CREATIVE FUTURES FUND

Delivery Investment

About the program

The Creative Futures Fund will support the creation and sharing of Australian stories and new ways for people to engage with them.

Creative Futures Fund: Delivery Investment will bring new Australian stories to life so people can engage with and experience them.

It is for works in their final stages of development that are ready for presentation. Investment can be used to adapt existing works that have already had a public outcome, develop and deepen partnerships, secure co-investment, realise and share the work, and capture the impact this has had for you, your collaborators and those experiencing the work.

We are seeking great ideas that are ambitious, unexpected and innovative. This includes new works and projects that may leverage existing intellectual property. The innovation could be in the story, the artforms or mediums used, the partners and artists you work with, or the way you will present or share the work.

The investment available is significant, so we want to know what that investment may help you do what wouldn’t otherwise be possible. Funding business as usual activity is not a priority.

The fund will only support Australian stories, for example the intellectual property must be majority owned by Australian creatives, be an Australian concept, with subject matter that is relevant to contemporary Australia.

Investment of between $250,000 and $1,500,000 will be negotiated with successful recipients.

Applications will be accepted and assessed in two stages:

  • Stage 1: an initial Expression of Interest (EOI) where you propose the story you want to bring to life, who you plan to work with and the level of investment you are seeking.
  • Stage 2: a small number of organisations will be invited to develop their EOI into a full application, which will provide detail on how the work will be realised, your partners, how people will engage with the work, the budget, milestones and risk management.

The final amount of investment and any deliverables will be negotiated directly with successful applicants. This may include the recoupment of funds where appropriate. The investment we provide may vary (higher and lower) from the amount requested at Stage 2.

Supported activity can commence from March 2025 onwards and must be completed within three years.

Further background on this fund can be found here.

Stage 1 EOIs closed.

The Australian Government is committed to this investment program and future iterations and new rounds will be announced in 2025.

Industry advisors were impressed by the interesting range of projects across arts forms with elements of risk in the work.

The strongest submissions:

  • showed a profound depth of practice and process
  • were well-written and easy to read, avoiding jargon or vague statements
  • told stories that were clear, powerful and demonstrated an urgency to share and present
  • addressed the three assessment criteria carefully and critically
  • discussed the innovation in the art or form, engagement with new partners or in communities scored more favourably against the alignment criterion
  • where appropriate, First Nations artist/s or the artistic leadership were clearly evident in the co-design of the proposal
  • where relevant, could demonstrate the links between the project and future engagement/audiences
  • confirmed partners that were well matched to the ambition of the project and indicated a collaboration that was mutually beneficial
  • provided a clear artistic vision and the ‘voices’ of the artistic team were present and instrumental to the delivery of the work
  • included details of the organisation and its work ensuring that Industry Advisors could see how the proposal differed from business-as-usual activities for the organisation
  • demonstrated exceptional artistic quality through engaging with artists of the highest calibre
  • provided support material such as biographies/CVs alongside evidence of previous developments or showings were also valued
  • provided compelling letters of support from stakeholders/communities/artists
  • included carefully curated support material to describe the organisation and illuminate the intention of the proposed artistic work.

Industry advisors also noted the following:

  • Submissions that demonstrated connection to place and community, describing meaningful types of engagement were highly regarded.
  • Submissions that proposed working with targeted groups, such as the d/Deaf community or young people included permissions/endorsement for the work where their lived experience was clear.
  • While recognising business-as-usual may look different in a post-Covid world, advisors supported submissions where the application was ambitious, innovating away from their current practice and working in new ways. Advisors were less supportive of works that looked to be their usual business or programming.
  • Advisors were also interested in submissions where the applicant had demonstrated a life of the work beyond a presentation or engagement outcome.
  • If submissions are adapting existing works, a compelling explanation must be included. Do not assume that assessors have read the original work to know why it is an important story to adapt and share.

Who can apply

  • Australian organisations working in the arts and culture sector who are carrying on business in Australia and have their central management and control in Australia
  • Organisations in receipt of Multi-Year Investment from Creative Australia can apply, however they must demonstrate the delivery or presentation activity is not already supported by their existing funding
  • Organisations can only submit one application to the Delivery Investment stream in this closing date.

Who can’t apply

You can’t apply to this fund if:

  • you are an individual or group
  • your organisation is based outside of Australia
  • your organisation does not work in the arts and culture sector
  • you have already applied to this closing date of Delivery Investment
  • you have an overdue report for another Creative Australia grant
  • you owe money to Creative Australia.

