The lowdown on the Culture Recovery Fund
Our Chair Samuel West spoke with NCA Trustees about the nuts and bolts of applying for the Culture Recovery Fund and what it means for their organisations.
Our Chair Samuel West spoke with NCA Trustees about the nuts and bolts of applying for the Culture Recovery Fund and what it means for their organisations.
Samuel West explores the fuss around THAT advert and celebrates some of the best creative responses.
Xena Frailing, an Arts Emergency mentee, reports back on her own experience of attending our Open Space event on 26th June.
The Arts Index provides data for arts organisations to make their case for increased public funding of arts activities, but it can be used in exactly the same way by individuals. Here’s how you can be your own advocate for the arts.
NCA Chair, Samuel West, set up poetry-reading initiative – PANDEMIC POEMS – just ahead of the official UK Coronavirus lock-down. The poems provide a much needed sense of perspective, reflection, and some hope in a time of uncertainty and grief.
The efforts of arts organisations to embrace digital performances and online sharing has been awe-inspiring. Particularly awe-inspiring for us at the NCA was how the National Student Drama Festival innovated all of its plans for their 2020 festival into a festival that could be entirely accessible online. NSDF’s Director, James Phillips, tells us of the challenges and successes of this unique year for NSDF.
Last month, Hackney Council’s Petra Roberts picked up the Hearts for the Arts Award for the Windrush Generations Festival, which won the award for Best Arts Project – Community Cohesion. As Cultural Development Manager at Hackney Council, Petra led the Windrush Programme and here she tells about the Festival in more detail; about its inspiring intergenerational approach and why storytelling is everything:
Having just announced this year’s Hearts for the Arts Award Winners on Friday, we got to thinking and hoping that the impact of the awards stretches further than Valentine’s Day. So we asked 2 of our recent winners about what they’ve been up to since winning their awards.
In the countdown to the UK General Election, the arts are being drowned out by the B word. We want to push it up the agenda. So we’ll be publishing lists of ground-breaking arts events to remind everyone about the power of culture to transform lives and maintain a healthy, balanced nation.
We were invited to attend the launch of a new book ‘Smashing It: Working Class Artists On Life Art And Making It Happen’. Our Exec Chair Michael Smith went along and tells us what he made of the evening (and the book).
Overwhelmed by a recent performance by 1000 children at the Albert Hall, our chair Samuel West answers one of the first questions in the armoury of the arts defender: “Do we want our children to have this?”
Theatrical magic-makers Royal De Luxe have been defying expectations about arts and culture for decades. On their third trip to Liverpool, hundreds of thousands of people lined the streets to wave goodbye to the Giants. Board member Michael Smith was there for the spectacle.
How a small investment from people who believe in the power of the arts can change young people’s lives. Pokuaa Osei won our inaugural Hearts
In a guest post on GCSE results day, Deborah Annetts of the Incorporated Society of Musicians and founder of the Baccforthefuture campaign warns of the threat to the arts from the EBacc exam system.
Mass-participation artwork Processions took place on 10 June 2018 to mark 100 years since the first British women got the vote. NCA Board member Cassie Chadderton from UK Theatre took part in London.