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Peer learning networks

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Peer learning networks

Creative Australia’s peer learning networks help to foster a collaborative and supportive environment for artists and creative workers where knowledge and skills are developed and shared. 

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Our place-based Development Collectives provide in-person networking in metropolitan cities, regional towns or online to foster peer learning opportunities for arts and cultural fundraisers.  

Join a peer learning network near you 

For more information on upcoming events taking place in metropolitan cities, regional towns or online, or to register your interest to host a Development Collective, please email cpa.programs@creative.gov.au

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Training and professional development

We offer targeted training and professional development workshops and programs to build the skills and capabilities of artists and arts organisations. 

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Matching funding programs

We offer matched funding programs to maximise your fundraising efforts, boost your revenue and help you to create meaningful connections with your audiences.  

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National Giving Day to the Arts

National Giving Day to the Arts is a new initiative designed to support artists and small to medium arts organisations to fundraise on one national day. 

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Key fundraising links

A useful list of key federal government, state and territory government and philanthropic funding opportunities for artists, creatives, arts organisations and artistic groups. 

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Fundraising support

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Fundraising support

Creative Australia’s fundraising programs and services aim to build the knowledge, skills and capabilities of artists and organisations, supporting financially sustainable creative careers and business models.

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Tim Hecker presented by The Substation and Room 40, 2023
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We offer a range of fundraising support, including training and professional development, matched funding programs and fundraising resources. Whatever stage you are at on your fundraising journey – whether you are trying to raise funds for a particular art project or interested in attracting private investment – we have targeted support to assist and inspire you. 

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Free coaching services

Creative Australia offers a free coaching service to support the capability of artists and arts to procure private investment from philanthropic or corporate partners.

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Fundraising training and professional development

We offer targeted training and professional development programs to support artists and arts organisations in their fundraising efforts.

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Peer learning and networks

Our peer learning networks help to foster a collaborative and supportive environment for artists and creative workers to share knowledge and skills.

Explore

Matching funding programs

We offer matched funding programs to maximise your fundraising efforts, boost your revenue and help you to create meaningful connections with your audiences. 

Explore

National Giving Day to the Arts

National Giving Day to the Arts is a new initiative designed to support artists and small to medium arts organisations to fundraise on one national day. 

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Fundraise on the Australian Cultural Fund

The Australian Cultural Fund is an online donation platform for Australian artists, arts workers and organisations, administered by Creative Australia.  

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Key fundraising links

A useful list of key federal government, state and territory government and philanthropic funding opportunities for artists, creatives, arts organisations and artistic groups.

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Impact investment readiness

Submitted by ryo@blissmedia… on

Impact investment readiness

Are you interested in attracting impact investment? We have developed a suite of resources and programs to support creative businesses to get impact investment.

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Impact investing is a funding model with a range of benefits for arts and cultural organisations seeking to access new sources of capital and diversify revenue streams to realise cultural value and social purpose.

Australia’s National Cultural Policy: REVIVE, includes a commitment for Creative Australia to explore partnerships and funding models that attract commercial and philanthropic investment alongside government investment.

At Creative Australia, we have developed a suite of resources and programs to support creative businesses to learn more about impact investing and work towards impact investment readiness.

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What is impact investment?

Content

Understand impact investment and how it could benefit your arts practice or organisation by generating positive outcomes alongside financial gains.

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Measuring impact

Content

The ability to measure impact is key for investors to know how their investment will help to improve the social or environmental impacts of your creative business.

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Creative Returns: Getting started with impact debt finance

Content

This guide to working with debt finance for the Australian creative industries provides essential information on the nature of impact investment for the creative industries.

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Creative Industries Impact Lab

Content

This program, focused on impact articulation and measurement, is designed for creative organisations that are at the start of their impact journey

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Impact Investment Readiness Program

Content

Creative Australia is partnering with Social Enterprise Finance Australia (Sefa) to development a pilot an Impact Investment Readiness Program.

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Community arts and cultural development

Partner and invest

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Partner and invest

Creative Australia is the Australian Government’s principal arts investment, development and advisory body. We champion arts and creativity to benefit all Australians.

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Fearless - Lucy Parakhina
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Fearless - Lucy Parakhina

Lucy Parakhina

Our vision for investment  

Creative Australia aims to support a thriving arts and cultural sector and encourages all Australians to regularly experience the inspiration, satisfaction and wellbeing that stems from living a creative life.  

