Website on Notion + constructor Super.so + forms Tally
Task
Create a single, regularly updated hub of opportunities for AI creators: artists, directors, designers, and developers. The goal is to gather competitions, festivals, exhibitions, grants, and residencies in one place so that creators do not spend hours searching chaotically across different sources.
Solution
The website has formed a structured database of opportunities, divided into several large sections: Competitions & AI Film/Art Festivals, Exhibitions & Showcases, Grants & Funding, Artist Residencies & Creative Houses. For each opportunity, key parameters are indicated in tables: description, website, location, format (online/offline/hybrid), deadlines, amount of funding or type of participation (free/paid entry), and other filtering tags. The page also allows users to add their own event through a form, enabling the community to contribute to the database and keep it up to date.
Result
AI creators receive a clear "guide for the year," where dozens of festivals (from Runway AI Film Festival to Google Global AI Film Award), exhibitions (Ars Electronica, DATALAND, IGNITE, etc.), and grant programs (NEA, Creative Europe, Canada Media Fund, etc.) for 2025-2026 are collected. This allows for quick filtering of relevant opportunities by format, region, or funding level and planning participation a year in advance, instead of discovering competitions randomly on social media.
In numbers
- Dozens of AI-oriented festivals and competitions in Europe, the USA, Asia, Africa, and online, gathered in one section Competitions & AI Film/Art Festivals.
- Over 20 exhibition projects and showcases featuring AI art — from Ars Electronica Festival to The Wrong Biennale.
- Several dozen grant programs and funds with funding ranges from small scholarships to million-dollar budgets, with separate tags for AI/tech-art.
- Coverage of at least 2025-2026 with specified event start dates and submission deadlines, allowing for the formation of a long-term participation plan.
Create a single, regularly updated hub of opportunities for AI creators: artists, directors, designers, and developers. The goal is to gather competitions, festivals, exhibitions, grants, and residencies in one place so that creators do not spend hours searching chaotically across different sources.
Solution
The website has formed a structured database of opportunities, divided into several large sections: Competitions & AI Film/Art Festivals, Exhibitions & Showcases, Grants & Funding, Artist Residencies & Creative Houses. For each opportunity, key parameters are indicated in tables: description, website, location, format (online/offline/hybrid), deadlines, amount of funding or type of participation (free/paid entry), and other filtering tags. The page also allows users to add their own event through a form, enabling the community to contribute to the database and keep it up to date.
Result
AI creators receive a clear "guide for the year," where dozens of festivals (from Runway AI Film Festival to Google Global AI Film Award), exhibitions (Ars Electronica, DATALAND, IGNITE, etc.), and grant programs (NEA, Creative Europe, Canada Media Fund, etc.) for 2025-2026 are collected. This allows for quick filtering of relevant opportunities by format, region, or funding level and planning participation a year in advance, instead of discovering competitions randomly on social media.
In numbers
- Dozens of AI-oriented festivals and competitions in Europe, the USA, Asia, Africa, and online, gathered in one section Competitions & AI Film/Art Festivals.
- Over 20 exhibition projects and showcases featuring AI art — from Ars Electronica Festival to The Wrong Biennale.
- Several dozen grant programs and funds with funding ranges from small scholarships to million-dollar budgets, with separate tags for AI/tech-art.
- Coverage of at least 2025-2026 with specified event start dates and submission deadlines, allowing for the formation of a long-term participation plan.