Arts People
The new Producer at Sheffield Theatres will be JOHN TOMLINSON, who previously worked there as Assistant Producer. Currently Producer at York Theatre Royal, he was founder of Stand and Be Counted, the...
Arts People
CHRISTINE BROWN joins MMW as its first Executive Director, to work alongside founder LAURA WESTCOTT. She moves from Help Musicians UK where she rose up the ranks from a temp to become Director of...
Given recent reports of anxiety and financial trouble for the owner of the Port Talbot garage on which Banksy installed his most recent work, Janice Aitken asks: is his art made in the interests of local communities, and who should pay to protect it? 
Howard Fishman explains why, in an age in which a gun can be made with a 3D printer and a reality TV Star can become US President, we need art that feels “like getting slapped in the face, but in a good way”.
Arts funding has been pumped into Narva, an Estonian town on the border with Russia, to empower the Estonian cultural identity and guard against pro-Russian propaganda, writes Carmen Gray.
News
6,000 people have signed a petition to stop the space, which had been used for a Banksy mural, from being turned into flats. City Councillor and Deputy Mayor for finance Craig Cheney said there would...
News
A new report calls for an arts education premium for every primary school to address worsening lesson quality and offer opportunities for more cultural trips.
News
The funder has also set out plans to create a consultative assembly of arts professionals, after hearing calls to communicate more effectively with the sector.
News
Schools Minister Nick Gibb says that the key to increasing the number of music GCSE entries is to improve the quality of lessons for pupils under fourteen years old.
News
Labour politicians are increasingly positive about the Arts Council’s work, while sentiment among Conservatives has moved in the opposite direction.
Feature
How can arts and culture reach a broader audience that more accurately reflects local communities? Sarah Boiling explores how to change the pattern of who engages with the arts.
Feature
Noise-induced hearing loss can be career-ending for professional musicians, as demonstrated in a recent case at the Royal Opera House, writes Tim Turney.
Case study
What is it like to be an artist working in the East Midlands? Elizabeth Hawley-Lingham and Paula Serafini spent two years looking beneath the surface.
Feature
Barriers to collaboration between universities and black and minority ethnic community organisations could be removed says Katherine Dunleavy, whose research points to a positive way forward.
Arts People
A reflection on the inspirational rule-breakers, unexpected challenges and creative teachers that have shaped the career of Judith Webster, CEO of Music for Youth.
Upon winning a Golden Globe, straight actor Darren Criss promised to act in no more gay roles, in order to open up opportunities for LGBT colleagues. Ryan Gilbey asks, is it a problem to act outside of your sexuality?
How do you make a musical instrument that works in Virtual Reality for disabled performers? Franziska Schroeder and Matilde Meireles explain their research at Queen’s University Belfast.
News
Figures provided by the online funding platform to the BBC reveal there has been a 33% drop in giving to arts and culture, and a 10% increase in donations to poverty and health-related charities....
News
St George’s Theatre in Great Yarmouth has been granted £27k by the local council and had its annual funding increased for a two-year period to clear debts accrued over the past six years...
News
The venue has dropped five-year old plans for a £6m refurbishment – saying they were too ambitious in the current climate – and is seeking options for a smaller, phased extension,...
News
33-year-old Thomas Ellison, from Fenham in Newcastle, has been sentenced to 90 hours of community service for placing a lunchbox with a circuit board and a doll on a major bridge in the city in 2017...
After controversies about underrepresented artists at the National Theatres of Wales and Ireland, Mark Fisher muses on who – and what – a national theatre is for. 
Ahead of the screening of a documentary profiling Mexican conductor Alondra de la Parra, DW speaks to the star about working with a film-maker, the magic of live performance, and why she still fields questions that no male conductor would be asked.
It can be difficult to give children a first-hand experience of live performance, but Northern Ballet is hoping to enthuse younger audiences with a series of 40-minute films at cinemas across the UK, writes Rob Walker.
News
Manchester Museum, the Horniman Museum in London and Carlisle’s Tullie House are among the institutions receiving grants in the latest round of the DCMS Wolfson fund, a joint initiative between...

Pages