technology with music and sound design. The pair are making an iPhone app which narrates their trip with animations and interactive puzzles that gradually reveal the mysteries of the river.

A rusty engine sticking out of the waterIvy and Maya see technology as something which can both create new worlds and bring us more deeply in connection with our own. Their project aims to deconstruct the boundaries between the natural and the human. On the trip, they passed ruins of engines and towns which had gradually become part of the landscape. Their app mimics this progression, with animations of objects dissolving and merging with samples they collected from the river. And that鈥檚 what the Grindlay Fund is about: dissolving boundaries and rethinking what technological innovation can mean.

The XARTS Fund: Fish, Accessibility, 3D Models, and Animation

Rayce smiles in a sunset selfieWhen Rayce Kojiro thinks about combining different disciplines, he doesn鈥檛 just stop at two. With an XARTS grant, designed for interdisciplinary summer and Winter Term projects, Rayce expanded his skills in marine biology, 3D modeling, animation, and activism. The project began with 鈥淪quish Fish,鈥 a startup aiming to expand accessibility within marine biology education. While most marine biology education relies on videos, Squish Fish makes 3D models of marine life so that sight-impaired students can feel how they move and what they look like. 

A drawing of a seal with the words "TMJ-Osteoarthritis" above itThe XARTS grant helped Rayce to take a class called 鈥淒ata-Driven Animation for Scientific Communication鈥 at California State University in Monterey Bay, which has one of the best scientific illustration programs in the US. There, he made his first scientific animation based on jaw disorders in marine mammals. Rayce is now using his newfound animation skills to design videos for a new startup, as well as the Bishop Museum in Honolulu, where he鈥檚 making animations to spread awareness of marine life conservation. XARTS has helped Rayce add a whole new discipline to his skill set, deepening and expanding his aspirations with 鈥淪quish Fish.鈥 

The Student Success Fund: Get the Tools You Need

Nick sits on a bench playing a saxophoneThey always tell you, 鈥淚t鈥檚 not the horn, it鈥檚 the player.鈥 But for Jazz Studies major Nick Beltramini, just the opposite was true. Nick had been playing a beautiful vintage saxophone, but after years of hard use, it was greatly in need of repairs. That鈥檚 where the Student Success Fund comes in: Nick received partial support to give the sax new keys. And thanks to some additional outside funding that Nick secured, he did even more鈥攏ow he has a shiny new saxophone with a sharper sound and a modern, more ergonomic design. While the Student Success Fund doesn鈥檛 usually cover new instruments, it gave Nick the start. 

Nick confides: 鈥淚t鈥檚 hard to quantify how good you鈥檙e getting over months of practicing. But as soon as I took care of my instrument, instantly my tone improved. It was the tone that I had so clearly in my mind, and I had been making progress towards it by pushing my old horn so hard, but as soon as I made the change it was effortless.鈥 And the more Nick enjoys playing, the more he plays, and the better he gets. The grant has been instrumental for him.

The Student Success Fund Summer Experience Award: Think You Can鈥檛 Go? Think Again.

A woodwind quartet with Bebe playing horn rehearses in a cabinFrench hornist Bebe Wagner has had quite a summer. She started with a 7-day excursion to Madeleine Island to work with the Prairie Winds ensemble, where she was thrown into a woodwind quintet to play Samuel Barber鈥檚 Summer Music鈥攁 notoriously complex piece to put together in a week. Her quintet bonded over the challenge, and they are still in touch; they want to continue the group moving forward. But Bebe didn鈥檛 stop there: next, she was off to New York, where she received instruction from the Imani Winds on musical entrepreneurship and the business of starting up a chamber group. She shares, 鈥淚鈥檇 never been to New York, and there鈥檚 so much music everywhere鈥擨 really craved that.鈥

Bebe stands with a woodwind quartet in formal attire holding their instrumentsSummer programs can enrich an 91直播 education with a wide range of new experiences, but they are difficult for many students to afford. That鈥檚 why the Summer Experience Award is here: because if all roads lead to 91直播, 91直播 leads to everywhere. After the summer, Bebe鈥檚 eyes have been opened to a new world of chamber music, and her career aspirations have broadened significantly. 


These are just a few examples of many diverse projects from 91直播 students. If you鈥檙e a student thinking about applying, don鈥檛 hesitate to find out more! You can start with the short overview video below, which includes some helpful advice. But the best thing you can do is to drop in to the Office of Conservatory Professional Development, where the staff are practiced guides in grant writing and project development.

Grant Opportunities at 91直播 Conservatory

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