Our vision is that creativity connects us. In a creatively connected nation, creative enterprise is interwoven across society, industry and government as the fuel that ignites our social, cultural and economic success.  

Our investment, advocacy and strategic development work helps to build capabilities in the arts and cultural sector and extends our capacity to connect Australians through creativity.   

Our co-investment model 

Our co-investment model supports the extension of these outcomes, by leveraging Australian Government (public) investment with private investment, to amplify the impacts of Australia’s cultural and creative industries and the benefits of participation in arts and culture.   

Australia’s cultural and creative industries are dynamic and generative – ideas are their currency. These complex, rich and connected human and cultural resources include extraordinary, world-class creative talent. 
  
Co-investment in Australia’s culture and creative industries benefits all Australians, from creativity to wellbeing, education, innovation, digital transformation and global connections.  

Australian artists and creative workers are also well placed to leverage content and creative capital for the public good – our inspiration, our wellbeing, our capabilities and our connections. 

Increasingly, partnerships are aligning around values-based objectives and a shared desire to make a positive contribution to society.  Read about our partnerships with purpose model

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Co-investment opportunities

Private investments – known as co-investments – include philanthropic gifts from individuals, families, trusts, foundations and corporations. 

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Public value and cross portfolio partnerships

Public value and cross-portfolio partnerships benefit Australian cultural and creative industries by building capacity and contributing to a vibrant arts and cultural sector.

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Impact investment

Are you interested in investing in Australian arts and culture to create measurable social and cultural impacts and generate financial gains?

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Creative Australia Impact investing advisory committee

This committee supports Creative Australia’s work in exploring and pursuing opportunities for impact investment in the creative industries.

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Supporting Australia at Venice

The Venice Biennale represents an extraordinary opportunity to celebrate Australia on the world stage through the lens of contemporary art.

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Creative Australia Venice Biennale ambassadors

We thank the generous investment and support of our Venice Biennale ambassadors.  

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Workplace giving

Our employees are passionate about Australian arts and creativity. It’s part of our culture. 

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Donate

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Donate

Help us to extend the outputs of public funds by donating to Creative Australia or preference a gift to independent fundraising campaigns through the Australian Cultural Fund. 

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Markus Ian McKenzie, The Crying Room: Exhumed, presented by The Substation and Club Greg International, 2024
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Donate to Creative Australia

For many years individual donors have joined with Creative Australia to co-invest in the arts. Together we have realised unforgettable creative experiences and supported the talents of extraordinary artists who enrich the lives of Australians. 

Join us by donating today, however small, big or big in ambition. With your donation we can achieve so much more for the Australian creativity. Thank you for supporting our vision. Donations to Creative Australia are tax deductible. 

We invite you to donate to specific programs or contact us to design a specific award or opportunity to meet a predefined need or philanthropic interest area. Please donate today or contact us to discuss these opportunities further, via email coinvestment@creative.gov.au or phone +61 2 9215 9067

Donate directly to artists and arts organisations through the Australian Cultural Fund

The Australian Cultural Fund is an online fundraising platform for the Australian arts and cultural sector, administered by Creative Australia.  

Through the Australian Cultural Fund, you can preference a gift to artists or arts organisations who run short-term campaigns for specific projects or to annual giving campaigns to support their ongoing work and general operating costs.  

Gifts over $2 received via the Australian Cultural Fund are tax deductible. There are no fees to distribute funds through the Australian Cultural Fund, which means that 100% of gifts and philanthropic grants go directly to artists and arts organisations. Find out more about the Australian Cultural Fund

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Partner and invest

Become a partner or co-investor with Creative Australia to support a thriving arts and creative sector by helping us to leveraging Government investment with private investment.

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Fundraising support

Our fundraising programs and resources build the skills and capabilities of artists and organisations to support financially sustainable creative careers and businesses.

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Partnerships and philanthropy

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Partnerships and philanthropy

Our investment, advocacy and strategic development work builds capability in the arts and cultural sector and our capacity to connect Australians through creativity.

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Totems Kempsey  Photographer Alicia Fox
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Totems Kempsey by Photographer Alicia Fox

Alicia Fox

Our sector is dynamic and touches all aspects of our communities, from the centrality of arts and culture to Australia’s identity, social unity and economic prosperity.   

Cultural participation is also increasingly understood as foundational to wellbeing and education – enabling connection, self-expression and the development of 21st century skills – yet when competing against charitable causes in mainstream Australia, philanthropy in support of the arts lacks a perception of need or urgency.  

