Taking a Chance on a Brand-New Artists’ Retreat
The Community Accelerator Grant has enabled Grace to seek and procure $8,500 in additional grants, many of which only disburse awards on a reimbursement basis and have significant restrictions regarding how funds can be spent. As the Executive Director and sole employee of Grace’s Mahali, Grace credits the Community Accelerator Grant for offering unrestricted funding and paying out awards up front, which she says feels far friendlier and more sustainable for a younger, smaller organization navigating startup-era cash flow challenges. Their 2025 award has primarily gone towards fronting the cash for reimbursement grant expenses and stabilizing their finances in advance of a major fundraising push, which Grace hopes will not only increase the scope of the Jubilee Love Festival, but allow her team to start looking seriously for a space that will allow them to house and feed artists year-round. Community Accelerator Grant funding has also made it possible for Grace to research and invest in new safety measures, a focus area she considers an unfortunate necessity when bringing BIPOC, LGBTQ+, and disabled artists into a rural community: “We’re a small, new organization that people don’t understand yet, and to some, what we’re doing seems pretty radical.”
As a nonprofit founder who herself identifies as Black, queer, and disabled, Grace has found it challenging to build relationships with funding entities who she senses aren’t used to seeing people like her in power, especially outside of more metropolitan areas. “Some groups will only fund the same organizations over and over again,” she says. “They won’t take a chance or a risk on something that has shown, even on a small scale, that it could be beneficial. I keep hearing, ‘Oh, what you’re doing is too new.’” She laughs. “Treating artists really well is too new?” She believes the statewide reach and specific intention of injecting funding into rural counties to be the most innovative thing about the Community Accelerator Grant: “I’ve lived in Seattle, I’ve paid my dues in Seattle, I play most of my shows in Seattle. But most of my friends who are working artists have been priced out of Seattle.”