What can be applied for

We will support the delivery or presentation of intellectual property that is owned by Australian citizens/permanent residents and/or an Australian company. This includes a wide range of delivery activities such as:

  • final creative developments that build on previous public outcomes
  • adapting existing Australian work and intellectual property into new formats and media
  • presentation based activities such as exhibitions, performances, publishing, recording, streaming, touring
  • professional skills development and capacity building
  • specialist advice and consultancies
  • establishing new partnerships, collaborations, investors, or income streams
  • community engagement and consultation
  • market and audience development
  • evaluation
  • a reasonable contribution to staffing or operational costs in support of this activity.

Activities can take place nationally, internationally, online, or a combination of in-person and online (hybrid activities).

Access costs are legitimate expenses and may be included in your application. We encourage applicants to ensure that their work is accessible to everyone. Budgets may include costs associated with making activities accessible to a wide range of people (e.g. presentation or delivery activities using Auslan, translation to other languages, captioning, audio description, temporary building adjustments, and materials in other formats).

If you are working with d/Deaf people or people with disability in your application, you may apply for access costs associated with the use of an interpreter, translation services, specific technical equipment, carer or support worker assistance. Please contact Artist Services to discuss your specific needs.

What can’t be applied for

You can’t apply for:

  • funds to develop new works that have not already has some form of public outcome, including works in progress or pilots
  • activities that create or leverage intellectual property that is majority owned by international individuals or entities
  • activities that do not have a clearly defined artistic, creative or cultural component
  • activities that do not involve or benefit Australian practicing artists, creative workers, or audiences
  • activities that could be considered a part of ‘business as usual’ for your organisation, and do not demonstrate innovation
  • activities that have already taken place
  • the same activities that have already been funded by Creative Australia (for example, through your multi-year investment)
  • activities that develop, produce, promote and distribute Australian narrative (drama) and documentary screen content
  • activities that could be supported by Screen Australia and its allied state and territory equivalents
  • activities that could be supported by Games Investment steams in the same jurisdictions
  • activities engaging with First Nations content, artists and communities that do not adhere to our First Nations Cultural & Intellectual Property Protocols.

Industry advisors with diverse and relevant experience assessed the EOIs against the assessment criteria listed below and advised Creative Australia on which applicants to prioritise.

Assessment Criteria

Your EOI was assessed against three assessment criteria. The bullet points underneath each criterion indicate what Industry advisors considered if relevant.

  1. Quality

Industry advisors have assessed the quality of the artistic and/or cultural development proposed in your EOI.

Advisors considered:

  • the quality and vision of the concept, story or work
  • evidence of the quality and impact of the work in earlier stages of development or presentations or in its original medium or format
  • the calibre and track record of your organisation, partners, and collaborators
  • who the final work is being made for, and how those people will engage with it
  • the impact this presentation activity may have for your organisation, collaborators and people
  • where relevant, evidence that the Protocols for First Nations Cultural and Intellectual Property in the Arts have been adhered to.
  1. Viability

Industry advisors assessed your capacity to undertake ambitious and innovative projects.

Advisors considered:

  • the calibre and track record of your organisation, partners, and collaborators
  • your previous experience delivering other ambitious and innovative projects
  • the financial stability of your organisation
  • evidence that the initial development of your proposed work for delivery has been informed by appropriate consultation and evaluation.
  1. Alignment

Industry advisors assessed the extent to which your EOI aligned with the priorities of the fund – the telling of Australian stories, and innovation.

Advisors considered:

  • who holds or will hold the intellectual property and rights to your story
  • the relevance of your story to contemporary Australia
  • the innovation demonstrated through your partners, the mediums or art forms you will work with, who will engage with the work and the experience they may have
  • how this work extends the usual practice of your organisation and collaborators
  • whether this work represents innovation for the Australian creative and cultural sector.

Moderation

Final decisions on which applicants to invite to submit a full application in Stage 2 were moderated and approved by Creative Australia staff to ensure a diverse investment portfolio across both investment streams, activities, art forms, geography, representation, audiences and risk.

Creative Australia has also determined the investment level that organisations can apply for in Stage 2 and provided those organisations with any specific feedback on issues to address, or support material to provide.

The closing date for full applications is Tuesday 3 December 2024, 3pm AEDT.

Please note that Stage 2 is by invitation only.

Who can apply

Only organisations with a successful EOI at Stage 1 will be invited to submit a full application.

Who can’t apply

You can’t apply to Stage 2 if:

  • your EOI was unsuccessful in Stage 1
  • you have an overdue grant report
  • you owe money to Creative Australia.

What can be applied for

We will support the creation or leveraging of intellectual property that is owned by Australian citizens/permanent residents and/or an Australian company. This includes a wide range of delivery activities such as:

  • final creative developments that build on previous public outcomes
  • adapting existing Australian work and intellectual property into new formats and media
  • presentation based activities such as exhibitions, performances, publishing, recording, streaming, touring
  • professional skills development and capacity building
  • specialist advice and consultancies
  • establishing new partnerships, collaborations, investors, or income streams
  • community engagement and consultation
  • market and audience development
  • evaluation
  • a reasonable contribution to staffing or operational costs in support of this activity.

