Museums express 'deep concern' over Whitworth Gallery row

outside of Whitworth Gallery
03 Mar 2022

The planned removal of Alistair Hudson as director "speaks to the silencing of dissent", according to an international museum ethics watchdog.

DfE plans ‘worrying’ for creative degrees

students take part in an art class
02 Mar 2022

Disadvantaged groups could miss out on future university places as creative degrees fail to feature in funding for “strategic priorities”.

Pressure on arts sector to cut Russian ties

02 Mar 2022

Cancellations abound in protest over the invasion in Ukraine as calls for a cultural boycott of "blood-drenched Russian money" grow louder.

Trafalgar acquires more pantos

02 Mar 2022

Trafalgar Entertainment has extended its pantomime offer further in a new deal with Imagine Theatre.

The panto producer will provide popular shows like Cinderella and Aladdin in five of Trafalgar's regional venues this Christmas: The Swan in High Wycombe, the Lyceum Theatre in Crewe, Swindon's Wyvern Theatre, the White Rock Theatre, Hastings, and Beck Theatre in Hayes.

"We’re absolutely delighted to be working with the teams at Trafalgar Entertainment and these five fantastic venues... We can guarantee that through this exciting new partnership our audiences can look forward to the very best in family entertainment this Christmas," Imagine's Managing Director Steve Boden said.

Trafalgar says it will continue its association with Crossroads Pantomimes to stage shows in Cardiff, Southend, Dartford and Bromley.

BBC to air Sunday night performances

02 Mar 2022

The BBC will air new plays, concerts and book readings on Sunday nights as part of a programming shift.

Sunday Night Performances on BBC Four will "cement its status as the home of performance", the broadcaster says.

A Welsh comedy from Theatr Clywd, Nitin Sawhney's piece for Coventry City of Culture, and performances from the Royal Shakespeare Company and Shakespeare's Globe are among the programmes scheduled from April.

An eight-part series for BBC Two and iPlayer, The Art That Made Us, will explore significant UK artworks in partnership with a nationwide "festival".

Museums, galleries, libraries and archives will hold events inspired by the objects as their stories are told on television next month.

UNBOXED launches first event

02 Mar 2022

UNBOXED, the 2022 festival of creativity and innovation, has launched its first event in Scotland.

About Us, a multimedia projection and performance artwork celebrating "our place in the universe and the connections between us", is the first of 10 creative projects commissioned for the festival.

Lead creative partner 59 Productions is presenting About Us in Paisley before moving on to Derry, Caenarfon, Luton and Hull. Alongside the nighttime shows, daytime installations and workshops will extend the project's reach to children and young people.

Nine more commissions will be experienced across 80 sites and through digital and broadcast media throughout 2022.

£12m ACE business innovation programme delayed

01 Mar 2022

An Arts Council England (ACE) business innovation programme has been delayed without a new start date.

The Reset and Innovation Programme, assigned £12m and originally planned for January, is part of the funder's three-year delivery plan for the Let's Create strategy.

The initiative will support organisations to apply ACE's investment principles and pursue innovations that build their long-term sustainability, including new partnerships and business models or company mergers.

An ACE spokesperson attributed the delay to "knock on" effects arising from its efforts to support the sector throughout the pandemic.

“Plans are still being finalised. We aim to share information in the coming months.”

Cultural tourism faces 'double jeopardy' in 2022

landscape image of Knebworth House
01 Mar 2022

MPs are warned that, for some attractions, "this year might be more financially challenging than the last two".

Inc Arts wins accolades for inclusive change

01 Mar 2022

Inclusion and diversity organisation Inc Arts has won four accolades from Anthem Awards.

The awards recognise "purpose and mission driven work". Inc Arts was acknowledged with gold awards for special projects, best strategy, partnership and collaboration and a "medal class" award.

The organisation helped share the experiences of 400 ethnically diverse arts workers with 3,000 senior leaders in the sector during the lockdowns, hosted a conference, Speak-Listen-Reset-Heal, and provided the Unlock toolkit.

CEO Amanda Parker said the work has been hard but has catalysed change at hundreds of UK arts organisations.

"In the darkest of storms, it's great to be seen."

Russian ballets cancelled across UK

01 Mar 2022

A series of events by Russian ballets have been cancelled following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Performances by the Russian State Ballet of Siberia were stopped at the Royal & Derngate theatre in Northampton, Wolverhampton Grand Theatre and The New Theatre Peterborough. 

The Ambassador Theatre Group has cancelled the same tour, scheduled for The Bristol Hippodrome and Edinburgh Playhouse.

Dublin’s Helix theatre pulled a performance by the Royal Moscow Ballet and London’s Royal Opera House withdrew the Bolshoi Ballet’s summer season.

Speaking on Twitter, Culture Secretary Nadine Dorries urged other features to “take action and stand by the people of Ukraine”.

“We can’t allow representatives of the Russian state to continue performing”.

Warrington Council creates artist database

01 Mar 2022

A database of arts professionals local to Warrington is being compiled by the borough council.

The creative practitioner database aims to become a resource for local creatives to find commissions and longer-term work.

It will feature work opportunities in and outside the town, upcoming cultural and networking events, and details of funding or support channels, alongside opportunities to take part in discussions about future culture plans.

