Vice President -- National Civic Art Society -- Classical Public Art and Architecture
National Civic Art Society
Posted
Jul 15, 2026
Location
Remote (US)
Type
Full-time
Compensation
$95000 - $125000
Mission
What you will drive
- Partner with the President on strategy, annual planning, and initiatives to grow the organization's reach and resources.
- Lead major-donor cultivation, grant writing, and fundraising campaigns.
- Oversee and expand core programs including advocacy, lectures, symposia, tours, architectural surveys, and publications.
- Produce op-eds, reports, testimony, and public statements; build relationships with federal agencies, Congress, state officials, architects, and allied organizations.
Impact
The difference you'll make
This role advances the classical and humanistic tradition in America's public architecture, monuments, and urban design, shaping national policy and iconic public spaces to be beautiful, dignified, and legible to citizens.
Profile
What makes you a great fit
- Seven or more years of progressive experience in advocacy, public policy, nonprofit management, journalism, law, architecture, or a related field.
- Proven success in fundraising: major gifts, grants, and campaigns.
- Strong project and organizational skills; ability to manage many priorities independently.
- Excellent writer with a genuine commitment to restoring beauty and dignity to America's public realm.
Benefits
What's in it for you
Annual compensation of $95,000–$125,000 commensurate with experience, plus performance bonus. Fully remote work with occasional travel to Washington, D.C. and elsewhere (fully reimbursed). Real autonomy and ownership, direct work with civic, political, and cultural leaders.
About
Inside National Civic Art Society
The National Civic Art Society, founded in 2002, is the foremost advocate for the classical and humanistic tradition in America's public architecture, monuments, memorials, and urban design. It is a small organization that has shaped Executive Orders, national memorials, and the design of Penn Station in New York.