97% of all Australians engage in the arts and 84% of us recognise the positive individual and broader social impacts of creative engagement.  

Join us to make a better Australia and support the wonderful creative Australian talent who inspire, educate and innovate our nation. 

Partnership opportunities

In this section

Donate

Help us to extend the outputs of public funds by donating to Creative Australia or preference a gift to independent fundraising campaigns through the Australian Cultural Fund.  

Explore

Partner and invest

Become a partner or co-investor to support a thriving arts and creative sector by helping us to leveraging Government investment with private investment. 

Explore

Impact investment readiness

Are you interested in attracting impact investment? We have developed a suite of resources and programs to support creative businesses to get impact investment. 

Explore

Australian Cultural Fund

The Australian Cultural Fund is an online fundraising platform for the Australian arts and cultural sector, administered by Creative Australia.

Explore

The Space in Between

Submitted by ryo@blissmedia… on

The Space in Between

The Space in Between was a discussion on the future of creativity and the arts hosted by the Australia Council for the Arts, now Creative Australia, as part of Vivid 2019.

To develop the conversation, the Australia Council for the Arts hosted, The Space in Between, a discussion on the future of creativity and the arts, as part of Vivid Ideas.

Australia Council research shows there has been a significant increase in the number of artists applying their artistic skills in other industries. Half of all professional Australian artists are now applying their creative skills outside the arts, up from around a third in 2009.

To develop the conversation, the Australia Council for the Arts hosted, The Space in Between, a discussion on the future of creativity and the arts, as part of Vivid Ideas.

Speaking at the event at Sydney’s Museum of Contemporary Arts on Wednesday, Australia Council CEO Adrian Collette AM called for greater investment in culture and creativity.

“Artists continue to explore new terrain, testing the fluidity and diminishing boundaries of future practice.  There is an increasing trend for artists to undertake creative work in more than one art form. More than half have been seriously involved at some point in their career in an art form other than their principal artistic occupation.”

The Space In Between: Seb Chan

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Meet the speakers

Astrid Edwards

Astrid Edwards is a writer, teacher, podcaster and interviewer. Astrid teaches writing at RMIT University and coordinates the Associate Degree of Professional Writing and Editing. She is a former Wheeler Centre Hot Desk Fellow, and is currently one half of Bad Producer Productions, a podcast company with seven successful (and three awarded) podcasts to date. Astrid is the host of The Garret: Writers on Writing and has interviewed Michelle de Kretser, David Malouf, Leigh Sales, Benjamin Law and Clementine Ford. The space between hearing, reading and writing is where she plays with learning and teaching in the technological age.  

Jenna Lee

Jenna Lee is a multidisciplinary artist and Larrakia, Wardaman and Karajarri woman. She identifies as a queer, mixed race, Asian, Aboriginal woman, with her art practice strongly influenced by these overlapping identities. Through her art, Jenna explores language, labels and objects, and how these intersect to create or challenge the concept of identity. Her practice spans curation, creative design, art making and production and her work has become a key part of Queensland’s visual identity through pieces at Brisbane Airport and on the uniforms for the Commonwealth Games. She is currently working on a project that engages with distance and closeness in exploring the ancient artefacts of a living culture.  


 

Professor Gene Moyle

Professor Gene Moyle is the Associate Dean, International and Advancement for the Creative Industries Faculty at the Queensland University of Technology. A former professional dancer, she retrained as a sport and exercise psychologist, focusing on the application and research of performance psychology and performance enhancement. Her work across the performing arts, elite sport and corporate domains amplified her interest in transdisciplinary ways of working. Gene is currently a Board Member of the Queensland Ballet, a member of the Queensland Board of the Psychology Board of Australia (AHPRA), President of Ausdance National, a Performance Health Advisory Panel member for the Queensland Academy of Sport, and an Industry Mentor and Panel Assessor for Arts Queensland.

