Smart in Business – Arts skill training for disabled artists

If you are a disabled artist, arts worker, volunteer, someone who works within communities or someone who would like to, this course is for you.

The Disability and Arts Transition Team (DATT) and the Community Arts Network of SA Inc. (CAN SA) invite disabled artists and arts-workers to join in training that contributes to a Course in Business Skills for Creative People (Code 40594SA).

The modules The People Factor (CUTPH08B) and Plan and Program Events (CVPPE06B) will be offered over three days (2, 3 and 8 November 2011) between 10am and 4pm each day. Workshops are hands on, practical and designed to be relevant to participants.

DATT is able to support participants further by offering each module for a fee of only $25/module (usually a module can cost up to $150). Undertaking both the modules offered will cost $50.

Only 12 places are available SO BE QUICK AND REGISTER!

If you are interested in taking part in this training opportunity contact Martin at DATT by email (msawtell@cansa.net.au) or phone (08) 8231 0900 to receive an enrolment form.

Please note: These workshops will be delivered entirely in Auslan on separate days (16-18 November)

Download the flyer.

 

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National Cultural Policy for Australia

From Arts Access Australia:

A new National Cultural Policy for Australia is being developed and you are invited to have your say.

The Federal Minister for the Arts, Simon Crean, has released a discussion paper on the National Cultural Policy that asks how the Australian Government should support arts and culture over the next 10 years.

You can read the discussion paper at http://culture.arts.gov.au

Help us make sure that arts and disability stays on the agenda!

To have your say…

There are a number of different ways you can tell the Government what you think should be in the National Cultural Policy.

We’ve made some notes on what we think should be included (see below). Feel free to copy or adapt these to make your own response. And ask your friends to do the same. Help us spread the word to get our voices heard!

Option 1: Fill in a short online survey…

The survey is also available in Word or PDF format and can be sent to culturalpolicy@pmc.gov.au or National Cultural Policy,
Office for the Arts,
Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet, 
PO Box 6500, 
Canberra ACT 2600.

Option 2: If you have more to say, then you can make an online submission…

The submission form is also available as a Word or PDF document and can be sent to culturalpolicy@pmc.gov.au or National Cultural Policy,
 Office for the Arts, 
Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet, 
PO Box 6500, 
Canberra ACT 2600.

Option 3: Join in one of the NCP roundtable discussions happening round the country.

Melbourne: 10th of October, 6 to 8pm at Arts Access Victoria (222 Bank Street, South Melbourne). RSVP to RSVP@artsaccess.com.au

Sydney: 13th of October,
9:30am to 3pm at the 
Utzon Room, Sydney Opera House. 
RSVP to Pia at pia@beyondempathy.org.au or 02 6772 0101.
 Or follow the debate on Twitter…

Have your say ends at midnight on the 21st of October 2011.

Arts and disability in the National Cultural Policy

Arts and culture plays an important role in the lives of all Australians. But not all Australians are able to participate in it equally.

The National Cultural Policy should actively demonstrate its commitment to improving access and opportunity for people with disability to engage in the arts at all levels: from attending as a member of an audience, to being employed within an arts organisation, to taking on a leadership role or working as a professional practicing artist.

The only area where disability is explicitly mentioned within the NCP Discussion Paper is in Goal 1. We call on the Government to ensure that disability is adequately represented in all areas of our National Cultural Policy. We must use this opportunity to make sure that Australia’s arts and culture is accessible for everyone to enjoy.

Goal 1: To ensure that what the Government supports – and how this support is provided – reflects the diversity of a 21st century Australia and protects and supports Indigenous culture.

All Australians should have the opportunity to participate in the cultural life of the nation, regardless of our abilities, age, gender, cultural and linguistic diversity, or geographic location.

The strategies needed to help meet this goal include:

  1. Authoritative national leadership on arts access and inclusion for people with disability.
  2. Including the findings, strategies and recommendations of the National Arts and Disability Strategy within the National Cultural Policy, rather than making it an appendix to it.
  3. Introduction of ongoing, dedicated funding for artists with disability.
  4. Conducting a full review and upgrade of our arts funding programs to make sure they’re accessible to all.
  5. Encourage and enforce compliance of the obligations that arts and cultural organisations have under the Disability Discrimination Act through monitored Disability Action Planning and support of a national Arts Access Award.
  6. Make sure that people with disability have a stronger voice in the decisions and organisations that affect us through cultural policy that supports and actively encourages participation at all levels of decision making (including senior management, leadership and governance roles).
  7. Building more active support and audiences for arts and disability practice and access to it by the entire population.
  8. Greater access and inclusion for Indigenous artists with disability, particularly due to the high level of disability experienced within our Indigenous communities.

Goal 2: To encourage the use of emerging technologies and new ideas that support the development of new artworks and the creative industries, and that enable more people to access and participate in arts and culture

Cultural policy needs to reflect the different ways that Australians take part in arts and creative activity.

The use of new technologies can go a long way to making our arts and culture more accessible to people with disability. But it is also important to note that while people with disability tend to be early adopters of new technologies, statistically we are still amongst the least likely to be able to afford them.