What can’t be applied for

You can’t apply for:

  • activities where all the costs are funded through this investment; you must demonstrate other sources of income will be leveraged or contributed.
  • activities that create or leverage intellectual property that is majority owned by international individuals or entities
  • activities that do not have a clearly defined artistic, creative or cultural component
  • activities that do not involve or benefit Australian practicing artists, creative workers or audiences
  • activities that could be considered a part of ‘business as usual’ for your organisation, and do not demonstrate innovation
  • activities that develop, produce, promote and distribute Australian narrative (drama) and documentary screen content
  • activities that could be supported by Screen Australia and its allied state and territory equivalents
  • activities that could be supported by Games Investment steams in the same jurisdictions
  • activities engaging with First Nations content, artists and communities that do not adhere to our First Nations Cultural & Intellectual Property Protocols.

Your application must comply with the following protocols. We may contact you to request further information during the assessment process, or if successful, as a condition of your funding.

Protocols for using First Nations Cultural and Intellectual Property in the Arts

All applications involving First Nations artists, communities or subject matter must adhere to these Protocols, provide evidence of this in their application and support material. More information on the First Nations Protocols is available here.

Commonwealth Child Safe Framework

All successful applicants are required to comply with all Australian law relating to employing or engaging people who work or volunteer with children, including working with children checks and mandatory reporting. Successful organisations who provide services directly to children, or whose funded activities involve contact with children, will additionally be required to implement the National Principles for Child Safe Organisations.

Industry advisors with diverse and relevant experience will assess your application against the assessment criteria listed below and advise Creative Australia on which applicants to prioritise.

Please note the industry advisors who will assess your application will include some advisors from Stage 1 as well as new advisors. Please consider this when preparing your application. Do not assume all industry advisors will be familiar with the information provided in your EOI.

Assessment Criteria

Your application will be assessed against three assessment criteria. The bullet points underneath each criterion indicate what industry advisors may consider if relevant. You do not need to respond to every bullet point listed.

  1. Quality

Industry advisors will assess the quality of the artistic and/or cultural presentation activities proposed in your EOI.

Advisors may consider:

  • the quality and vision of the concept, story or work
  • the calibre and track record of your organisation, partners, and collaborators
  • who the proposed work will be made for, and how they may engage with it
  • contribution to a diverse cultural expression in the context of the wider Australian arts sector.
  1. Viability

Industry advisors will assess the viability of your application, including your capacity to successfully complete

Advisors may consider:

  • your capacity to realise this new work
  • the role of partners or collaborators
  • whether your plan and use of resources is realistic and achievable, including contingencies and risk management
  • the timeliness and relevance of the work for your organisation and collaborators
  • the diversity and scale of income and co-funding, including earned income, grants, sponsorship, philanthropy, in-kind contributions
  • how you aim to evaluate the impact of this work.
  1. Impact

Industry advisors will assess the expected impact this presentation will have on your organisation, your collaborators and those engaging with the proposed work.

Advisors may consider:

  • new partnerships and collaborations established or deepened through the activity
  • how the delivery or presentation of your work will build the capacity and skills of you and your collaborators to work in new ways with new mediums, art forms or audiences
  • the level of innovation, ambition, experimentation or risk-taking within this work, organisation and wider sector
  • how the work will reach and engage with new people in new ways, and evidence that there is demand for this
  • the potential for new revenue streams or markets for your work
  • the potential benefit and impact on careers, artistic or cultural practice in the wider sector.

Moderation

Final decisions on which applicants to invest in will be moderated and approved by Creative Australia staff to ensure a diverse investment portfolio across both investment streams, activities, art forms, geography, representation, audiences and risk.

Creative Australia will also determine the investment level that will be made, along with any special conditions and deliverables. Where appropriate, we make seek specialist advice from industry professionals.

Decisions will be approved by the Creative Australia Executive team.

Your full application must be submitted via Creative Australia’s Application Management System.

Creative Australia staff will create a draft application for you and advise you when it is ready to access via the grantee portal.

Please note the industry advisors who will assess your application will include some advisors from Stage 1 as well as new advisors. Please consider this when preparing your application. Do not assume all industry advisors will be familiar with the information provided in your EOI.