Emre Deniz

Emre Deniz is a multi-award winning game and technology developer based in New Zealand, responsible for founding Opaque Space and the Earthlight franchise, and working in a range of projects spanning defense, games to astronautical training. In the past 5+ years, Emre has been involved as an artist and game designer in various VR/AR productions with clients and collaborators ranging from NASA, Boeing, United States Air Force, HTC Vive, Epic Games, Microsoft, Google and the Australian Defence Force. After winning multiple industry awards in 2017 and 2018 for his Serious Games work, Emre oversaw the invention of the ‘Adaptive Intelligent Virtual Assessor’, which went onto secure commercial contracts for XR training in both the Australian Defense Force and the United States Air Force. In 2019, Emre joined Joshua Boggs, of Framed, as the Studio and Development Director of Studio Mayday, a New Zealand based studio focused on creating innovative storytelling and genre defining games. 


 

Seb Chan

Seb Chan is Chief Experience Officer at the Australian Centre for the Moving Image in Melbourne. He is responsible for holistic experience design and oversees teams responsible for experience & digital, ICT, as well as the museum’s collections, digitisation & digital preservation programs. Prior to this he led the digital renewal and transformation of the Cooper Hewitt Smithsonian Design Museum in New York (2011-2015). At the Cooper Hewitt he also led experiments in the acquisition of digital design including the first ‘App’ to enter the Smithsonian’s permanent collection. He drove the Powerhouse Museum’s pioneering work in open access, mass collaboration and digital experience during the 2000s. He has also worked as a museum consultant with institutions across North America, Europe and Asia. His work has won awards from American Alliance of Museums, One Club, D&AD, Fast Company and Core77. He is an Adjunct Professor, School of Media and Communications, in the College of Design and Social Context at RMIT, and is a current member of the international advisory board of Art Science Museum (Singapore), and advisory committees for the National Museum of Australia, Hammer Museum at UCLA (USA), and the Exploratorium (USA), National Heritage Board of Singapore, and is a board member of Diversity Arts Australia. He is an alumni of the Getty Leadership Institute and Salzburg Global Seminar, and also led a parallel life in digital art and electronic music. 


 

Watch the event

An Australia Council for the Arts Vivid Event: The Space in Between (Full Length)

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Audience Outlook Monitor

Submitted by ryo@blissmedia… on

Audience Outlook Monitor

Between 2020 and 2023 Creative Australia worked with Patternmakers and WolfBrown to understand changes in the behaviours and attitudes of arts-goers.  

Launched in May 2020, the Audience Outlook Monitor was established to track audience behaviours and sentiments in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, in order to support decision-making and forward planning across the sector. In subsequent years, it continued to provide insight into the evolving trends shaping audience preferences, decisions and behaviours. 

The Audience Outlook Monitor was a valuable tool, providing artists, cultural organisations and the broader arts sector with timely information as changes occurred across the period 2020 to 2023.

With multiple data collection points across each year, nearly 30 snapshot reports and factsheets were published, often accompanied by webinar discussions exploring the results.

In addition, Patternmakers published a dashboard for exploring the results of each phase in detail.

The Audience Outlook Monitor also involved six state and territory partners, and 159 arts and cultural organisations deployed the survey to samples of their databases. The project was an excellent demonstration of industry and government collaboration to provide regular updates and up-to-the-moment insights during a time of great change and challenge for the arts.

Read more about the Audience Outlook Monitor on the Patternmakers website.

2020–2023 Audience Outlook Monitor 

Shapeshifting: Audience Trends for Summer and 2023

Shapeshifting: Audience Trends for Summer and 2023

26 October 2022 – The co-host of this session was Liz Tomkinson, Manager Multi-Year Investment at the Australia Council for the Arts

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Live attendance – August 2022 pulse check

Live attendance – August 2022 pulse check

24 August 2022 – The co-host of this session was Andy Donovan, Director of Multi-Year Investment at the Australia Council for the Arts

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Live Attendance March 2022

Live Attendance March 2022

23 March 2022 – The co-host of this session was Andy Donovan, Director of Multi-Year Investment at the Australia Council for the Arts

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Rebuilding regional audiences

Rebuilding regional audiences

26 October 2021 – The co-host of this session was Scott Howie, General Manager at Regional Arts Australia.

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Creative audience engagement at home

Creative audience engagement at home

5 October 2021 – The co-host of this session was Anne Dunn, Executive Director at Sydney Dance Company.

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Audience Outlook Monitor Webinar: July results

Audience Outlook Monitor Webinar: July results

27 July 2021 – The co-host of this session was Andy Donovan, Director Multi-Year Funding at the Australia Council for the Arts.

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Access and inclusion 2021

Access and inclusion 2021

29 June -The co-host of this session was Morwenna Collett, arts consultant specialising in diversity, access and inclusion.

