From issue 168
Jenny Abramsky CBE (pictured), currently Director of BBC Audio & Music, will join the Board of The Heritage Lottery Fund and National Heritage Memorial Fund as Chair in October...
From issue 168
Andrew Ormston explores ways of improving the relationship between the cultural and tourism sectors.
From issue 168
Key partnerships, massive online campaigns and strategic use of sponsorship helped Manchester International Festival (MIF) to reach its international market, say Helen Palmer and Andrew Palmer.
From issue 168
A new Visitor Economy Strategy adds to the possibilities of creating partnership between the tourism and cultural sectors, writes Mary Clarke.
From issue 168
Julia Payne and Wendy Smithers provide the ultimate ?how to? (and ?how not to?) list for arts professionals working with consultants.
From issue 168
The client?consultancy relationship and the consulting process itself are the keys when both budget and time are tight, writes Martyn Best.
From issue 168
Making a cultural project into a fundable proposition was a challenge for Stephen Feber ? he tells us how.
From issue 168
ArtsProfessional reveals the career paths of the sector's senior managers.
From issue 168
It is with interest that I read your article “The ‘issue’ issue” on 24 March, which mentioned that the Cultural Olympiad will ‘promote art which bigs London up, for two...
From issue 168
ACE is under pressure to reduce its overheads as DCMS cost-saving measures start to bite.
From issue 168
Seven artists, each with a strong regional identity, will reflect on England from a fresh perspective through a new national partnership between BBC English Regions and Arts Council England. ‘...
From issue 168
St Donats Arts Centre is celebrating the restoration of its revenue funding from Arts Council Wales (ACW) while the Welsh Jazz Society (WJS) believes it will be forced to close, as the results of appeals against recent funding decisions emerge. All six of the organisations originally in line for a cut have appealed against ACW?s decisions, and their representations have been heard by an independent panel.
From issue 168
The glass ceiling is still in place in the cultural sector, with only 28% of organisations having a female chair of their board, though 47% have a female chief executive, and women account for 64% of...
From issue 168
Low levels of understanding about the process of claiming tax relief through the Gift Aid scheme are limiting the extent to which this scheme is being used in fundraising, according to a new report...
From issue 168
An understanding of the impact that funding can have on theatre, and of developments in the five years since the Theatre Review, should result from Arts Council England’s forthcoming Theatre...
From issue 168 News
Five members of Stratford-upon-Avon’s Orchestra of the Swan (pictured) will appear next month in the new series of Channel 4’s hit fashion show ‘How To Look Good Naked’. Seen...
From issue 168
Torbay, Dover and Blackpool will each benefit from around £4m for cultural, heritage and infrastructural projects from a new DCMS-funded programme called ‘Sea Change’, through which...
Choirs from five of London’s top City firms – Deloitte, KPMG, Morgan Stanley, PricewaterhouseCoopers and UBS – and the UBS company orchestra, will perform in the Barbican Hall in...
From issue 168
The Theatre Assessment (we’re not allowed to call it a review in case it gets muddled up with the Theatre Review five years ago) must be a welcome development for a sector which still feels...
From issue 168
Chloë Reddaway uncovers the lack of joined-up government when it comes to funding policy.
From issue 168
Live art springs from a truly democratic wish to involve everyone in the creative moment, writes Francis Alexander.
From issue 168
Timely reporting to HMRC at the end of the tax year will stave off potential penalties, writes Lesley Fidler.
From issue 167
Employment solicitor Deborah Annets has been appointed Chief Executive of the Incorporated Society of Musicians. She succeeds Neil Hoyle who has moved with his family to Scotland. QUAD, Derby...
From issue 167
Disabled people just want access to the same kit and the same websites that the rest of us take for granted, writes Jo Verrent.
From issue 167
Adaptive technology can be surprisingly low-tech and low-cost, as Julia Piggott discovers.

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