The application form contains the following questions:

  • Tell us about your organisation as relevant to this application focusing on key people, highlights and achievements, in no more than 2,400 characters.
  • Tell us about the Australian story you want to tell and the work that you plan to deliver/present and how it differs from your usual practice. Describe the artistic vision, the process you will undertake, and the intended outcomes of the delivery/presentation, in no more than 5,600 characters.
  • Explain who owns or will own the work you will be delivering/presenting. Where relevant, describe the intellectual property and any agreements that you have in place, in no more than 3,200 characters.
  • Tell us who you are planning to reach or engage with through this new work, how you plan to do this, and how this may extend your usual practice, in no more than 3,200 characters.
  • Explain what role your partners will play in the delivery/presentation of the new work. Where relevant, describe any new connections or partners you will work with from the public, commercial and private sectors, in no more than 2,400 characters.
  • Tell us what impact this delivery/presentation will have on your organisation, your collaborators and partners, and those engaging with the new work, in no more than 5,600 characters.
  • Provide details on up to three (3) Key Performance Indicators (KPI) or goals you aim to achieve through the delivery of this work, in no more than 2,400 characters.
    (Please note that any KPIs or goals may be included in your funding agreement if successful. They may be subject to further negotiation between your organisation and Creative Australia.)
  • Detailed information on key personnel and collaborators, including their confirmed involvement.
  • A detailed list of activities and a timeline including milestones and key deliverables.
  • A detailed budget for the duration of your project.
    • Income includes in-kind support, cash contributions and other leveraged income.
    • Expenditure including all activities associated with presentation/delivery costs. Your budget should also include further details on how royalties and other income will be distributed (if applicable).
    • Financial information on your organisations latest forecasted operating results. If you are a calendar year-end organisation, please include a total of actual results for 9 months to 30 September 2024 and forecasted results for 3 months to 31 December 2024. If you are a financial year-end organisation, please provide actual results for the year ended 30 June 2024.

You must submit support material with your full application. The Industry Advisors will review this material to help them assess your proposed activity.

We strongly recommend you curate the support material you provide to make it relevant, targeted and easily accessible.

Our preferred method of receiving support material is via URLs (weblinks) that link to content that is targeted and relevant to your submission.

Creative Australia will not view any URLs that require log in or to sign up to a platform. Please do not provide links to applications or documents that require users to log in or pay for access.

If you are linking to sites or files that are private or password protected, please provide the password in the password field on the application form.

You can include a maximum of:

  • 10 minutes of video and/or audio recording, and/or
  • 10 images, and/or
  • 15 pages of written material (for example, excerpts of writing, scripts and letters of support/confirmation).

If you cannot supply support material via URLs, you may upload support material to your application in the following formats:

  • video (MP4, Windows Media)
  • audio (MP3, Windows Media)
  • images (JPEG, PowerPoint)
  • written material (Word, PDF).

We do not accept support material submitted via post. Support material received by post will not be assessed and will be returned to the sender. If you think you will have difficulty submitting your support material online or need advice on what type of material to submit, please contact creativefuturesfund@creative.gov.au.

You must provide the following essential support material.

  1. Artistic support material

Please provide up to 3 URLs (weblinks) that best demonstrate your organisation’s artistic works for presentation/delivery. These URLs may include video, audio, images and written material. The Artistic support material you include should provide clear evidence of the artistic and cultural quality of your proposed activities.

  1. Letters of support/confirmation

You must provide letters to evidence your organisation’s engagement with communities or key partners that are named in your application – these may be included as one of your 3 URLs or uploaded as support material.

If you are working with a targeted group or community to develop your work, please upload a community engagement plan as a part of your support material, see point 7.

  1. Bios/CVs of the key personnel

You must provide bios/CVs of key personnel to indicate the skills/expertise and relevance of your key artists and creative workers involved in your development presentation/delivery.

  1. Risk and management

Applicants are required to submit a risk management plan for the duration of the project.

Your plan does not need to follow a specific proforma however you may wish to use this template. The document should not exceed 3 pages.

You may want to consider the following details:

  • Identify Risks: Engage key stakeholders, including staff, board members, and volunteers, to brainstorm and identify potential risks relevant to the activities or events of the organisation.
  • Description and Likelihood: For each identified risk, provide a clear and concise description of the risk, including its potential causes and consequences. Assess the likelihood of each risk occurring on a scale e.g. low, medium, high.
  • Potential Impact: Evaluate the potential impact of each risk. Consider impacts on the organisation’s objectives, finances, reputation, and stakeholders etc. Assess the impact on a scale, e.g. low, medium, high.
  • Ownership and Responsibility: Assign ownership of each risk to the appropriate individual (i.e. board, program lead, producer, production manager or operations team etc.) responsible for managing and monitoring the risk.
  1. Marketing and communications plan

Please provide a high-level marketing and communications plan outlining your key selling points and strategies for marketing/engagement. The purpose of this document is to explain how you will effectively engage with your audience for the delivery /presentation of the new work. Your plan does not need to follow a specific proforma however you may want to include the following details:

  • Outline the key selling points for the work
  • Describe your target audience/community and how you intend to reach them.
  • The anticipated timelines for carrying out your marketing / communications strategies
  • Identify resources required to deliver the strategy
  • Personnel responsible for implementation

The document should not exceed 2 pages.