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Audience Outlook Monitor Webinar: International perspectives with WolfBrown

Audience Outlook Monitor Webinar: International perspectives with WolfBrown

15 June – The co-hosts of this webinar were Alan Brown and Megan Bander from WolfBrown USA, leaders of the Audience Outlook Monitor internationally.

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Digital engagement 2021

Digital engagement 2021

25 May – The co-host of this session was Stuart Buchanan, Head of Digital Programming at the Sydney Opera House.

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Fundraising and support 2021

Fundraising and support 2021

23 April – The co-host of this session was Matt Morse, Executive Director Strategy and Programs at Creative Partnerships Australia.

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Phase 4 Snapshot report

Phase 4 Snapshot report


30 March – The co-host of this session was Andy Donovan, Director Multi-Year Investment at the Australia Council for the Arts .

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Partners and participating organisations

Delivery partners

Patternmakers-logoWB-logo-ko-pos

 

Supporting partners

Creative Australia government logoNSW logoCreative Victoria logo

 

Government of the Australian Capital Territoryqueensland government logogovernment of south australia logodlgsc-colour-jpg

Participating organisations

ACMI

Adelaide Festival Centre

Adelaide Film Festival

Adelaide Fringe

Adelaide Symphony Orchestra

Art Gallery of Ballarat

Art Gallery of New South Wales

Art on The Move

Art, Not Apart

arTour

ARTRAGE INC

Arts Centre Melbourne

Arts Margaret River Inc

Artsource

Artspace

Australian Ballet, The

Australian Brandenburg Orchestra

Australian Centre for Contemporary Art

Australian Dance Theatre

Australian Festival of Chamber Music

Australian Museum

Australian Theatre for Young People

Barking Gecko Theatre

Bathurst Regional Council T/A Bathurst Memorial Entertainment Centre

Belconnen Arts Centre

Bell Shakespeare

Belvoir

Bendigo Venues & Events

Biennale of Sydney

Black Swan State Theatre Company

Brisbane Festival

Brisbane Multicultural Art Centre (BEMAC)

Brisbane Powerhouse

Brisbane Writers Festival

Brown’s Mart Arts Ltd

Bunbury Regional Entertainment Centre

Bundaberg Regional Council

Bunjil Place (City of Casey)

Cairns Indigenous Art Fair

Campbelltown Arts Centre

Canberra Glassworks

Canberra Youth Theatre

Centre for Contemporary Photography

Chamber of Arts and Culture WA

Chunky Move

Circa Contemporary Circus

Circus Oz

Colac Otway Performing Arts & Cultural Centre

Country Arts SA

Cube Wodonga, The

Cultural Media

Dancehouse

Darwin Aboriginal Art Fair Foundation Ltd

Darwin Entertainment Centre

Design Centre Tasmania

Drum Theatre

Electronic Music Conference (EMC)

Empire Theatres Pty Ltd

Events Centre, Caloundra, The

Faculty of Fine Arts and Music, University of Melbourne

Feast Queer Arts and Cultural Festival

Footscray Community Arts Centre

Forge Theatre and Arts Hub

FORM building a state of creativity

Frankston Arts Centre

Fremantle Press Inc

Geelong Arts Centre

Geelong Gallery

Gladstone Entertainment Convention Centre

Glasshouse, The

Goldfields Arts Centre

Hayes Theatre Co

History Trust of South Australia

HOTA, Home of the Arts

HotHouse Theatre

Ian Potter Museum of Art, the University of Melbourne

Information + Cultural Exchange

Ipswich Civic Centre

La Boite Theatre Company

Lighthouse Theatre Warrnambool

Linden New Art Inc

Lismore Regional Gallery

Logan Entertainment Centre – Logan City Council

Mackay Entertainment & Convention Centre

Malthouse Theatre

Melbourne Fringe

Melbourne International Comedy Festival

Melbourne International Jazz Festival

Melbourne Recital Centre

Melbourne Symphony Orchestra

Melbourne Theatre Company

Merrigong Theatre Company

Mildura Arts Centre

Multicultural Arts Victoria

Museums Victoria

Music Victoria

National Gallery of Australia

National Gallery of Victoria (NGV)

National Museum of Australia

National Portrait Gallery

Nexus Arts

No Strings Attached Theatre of Disability

Opera Australia

Opera Queensland

Orange Civic Theatre

Penrith Performing & Visual Arts

Perth Festival

Perth Theatre Trust

Perth Theatre Trust – Albany Entertainment Centre

Platform Youth Arts

 

