
Anti-Stigma Arts Fund
Launched in 2021, the Anti-Stigma Arts Fund gave individuals, groups and organisations the chance to apply for funding for arts projects in any medium that aim to tackle mental health stigma and discrimination.
Over the years, artists, makers and creators have used a huge range of different media to challenge stigmatising attitudes and behaviours associated with mental health.
The arts can offer a really powerful platform for people to share their experiences, and show what the reality is for people living with mental health problems.
Launched in 2021, our Anti-Stigma Arts Fund provided an opportunity for people and groups across Scotland to take forward an arts project which aims to tackle mental health stigma and discrimination.
The 2024 projects
The Anti-Stigma Arts Fund provides grants of up to £5,000 to help organisations and groups deliver projects that tackle the issue of mental health stigma through art.
Now in its fourth year, the fund will help create collaborative pieces shaped by participants to highlight different intersections of mental health stigma – and explain what needs to change.
This year’s fund has focussed on projects connected to supporting people with experience of poverty, to highlight the overlap with mental health stigma.
The following three projects were chosen from 70 applications.
Sharpen Her: The African Women’s Network (SHAWN) and Open Aye
The Sharpen Her network supports African women, addressing barriers to participation in society and building capacity. As part of the project, Sharpen Her will partner with Open Aye, a social enterprise. It provides expertise in participatory photo projects, particularly for under-served communities.
Members of the network will analyse and document lived experiences of mental health stigma and intersectional discrimination as part of a photography project. Many of the women in the Sharpen Her network have migrant or refugee backgrounds, and have experience of trauma, discrimination, mental health issues, poverty and racism.
Mindwaves
Mindwaves’ project is a series of podcasts that will explore the experience of living with mental health problems and poverty, and the way these experiences are stigmatised. It will be led by an editorial board made up of Mindwaves volunteers who will plan, record, edit and publish a podcast series that centres lived experience, tackling stigma and discrimination. This will include creative inputs, such as songs and poems.
The production of the podcast will offer participants a positive and creative way to engage with an issue that has consistently affected their lives and offer a wider audience new perspectives on mental health, poverty and stigma.
The Simon Community
The Simon Community provide information, advice, care support, accommodation and homes to people experiencing or at risk of homelessness.
Through its We See You project, The Simon Community will run a weekly art therapy group for 12 weeks, followed by a weekly peer-led community art group.
The group will be a space to explore the intersection between mental health stigma and the experiences of poverty-related stigma. There will be a focus on the experiences of people who use substances and the stigma that exists in society and mental health services.
Additional arts funding news...
See Me has also been able to fund a new piece of work with Govan Community Project.
In March 2024, the Wellbeing Project was set up to provide trauma-informed and culturally responsive mental health support to members of the community. It also aims to improve collective mental health literacy and access to statutory services. The project centres the voices of people with lived experience of the asylum system and the impacts of forced migration on mental health and wellbeing.
Alongside their established one-to-one support service, Govan Community Project will conduct three creative workshops open to all community members over the course of three months.
The workshops will explore mental health stigma and discrimination, experiences accessing mental health support and understanding how mental health professionals can offer genuinely culturally responsive, person-centred care.
Keep an eye on this page for updates about the projects!
2023 projects
In 2023, we received 73 applications. From those applications, we funded six fantastic projects in 2024. Below you can find out more about projects from the third year of the arts fund.
The 2022 projects
Last year the fund received more than 40 applications from organisations and individuals across Scotland. From these applications, we are delighted to announce we are funding four fantastic projects. Collectively these projects plan to produce a comic, two films and a spoken-word showcase.
The 2021 projects
In 2021, We received 72 applications from a range of organisations and individuals Scotland-wide, with six projects funded. Below, you can find out more about the first Anti-Stigma Arts Fund cohort.

Read more about our research into the impact of the arts in anti-stigma work.