  1. Evaluation approach

Applicants are required to submit a document outlining your approach to evaluating your presentation/delivery. Your 3 KPIs or goals should be clear and measurable. Applicants may want to consider goals including audience targets, new partnerships and new income sources.

Your plan does not need to follow a specific proforma however you may wish to include the following details,

  • The KPIs or goals as noted in your application. There should be no more than 3
  • The anticipated timeline of when these will be completed
  • Personnel responsible for implementation
  • Indicators of success, e.g. how will you know you have achieved your goal

The document should not exceed 1 page. Please note that any KPI targets included may be subject to further negotiation when funding agreements are finalised.

  1. Community engagement plan

If you are working with a targeted group or community for the development of your work, you must upload a Community Engagement Plan. The purpose of this document is to explain how you will effectively engage with your community to develop your work. The document should not exceed 2 pages.

Your plan does not need to follow a specific proforma however you may wish to include the following details:

  • List and identify community organisations and representatives to be invited and involved, e.g. Traditional Owners or Elders, LGA representatives, key community members, representatives of targeted groups.
  • Identify the aims or goals for engaging with the community representatives.
  • Identify when/how the community engagement will occur, eg modes of communications and timelines.
  • Identify how decisions will be made and who owns these decisions/content produced
  • Identify any resources required.

We may request additional support material specific to your application, as recommended by the Industry Advisors and staff who reviewed your EOI.

Recipients of the fund will be notified in late February 2025 and announced in March.

If your application is successful, we will give you a draft investment agreement that specifies the amount of investment we will provide, the proposed payment schedule, milestones, deliverables, and any other conditions of investment. For commercial projects, this may include financial recoupment. We will negotiate the final version of this agreement with you.

We will pay you once you have accepted your investment agreement and any reports or deliverables you must provide us with have been approved.

You may be asked to participate in evaluation activities with Creative Australia staff and external evaluators at various times throughout your project. These may include working with Creative Australia’s delivery partners, (eg Climate Action Services).

Watch our information session here and below.

Frequently asked questions for Stage 2 applications

  • Applications will be reviewed by Industry advisors who will make recommendations for Creative Australia to consider when making the final investment decisions. The panel of advisors are selected based on their differing arts practice knowledge and experience.
  • Some Industry advisors are participating in both EOI and Stage 2 reviews. We will endeavour to engage a portion of Industry advisors to review across both stages, however this information will not be made public.
  • The full list of Industry advisors will be published on our website following notification of the outcomes of Stage 2.

Only the most competitive organisations have been invited to submit a full application.

28 applicants across both the Development and Delivery streams (10%) have been invited to submit a full application in Stage 2. The success rate will be higher at this stage than at EOI stage.

You may request the same amount as you asked for in your EOI. The final amount of investment and any deliverables will be negotiated directly with successful applicants. The investment may vary (higher or lower) from the amount requested.

The questions and support material requirements are outlined in the guidelines for each stream. You may replicate or update information provided in your EOI, including financial information.

You will need to submit budget details including all income and expenditure for the duration of your project. with explanation of the main assumptions underlining key budget estimates. Partners and their income contributions should also be included in the budget.

You will also need to provide financial information on your organisations latest forecasted operating results. If you are a calendar year-end organisation, please include a total of actual results for 9 months to 30 September 2024 and forecasted results for 3 months to 31 December 2024. If you are a financial year-end organisation, please provide actual results for the year ended 30 June 2024.

Support material requirements are included in the guidelines. Please consider submitting materials to demonstrate confirmed partnerships and collaborations alongside artistic examples of your work.

Ensure you abide by the support material limits. Industry advisors are not required to read/view any material that exceeds the limits.

You can include a maximum of:

  • 10 minutes of video and/or audio recording, and/or
  • 10 images, and/or
  • 15 pages of written material (for example, excerpts of writing, scripts and letters of support/confirmation).

If you cannot supply support material via URLs, you may upload support material to your application in the following formats:

  • video (MP4, Windows Media)
  • audio (MP3, Windows Media)
  • images (JPEG, PowerPoint)
  • written material (Word, PDF).

We do not accept support material submitted via post. Support material received by post will not be assessed and will be returned to the sender. If you think you will have difficulty submitting your support material online or need advice on what type of material to submit, please contact creativefuturesfund@creative.gov.au

The only support material we will accept after the Stage 2 closing date is audited accounts for the 2023/24 financial year.

If you need to submit these accounts after the closing date, please send them to creativefuturesfund@creative.gov.au. Be sure to include your application reference number in the email.

Please note, late support material is not distributed to Industry advisors with your application. We make a note of it on file and bring it to the attention of Industry advisors at our discretion.

CREATIVE FUTURES FUND

Development Investment

About the program

The Creative Futures Fund will support the creation and sharing of Australian stories and new ways for people to engage with them.