Cabinet Member for Culture Maureen McLaughlin said it is vital the council supports local arts and culture professionals.

“Warrington’s arts and culture community will be much stronger, now and in the future, if we work together.”

New Historic England fund focuses on ‘everyday heritage’

28 Feb 2022

The public body responsible for England's historic environment is focusing on working-class history with a new funding scheme for cultural activities. 

DASH extends Future Curators network

28 Feb 2022

Disabled-led visual arts charity DASH is extending its Future Curators programme.

Cornwall’s Newlyn Art Gallery & Exchange, Southampton’s John Hansard Gallery and Sheffield’s Arts Catalyst will join the network’s three existing members this year.

The three new organisations will each host a disabled curator for a fifteen-month residency, resulting in a new exhibition or body of work produced by each curator.

DASH says its Future Curators Network aims to address deep-rooted inequality against disabled people in the visual arts sector.

Artistic Director Mike Layward says the programme now covers most parts of England: “We have high hopes for the Future Curators programme and the influence it will bring in diversifying the visual arts sector.”

EURO 2022 plans £800k cultural programme

28 Feb 2022

UEFA Women’s EURO 2022, the women’s European football championship, will run a cultural programme alongside the tournament coming to England this summer.

The arts programme will be managed by the Football Association (FA) and is made possible through an £800,000 Arts Council England grant.

Three commissioned projects will harness culture to celebrate the history of women’s football, including an opportunity open to the public to create an original anthem for the championship.

“The combined forces of culture and sport have the power to improve lives, regenerate neighbourhoods, support local economies and bring people together nationally and internationally,” ACE Chief Executive Darren Henley said.

National Open Youth Orchestra announces first concerts

28 Feb 2022

The National Open Youth Orchestra (NOYO) is going on tour for the first time.

The orchestra consists of disabled and non-disabled musicians aged 11-25 playing both acoustic and electronic instruments tailored to disabled performers.

Launched in 2018, the orchestra is the world’s first disabled-led national youth ensemble.

NOYO says performances will be presented in a relaxed atmosphere to accommodate a neurodiverse audience, with dimmed lights, relaxed seating and consideration towards noise and audience movements.

A programme of four events, starting in London on April 24, is scheduled through to June.

ACE instructed to address funding imbalance

women looks at art in gallery
24 Feb 2022

The funder is to redirect funding away from London-based organisations as outlined in the latest addendum to its guidance for applicants.

Scottish Ballet ends BP sponsorship

23 Feb 2022

The Scottish Ballet has ended its partnership with BP.

Scotland’s national ballet confirmed it severed ties with the oil giant at the end of January as it works to become carbon neutral by 2030.

The announcement follows the National Portrait Gallery’s decision to end its 30-year BP sponsorship.

Member of activist theatre group BP or not BP? Scotland, Zoe Lafferty, said all eyes are now on the British Museum to follow suit.

“We desperately need cultural gatekeepers to start being leaders in times of crisis rather than allowing the arts to hide decades of violence towards people and ecosystems.”

Bristol gallery crowdfunds to complete £4m refurb

23 Feb 2022

Bristol's RWA art gallery is crowdfunding the final £100,000 of its redevelopment project.

The gallery is slated to reopen in May following a £4.1m refurbishment that it says is "the most significant on a Grade II listed building in over a century".

Works included repairs, accessiblity improvements and the development of free to access galleries across three floors as well as an outdoor events space for sculpture and public arts.

The gallery says it needs half of its crowdfunding target in public donations, as a family trust is willing to match donations of up to £50,000.

RWA Director Alison Bevan says the gallery will be able to welcome 40% more visitors annually once it reopens.

"It will also enable us to extend our community and wellbeing programmes, so that more people from under-represented communities across Bristol have the opportunity to engage in art and creativity."

Fringe Festival volunteering ‘leans into ableism’

a crowd gathers at Edinburgh Fringe Festival
23 Feb 2022

Allegations of discriminatory practices ignite calls for the festival to adopt new principles to tackle inequalities. 

BP and National Portrait Gallery cut ties

22 Feb 2022

A 30 year sponsorship deal between BP and the National Gallery will end in December, the parties say.

In a press release on Tuesday (February 22), they confirmed that BP's support of the Portrait Award will not be renewed. It said the decision was made "together", offering no insight into whether pressure to end oil company sponsorship of the arts convinced either partner that time was up.

"The BP of today is a very different company from when we first started our partnership with the National Portrait Gallery," the company's UK boss Louise Kingham said, noting a need to find "new ways to best use our talent, experience, and resources".

Lobby groups Culture Unstained and BP or not BP? claim its clear the partnership had become too controversial.

"This is clearly a vote of no confidence in BP’s business. The company spent 30 years painting a picture of itself as a responsible philanthropist but it is rapidly running out of places to clean up its toxic image," Culture Unstained Co-Director Jess Worth said.

Nicholas Cullinan, Director of the National Portrait Gallery, expressed gratitude for the long-running support.

"Its funding for the award has fostered creativity, encouraged portrait painting for over 30 years and given a platform to artists from around the world, as well as providing inspiration and enjoyment for audiences across the UK."

It's estimated the sponsorship enabled six million free visits and contributed to the career development of more than 1,500 portrait artists.

The last Portrait Award was in 2020. It was not staged this year or last because the gallery is closed for redevelopment.

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