The Government has a role to make sure arts and cultural venues use new technologies to enhance engagement with their audiences, participants and collaborators and not as a way of offering people with disability a lesser service.

The strategies needed to help meet this goal include:

  1. Encourage and enforce compliance of the obligations that arts and cultural organisations have to provide captioning and audio description technologies.
  2. Ensuring that new technologies can’t be introduced at the exclusion of more traditional methods. For example, funding applications that can only be made online aren’t accessible to everybody.
  3. Increased emphasis on the use of new technologies to create new ways of making art and a commitment to funding innovative content.

Goal 3: To support excellence and world-class endeavor, and strengthen the role that the arts play in telling Australian stories both here and overseas

Australia’s diversity should be nurtured, supported and encouraged, and reflected in our arts and cultural activities.

The strategies needed to help meet this goal include:

  1. Commissioning new research to document the disability arts movement in Australia, our successful Australian artists with disability, and the benefits of participating in arts activity for people with disability.
  2. Increased investment in the arts and disability sector. A commitment of ongoing financial support from all three levels of government is required in order to redress the historical imbalance that has seen artists with disability receive fewer opportunities to develop their practice and professional careers.
  3. Promote excellence and encourage world-class standards above and beyond the major funded organisations and individuals. A diverse sector is a strong sector.
  4. Commitment to increasing representation of people with disability in our creative culture through funding organisations and artists to tell their stories.
  5. Encouraging organisations to stop casting non-disabled performers to depict people with disability on stage and on screen.
  6. Protection of the rights of those creating cultural works, including our freedom of expression, through effective policy and Australian copyright law. This is particularly relevant to artists with disability who work within a disability arts context, where themes relating to their own or a collective experience of impairment can be potentially confronting for some audiences.

Goal 4: To increase and strengthen the capacity of the arts to contribute to our society and economy

Every Australian has the right to experience and learn about the arts throughout our lives, and these experiences should be accessible for everyone to enjoy.

Participation in and access to arts and culture by people with disability is important to support a society that fosters creativity, innovation and community enrichment.

The strategies needed to help meet this goal include:

  1. Making sure that the new national curriculum is fully accessible to people with disability, to ensure all young Australians have access to this important arts education.
  2. Policing the accessibility of our arts education institutions to ensure accountability and to increase representation of students with disability at all levels of arts education.
  3. Recognising and resourcing alternative routes into arts education and employment, including volunteerism and mentoring.
  4. Ensuring that professional and aspiring artists and arts workers with disability have the same choices and opportunities to engage, practice and pursue a career in the arts as those without disability.
  5. Encourage and enforce compliance of the obligations that arts and cultural organisations have to be inclusive employers. Tap into the potential of the arts and cultural sector to lead the way in terms of inclusive, open employment for people with disability.

 

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JUMP

Make Your Artistic Match with JUMP in 2012! Apply for JUMP, the Australia Council’s National Mentoring Program for Young and Emerging Artists.

Are you a young Australian artist on the cusp of a great career? You’re producing excellent work in your artform, and know where you’re headed – but do you have the expert advice to match? Form a mentoring relationship with a professional artist of your choice and join a diverse national network of program participants and alumni making their mark on the industry.

Applications Close 28 October 2011.

Where: National

Who: Artists aged 18-30

Contact: Susan Gibb on (02) 8571 9065 or jump@carriageworks.com.au.

Website: http://jumpmentoring.com.au

 

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Disability and Arts Transition Team eNews 10 – August 2011

The Disability and Arts Transition Team (DATT) have released the August 2011 edition of eNews.

In this edition:

Opportunities

  • Cultivate
  • Regional NSW Music Residency for Musicians with Disability
  • Dance Theatre Audition
  • National Ceramic Award for People with Disabilities
  • Poetry Competition
  • The Ian Potter Cultural Trust
  • Caption Club – GoTheatrical!

Events

  • Three Sisters Captioned Performance

Research

  • Dr Caroline Ellision is doing research into processes and opportunities that support people living with disabilities to participate in the arts.

Workshops

  • Dance Workshops – Restless Dance Theatre
  • Drama Workshops – No Strings Attached Theatre of Disability

Read the newsletter here.

 

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Cultivating arts and disability

Arts Access Australia and the Australia Council for the Arts are pleased to announce the launch of Cultivate, a new professional development fund for Australian artists with disability.

Cultivate will provide seed funding to artists who want to further develop their professional artistic practice with the aim of being better placed to pursue a professional artistic career and to compete for funding in general arts funding programs.

Grants of up to $8,000 will be available for the costs associated with growing applicants’ professional practice as artists. This could include specific skills or professional development opportunities, including mentoring.

Cultivate, which is also supported by the Australian Government through the Office for the Arts, begins to address the recommendation made in the National Arts and Disability Strategy to improve access to arts and cultural funding programs and processes for people with disability.

Cultivate also aims to act as a model of how arts funding processes can be made more accessible by letting artists apply in whatever way works best for them – which could be using Auslan, on video or face-to-face.