Creative Futures Fund: Development Investment can support the creation and testing of new ideas and works, the establishment of new partnerships, collaborations and skills to lay the foundations for future delivery. This stream is also suitable for applicants who are testing their work in the market.

We are seeking great ideas that are ambitious, unexpected and innovative. This includes new works and projects that may leverage existing intellectual property. The innovation could be in the story, the artforms or mediums used, the partners and artists you work with, or the way you will present or share the work.

The investment available is significant. We want to know what that investment may help you do that wouldn’t otherwise be possible. Funding ‘business as usual’ activity is not a priority.

The fund will only support Australian stories. The intellectual property must be majority owned by Australian creatives, be an Australian concept, and have subject matter that is relevant to contemporary Australia.

Investment of between $50,000 and $250,000 will be negotiated with successful recipients.

Applications will be accepted and assessed in two stages:

  • Stage 1: an initial Expression of Interest (EOI) where you propose the story or work you want to develop or adapt, and the level of investment you are seeking. (Now closed)
  • Stage 2: a small number of organisations will be invited to develop their EOI into a full application, which will detail the development process, partners, budget, milestones and risk management.

The final amount of investment and any deliverables will be negotiated directly with successful applicants. The investment may vary (higher or lower) from the amount requested at Stage 2.

Supported activity can commence from March 2025 onwards and must be completed within two years.

Further background on this fund can be found here.

Stage 1 EOIs closed.

The Australian Government is committed to this investment program and future iterations and new rounds will be announced in 2025.

Feedback on Stage 1 Expression of Interest

Industry Advisors were impressed by the range of projects across art forms with elements of risk in the work.

The strongest submissions:

  • showed a profound depth of practice and process
  • were well-written and easy to read, avoiding jargon or vague statements
  • told stories that were clear, powerful and demonstrated an urgency to share and present
  • addressed the two assessment criteria carefully and critically
  • discussed the innovation in the art or form, engagement with new partners or in communities scored more favourably against the alignment criterion
  • where appropriate, First Nations artist/s or the artistic leadership were clearly evident in the co-design of the proposal
  • where relevant, could demonstrate the links between the project and future engagement/audiences
  • confirmed partners that were well matched to the ambition of the project and indicated a collaboration that was mutually beneficial
  • provided a clear artistic vision and the ‘voices’ of the artistic team were present and instrumental to the delivery of the work
  • included details of the organisation and its work ensuring that Industry Advisors could see how the proposal differed from business-as-usual activities for the organisation
  • demonstrated exceptional artistic quality through engaging with artists of the highest calibre
  • provided support material such as biographies/CVs alongside evidence of previous developments or showings were also valued
  • provided compelling letters of support from stakeholders/communities/artists
  • included carefully curated support material to describe the organisation and illuminate the intention of the proposed artistic work.

Industry Advisors also noted the following:

  • Submissions that demonstrated connection to place and community, describing meaningful types of engagement were highly regarded.
  • Submissions that proposed working with targeted groups, such as the d/Deaf community or young people included permissions/endorsement for the work where their lived experience was clear.
  • While recognising business-as-usual may look different in a post-Covid world, advisors supported submissions where the application was ambitious, innovating away from their current practice and working in new ways. Advisors were less supportive of works that looked to be their usual business or programming.
  • Advisors were also interested in submissions where the applicant had demonstrated a life of the work beyond a presentation or engagement outcome.
  • If submissions are adapting existing works, a compelling explanation must be included. Do not assume that assessors have read the original work to know why it is an important story to adapt and share.

Who can apply

  • Australian organisations working in the arts and culture sector who are carrying on business in Australia and have their central management and control in Australia.
  • Organisations in receipt of Multi-Year Investment from Creative Australia can apply, however they must demonstrate the development activity is not already supported by their existing funding.
  • Organisations can only submit one application to the Development Investment stream to this closing date.

Who can’t apply

You can’t apply to this fund if:

  • you are an individual or group
  • your organisation is based outside of Australia
  • your organisation does not work in the arts and culture sector
  • you have already applied to this closing date of Development Investment
  • you have an overdue report for another Creative Australia grant
  • you owe money to Creative Australia.

What can be applied for

We will support the creation or leveraging of intellectual property that is owned by Australian citizens/permanent residents and/or an Australian company. This includes a wide range of development activities such as:

  • research and development
  • creative development and experimentation
  • adapting existing Australian work and intellectual property into new formats and mediums
  • work in progress showings, prototypes, pilots and other forms of market testing and evaluation
  • professional skills development and capacity building
  • establishing new partnerships, collaborations, investors, or income streams
  • community engagement and consultation
  • market and audience development
  • a reasonable contribution to staffing or operational costs in support of this activity.