Powerhouse Museum

Propel Youth Arts WA

Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art

Queensland Museum Network

Queensland Music Festival

Queensland Performing Arts Centre

Queensland Symphony Orchestra

Queensland Theatre

Real Film Festival

Red Chair Pty Ltd

Royal Historical Society of Victoria

SALA (South Australian Living Artists) Festival

Screenworks

Scribblers Festival

Smith’s Alternative

South Australian Museum

Spare Parts Puppet Theatre

State Library of Queensland

State Library Victoria

State Opera South Australia

State Theatre Company South Australia

SWELL Sculpture Festival

Sydney Dance Company

Sydney Fringe Inc, The

Sydney Opera House

Sydney Philharmonia Choirs

Sydney Theatre Company

Sydney Writers’ Festival Ltd

Synergy & Taikoz Ltd

 

Tasmanian Symphony Orchestra, The

 

Theatre North Inc

Theatre Works

TOPOLOGY

Townsville City Council

Townsville City Council Galleries

Tura New Music

Umbrella Studio Contemporary Arts

Unconformity, The

Victorian Music Development Office

Victorian Opera

Vitalstatistix

Wangaratta Performing Arts & Convention Centre

West Australian Ballet

West Australian Opera

West Australian Symphony Orchestra

Western Australian Museum

Wheeler Centre, The

Womadelaide foundation Ltd

Yirra Yaakin Theatre Company

Note: not all organisations participated with all phases of the project

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Electorate profiles

Electorate Profiles is an interactive tool providing data on arts and culture in each of Australia’s 151 federal electorates.
Choose an electorate from the map or table to display information including audience engagement with the arts, ticket buying trends across arts and sport, and cultural and creative employment and businesses.

Learn more

Electorate profiles

Electorate Profiles is an interactive tool providing data on arts and culture in each of Australia’s 151 federal electorates.
Choose an electorate from the map or table to display information including audience engagement with the arts, ticket buying trends across arts and sport, and cultural and creative employment and businesses.

Learn more

Electorate profiles

Submitted by ryo@blissmedia… on

Electorate profiles

Electorate Profiles is an interactive tool providing data on arts and culture in each of Australia’s 151 federal electorates.
Choose an electorate from the map or table to display information including audience engagement with the arts, ticket buying trends across arts and sport, and cultural and creative employment and businesses.

Electorate Profiles is an interactive tool providing data on arts and culture in each of Australia’s 151 federal electorates.

Choose an electorate from the map or table to display information including audience engagement with the arts, ticket buying trends across arts and sport, and cultural and creative employment and businesses.

Further information by electorate

Use the Find my electorate tool from the Australian Electoral Commission to search for your electorate by postcode or locality/suburb.

The ABS Electoral Division Profiles provide a statistical overview for each federal electorate. Each profile provides information on population, housing, family and person characteristics.

Visit ABS Census QuickStats to explore a range of other social and demographic indicators by various geographies, including federal electorate, local government area and remoteness areas.

If you would like to see data for a specific electorate in PDF format, please email us and we’ll do our best to help.

Find out more

Two women looking at an art installation with dry ice
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Soft Centre Festival 2018.

Credit: Jordan Munns.

Research partnerships

Creative Australia welcomes opportunities to partner with academia and industry through research.

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Two women looking at an art installation with dry ice
×

Soft Centre Festival 2018.

Credit: Jordan Munns.

Research partnerships

Creative Australia welcomes opportunities to partner with academia and industry through research.

Learn more
Logo Creative Australia

We acknowledge the many Traditional Custodians of Country throughout Australia and honour their Elders past and present.

We respect their deep enduring connection to their lands, waterways and surrounding clan groups since time immemorial. We cherish the richness of First Nations Peoples’ artistic and cultural expressions.

We are privileged to gather on this Country and through this website to share knowledge, culture and art now, and with future generations.

First Nations Peoples should be aware that this website may contain images or names of people who have died.

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We acknowledge the many Traditional Custodians of Country throughout Australia and honour their Elders past and present.

We respect their deep enduring connection to their lands, waterways, and surrounding clan groups since time immemorial. We cherish the richness of First Nations peoples’ artistic and cultural expressions. We are privileged to gather on this Country and to share knowledge, culture and art, now and with future generations.

Art by Jordan Lovegrove