Grants to improve access to arts events and venues
Date: 31 January 2012
Grants to improve
access to arts events and venues
Arts organisations and venues will become more accessible this year, thanks to eleven grants provided by Creative New Zealand for projects ranging from sign language interpretations and audio described performances to music workshops and concerts for disabled children and young adults, and improved physical access.
Totalling $30,000, the one-off grants are being administered by Arts Access Aotearoa through its Arts For All Programme, a partnership programme with Creative New Zealand. The aim of this programme is to work with representatives from the disability sector to support arts organisations, venues and producers to improve their access.
Stephen Wainwright, Chief Executive, Creative New Zealand said the one-off grants signal the organisation’s commitment to supporting improved access to arts events for all New Zealanders. They complement the publication Arts for All: opening doors to disabled people and the annual Big ‘A’ Creative New Zealand Arts for All Award.
“It’s great to see the range of projects and the organisations’ enthusiasm to build new audiences by making performances, facilities and information more accessible to disabled people,” he said. “I look forward to seeing the long-term impact of this investment and of Arts Access Aotearoa’s Arts for All Programme.”
Richard
Benge, Executive Director, Arts Access Aotearoa said the
one-off grants build on the work being done through the Arts
For All Programme. They have also prompted valuable
discussions with the organisations.
“I am very pleased
to see the level of commitment and creative ideas coming
from the arts community to improve access for everyone
wanting to engage in the arts,” he said.
The
eleven grant recipients will also contribute their own
funding to their projects.
The following is a complete
list of grants:
• $3000 to Auckland Art
Gallery Toi o Tāmaki to increase access to its programmes,
provide disability awareness training for staff, and provide
a series of signed talks about works in its collection in
2012
• $3000 to the Auckland Theatre Company
to install ramps in its premises and make its website more
accessible to people with a visual impairment
•
$3000 to Capital E National Theatre for Children to provide
signed performances of three different works in its 2012
programme
• $3000 to Chamber Music New
Zealand to present a workshop and concert in the Wellington
Town Hall for disabled children and young adults so they can
experience live music up close, and interact with musicians
and their instruments
• $3000 to Fortune
Theatre, Dunedin to establish best practice methodologies
for audio-described performances and present six
audio-described performances in 2012
• $3000
to the New Zealand Symphony Orchestra to increase the number
of its performances to students in special needs schools in
Auckland
• $1150 to Pablos Art Studios,
Wellington to provide staff training for its tutors,
enhancing their engagement with those studio’s artists who
have visual, hearing or communication impairments
•
$3000 to Q Theatre, Auckland to develop an accessibility
policy and action plan, promote its access to a wide
audience, and provide disability awareness training for
staff, board and management
• $3000 to Silo
Theatre, Auckland to provide signed performances of
Tribes by Nina Raine, an award-winning work about the
politics of communication for hearing, hearing impaired and
Deaf people
• $1850 to Studio2, Dunedin to
display artwork by disabled artists to professional
standards in its exhibition space
• $3000 to
the Theatre Royal Charitable Trust, Christchurch to
contribute to the installation of an accessible lift,
catering for disabled patrons, to the upper levels of the
Isaac Theatre Royal.
ends