Activities can take place nationally, internationally, online, or a combination of in-person and online (hybrid activities).

Access costs are legitimate expenses and may be included in your application. We encourage applicants to ensure that their work is accessible to everyone. Budgets may include costs associated with making activities accessible to a wide range of people (e.g. development activities using Auslan, translation to other languages, captioning, audio description, temporary building adjustments, and materials in other formats).

If you are working with d/Deaf people or people with disability in your application, you may apply for access costs associated with the use of an interpreter, translation services, specific technical equipment, carer or support worker assistance. Please contact Artist Services to discuss your specific needs.

What can’t be applied for

You can’t apply for:

  • activities that create or leverage intellectual property that is majority owned by international individuals or entities
  • activities that do not have a clearly defined artistic, creative or cultural component
  • activities that do not involve or benefit Australian practicing artists, arts professionals or audiences
  • activities that could be considered a part of ‘business as usual’ for your organisation, and do not demonstrate innovation
  • activities that have already taken place
  • the same activities that have already been funded by Creative Australia (for example, through your multi-year investment)
  • activities that develop, produce, promote and distribute Australian narrative (drama) and documentary screen content
  • activities that could be supported by Screen Australia and its allied state and territory equivalents
  • activities that could be supported by Games Investment steams in the same jurisdictions
  • activities engaging with First Nations content, artists and communities that do not adhere to our First Nations Cultural & Intellectual Property Protocols.

Your application must comply with the following protocols. We may contact you to request further information during the assessment process, or if successful, as a condition of your funding.

Protocols for using First Nations Cultural and Intellectual Property in the Arts

All applications involving First Nations artists, communities or subject matter must adhere to these Protocols, provide evidence of this in their application and support material. More information on the First Nations Protocols is available here.

Commonwealth Child Safe Framework

All successful applicants are required to comply with all Australian law relating to employing or engaging people who work or volunteer with children, including working with children checks and mandatory reporting. Successful organisations who provide services directly to children, or whose funded activities involve contact with children, will additionally be required to implement the National Principles for Child Safe Organisations.

Industry advisors with diverse and relevant experience assessed the EOIs against the assessment criteria listed below and advised Creative Australia on which applicants to prioritise.

Assessment Criteria

EOIs were assessed against two assessment criteria. The bullet points underneath each criterion indicate what Industry Advisors considered if relevant.

  1. Quality

Industry advisors assessed the quality of the artistic and/or cultural development proposed in your EOI.

Advisors considered:

  • the quality and vision of the concept, story or work
  • the calibre and track record of your organisation, partners, and collaborators
  • who the proposed work will be made for, and how they may engage with it
  • the impact the development activity may have for your organisation
  • where relevant, evidence that the Protocols for First Nations Cultural and Intellectual Property in the Arts have been adhered to.
  1. Alignment

Industry advisors assessed the extent to which your EOI aligned with the priorities of the fund – the telling of Australian stories, and innovation.

Advisors considered:

  • who holds or will hold the intellectual property and rights to your story
  • the relevance of your story to contemporary Australia
  • the innovation demonstrated through your partners, the mediums or art forms you will work with, who will engage with the work and the experience they may have
  • how this development extends the usual practice of your organisation and collaborators
  • whether this development represents innovation for the Australian creative and cultural sector.

Moderation

Final decisions on which applicants to invite to submit a full application in Stage 2 were moderated and approved by Creative Australia staff to ensure a diverse investment portfolio across both investment streams, activities, art forms, geography, representation, audiences and risk.

Creative Australia has also determined the investment level that organisations can apply for in Stage 2 and provided those organisations with specific feedback on issues to address, or support material to provide.

The closing date for full applications is Tuesday 3 December 2024, 3pm AEDT.

Please note that Stage 2 is by invitation only.

Who can apply

Only organisations with a successful EOI at Stage 1 will be invited to submit a full application.

Who can’t apply

You can’t apply to Stage 2 if:

  • your EOI was unsuccessful in Stage 1
  • you have an overdue report for another Creative Australia grant
  • You owe money to Creative Australia.

What can be applied for

We will support the creation or leveraging of intellectual property that is owned by Australian citizens/permanent residents and/or an Australian company. This includes a wide range of development activities such as:

  • research and development
  • creative development and experimentation
  • adapting existing Australian work and intellectual property into new formats and mediums
  • work in progress showings, prototypes, pilots and other forms of market testing and evaluation
  • professional skills development and capacity building
  • establishing new partnerships, collaborations, investors, or income streams
  • community engagement and consultation
  • market and audience development
  • a reasonable contribution to staffing or operational costs in support of this activity (for organisations not receiving multi-year investment from Creative Australia).