A total of $40,000 of grant money will be available in 2011, which will be followed by a second round of $50,000 of grant money in 2012.

Applications for Cultivate are due on Monday the 12th of September 2011. Applications must be received by 10am.

For a copy of the guidelines and application, visit www.artsaccessaustralia.com

Or for more information, contact Arts Access Australia on:

Email info@artsaccessaustralia.org

Phone 0419 201 338 (voice / text)

Skype artsaccessaustralia2

 

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Artists Identifying with Disability Invited to Participate in Research

Dr Caroline Ellison is a senior lecturer in the Disability and Community Inclusion Unit at Flinders University in Adelaide, South Australia.

Caroline is conducting research into the processes and opportunities that support people living with disability to participate in the arts as a professional career, serious leisure pursuit, or as an alternative to traditionally available supported employment or day options.

The research aims to gain a perspective directly from artists living with disability or those who provide supports so as to increase our understanding about how to assist people to choose the arts as a career, serious leisure pursuit or day option and to provide evidence of the benefits and outcomes of such a choice.

Any artist or support person who identifies with living with disability, of any age, and working with any arts medium are invited to participate by contacting Caroline at caroline.ellison@flinders.edu.au.

 

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July MusicWorks

All of the performers at the upcoming July 5th MusicWorks are new to the MusicWorks:

BACH TO BLUES

Street-wise blues with a classical touch

GRANT DIEDRICH

Blues, jazz, rock guitar

COLIN SIMPSON

(THE REAL ELVIS)

When: Tuesday July 5th 2011, 10.30am – 2.30pm

Where: The Governor Hindmarsh, 59 Port Road, Hindmarsh

Cost: $6 admission, support workers free.

For more info see the flyer.

 

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Be part of the Mental Health Week Exhibition Trail 2011

Mental Health Week Exhibition Trail

Register Your Artwork Today

Exhibit in Metropolitan and Rural South Australia during October as part of Mental Health Week. Artists and collectives may exhibit in a variety of locations and also enter to be part of the main exhibitions at the Town Hall and the Bakehouse Theatre.

  • Established Artists at The Adelaide Town Hall – opening 15/10/11 at 11am.
  • Emerging Artists at The Bakehouse Theatre – opening 10/10/11 at 6pm.
  • Artists may submit up to five pieces to the curated exhibitions
  • Artists and Organisations may enter a body of work to be exhibited at other sites and locations not just the Town Hall and Bakehouse (variety of venues)
  • Prizes are awarded at the curated exhibition in the categories of: Technical Skill, Expression, Experimentation, Wild Card and People’s Choice!
  • With judges Steve Donaldson, Daisy and professional artist Chris Wake
  • Exhibit along with other talented artists
  • Be part of a widely publicised & marketed event
  • Open to emerging and established artists

The Mental Health Week Exhibition is open to everyone including Carers, those living with a mental health problem, a disadvantage and the general public. As 1 in 5 of us will experience a mental health problem in any given year the Big Circle is a group that is relevant for us all.

HOW? Complete the Registration form.

WHEN? Entries close: Friday August 19th 2011.

Contact The Big Circle:

T: 8212 8873 F: 8212 8874 E: bigcircle@mhcsa.org.au

Website: www.mhcsa.org.au

1/408 King William Street, Adelaide SA 5000

Mental Health Week: 9-15th October 2011

 

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Purple Orange 2011 Art Exhibition Extended

Calling all artists

Purple Orange is the shopfront of the Julia Farr Association. Each year they hold an art exhibition showcasing the works of artists living with disability and artists whose submitted work explores themes relevant to the disability community.

The theme of this year’s exhibition is Personal Leadership.

Due to requests from artists the closing date for art work to be received has been extended until 30 June 2011.

The launch of the Exhibition will now be on Monday 25 July 2011.

For further information, terms of exhibition and submission forms have a look at the flyer.

 

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Forum on Social Isolation

One man sits in the dark, looking for his dreams…

One is an exploration of what it means to be alone.
Sometimes One is too many. Sometimes One is not enough.
One is the sum of all parts.

Artistic Director of Tutti, Pat Rix says, “One has been developed over several years with Daisy Brown and is a quirky and quizzical culmination of each performers’ cost benefit analysis of living alone. We are absolutely thrilled to be sharing One with an audience at last.”

On the 27th of May Tutti and the Mental Health Coalition of SA will present a forum and open panel discussion on Social Isolation and the performance ‘One’ with speaker and facilitator Geoff Harris, speaker Professor Leon Earle, Artistic Director Pat Rix and the panel of performers which includes: Joel Hartgen, Trish Ferguson, Jane Hewitt, Alistair Brasted and Jackie Saunders.

Discussions will range over the services available for support and pathways of support for those with a dual disability or issues of being isolated and consider the emotional and physical impact of feeling and living alone.

‘What are the issues of being alone and coping by yourself?’
“Who can you turn to in times of need?’

Date: 27 May 2011

Location: The Queens Theatre – Playhouse Lane, Adelaide SA 5000

Time: from 8.30 to 9.30pm (post performance)

Cost: FREE EVENT

 

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