Traditional Arts Apprenticeship

The Vermont Folklife Traditional Arts Apprenticeship Program (VTAAP) was initiated thirty years ago to support Vermont's living cultural heritage. The traditional or folk arts historically have been passed from generation to generation without the support of classes or public institutions. They were carried on because they had meaning in people's lives. But in a changing world the link between generations can be broken and time-honored knowledge can be endangered.

An apprenticeship is a face-to-face learning opportunity in which an experienced artist instructs a novice. This instruction addresses both the skills and techniques of an art form, as well as its meaning and use within the communities in which it is practiced. 

This program supports mentor artists and apprentices who have already decided to work together. Vermont Folklife staff do not match apprentices and mentor artists. The purpose of VTF’s traditional arts apprenticeship program is to provide funding to help compensate the mentor artist for their time and to cover the cost of travel and of materials used during the apprenticeship.

VTAAP is made possible by generous support from the National Endowment for the Arts in and in partnership with the Vermont Arts Council.

Applications for the 2024-25 VTAAP program cycle are closed
Applications for the coming year will open in the summer of 2025

Feel free to read the Application Information & Guidelines to learn more about the program.

If you have questions or need help with the application, please contact Kate Haughey (khaughey@vtfolklife.org) or Mary Wesley (mwesley@vtfolklife.org; 802-388-4964).

We strongly suggest you contact Kate before applying in order to be sure that your art form is eligible.

The Traditional Arts Apprenticeship program welcomes artists from all traditions and cultures, including artists from refugee and immigrant backgrounds.

To find information about VTAAP in other languages, please see below:

A traditional arts apprenticeship offers support to bring together individuals and communities who share a common commitment to keeping traditional cultural expressions vital and relevant. It pairs a skilled mentor artist who is recognized as having achieved a high level of expertise in their art form with a less-experienced apprentice. The mentor artist and apprentice jointly plan when, where, and what they expect to accomplish during the course of the apprenticeship.

Across thirty years of the program Vermont Folklife has supported 350 apprenticeships representing a broad spectrum of expressive culture—from the arts of native Abenaki and of English, French, and Irish immigrants, to the arts of Lao, Somali Bantu, Congolese, Bosnian, Tibetan and Bhutanese Nepali refugees. These art forms reflect the cultural history, values, and aesthetics of the groups that practice them. They often play an important role in the lives of both the artist and the artist's cultural community.

Click the images below to read the VTAAP 30th Anniversary “Innovation in Tradition” Zine

Video Library

See apprenticeships from years past