What can’t be applied for

You can’t apply for:

  • activities where all the costs are funded through this investment; you must demonstrate other sources of income will be leveraged or contributed
  • activities that create or leverage intellectual property that is majority owned by international individuals or entities
  • activities that do not have a clearly defined artistic, creative or cultural component
  • activities that do not involve or benefit Australian practicing artists, creative workers or audiences
  • activities that could be considered a part of ‘business as usual’ for your organisation, and do not demonstrate innovation
  • activities that develop, produce, promote and distribute Australian narrative (drama) and documentary screen content
  • activities that could be supported by Screen Australia and its allied state and territory equivalents
  • activities that could be supported by Games Investment steams in the same jurisdictions
  • activities engaging with First Nations content, artists and communities that do not adhere to our First Nations Cultural & Intellectual Property Protocols.

Your application must comply with the following protocols. We may contact you to request further information during the assessment process, or if successful, as a condition of your funding.

Protocols for using First Nations Cultural and Intellectual Property in the Arts

All applications involving First Nations artists, communities or subject matter must adhere to these Protocols, provide evidence of this in their application and support material. More information on the First Nations Protocols is available here.

Commonwealth Child Safe Framework

All successful applicants are required to comply with all Australian law relating to employing or engaging people who work or volunteer with children, including working with children checks and mandatory reporting. Successful organisations who provide services directly to children, or whose funded activities involve contact with children, will additionally be required to implement the National Principles for Child Safe Organisations.

Industry advisors with diverse and relevant experience will assess your Stage 2 application against the assessment criteria listed below and advise Creative Australia on which applicants to prioritise.

Please note the industry advisors who will assess your application will include some advisors from Stage 1 as well as new advisors. Please consider this when preparing your application. Do not assume all industry advisors will be familiar with the information provided in your EOI.

Assessment Criteria

Your application will be assessed against three assessment criteria. The bullet points underneath each criterion indicate what industry advisors may consider if relevant. You do not need to respond to every bullet point listed.

  1. Quality

Industry advisors will assess the quality of the artistic and/or cultural development proposed in your EOI.

Advisors may consider:

  • the quality and vision of the concept, story or work
  • the calibre and track record of your organisation, partners, and collaborators
  • how the work will be developed, and where appropriate, how communities or targeted groups have been consulted/engaged.
  • who the proposed work will be made for, and how they may engage with it
  • relevance and the importance of the proposed Australian story and its contribution to diverse cultural expression in the context of the wider Australian arts sector.
  1. Viability

Industry advisors will assess the viability of your application, including your capacity to successfully complete the activities proposed.

Advisors may consider:

  • your capacity to undertake this development, including your organisational stability
  • the role of partners or collaborators
  • whether your plan and use of resources is realistic and achievable, including contingencies and risk management
  • the diversity and scale of income and co-funding, including earned income, grants, sponsorship, philanthropy, in-kind contributions
  • how you aim to reflect on, respond to and potentially evaluate this work
  • where relevant, evidence that the Protocols for First Nations Cultural and Intellectual Property in the Arts have been adhered to.
  1. Impact

Industry advisors will assess the expected impact this development will have on your organisation, your collaborators and those engaging with the proposed work.

Advisors may consider:

  • new partnerships and collaborations established or deepened through the activity
  • how the development will build the capacity and skills of you and your collaborators to work in new ways with new mediums, art forms or audiences
  • the level of innovation, ambition, experimentation or risk-taking within this work, organisation and wider sector
  • the timeliness and relevance of this development for your organisation and collaborators
  • how the work will reach and engage with new people in new ways, and evidence that there is demand for this
  • the potential for new revenue streams or markets for your work
  • the potential benefit and impact on careers, artistic or cultural practice in the wider sector.

Moderation

Final decisions on which applicants to invest in will be moderated and approved by Creative Australia staff to ensure a diverse investment portfolio across both investment streams, activities, art forms, geography, representation, audiences and risk.

Creative Australia will also determine the investment level that will be made, along with any special conditions and deliverables. Where appropriate, we make seek specialist advice from industry professionals.

Decisions will be approved by the Creative Australia Executive team.

Your full application must be submitted via Creative Australia’s Application Management System.

Creative Australia staff will create a draft application for you and advise you when it is ready to access via the grantee portal.

Please note the industry advisors who will assess your application will include some advisors from Stage 1 as well as new advisors. Please consider this when preparing your application. Do not assume all industry advisors will be familiar with the information provided in your EOI.

The application form contains the following questions:

  • Tell us about your organisation as relevant to this application focusing on key people, highlights and achievements, in no more than 2,400 characters.
  • Tell us about the Australian story you want to tell and the work that you plan to develop and how it differs from your usual practice. Describe the artistic vision, the process you will undertake, and the intended outcomes of the development, in no more than 5,600 characters.
  • Explain who owns or will own the work you will be developing. Where relevant, describe the intellectual property and any agreements that you have in place, in no more than 3,200 characters.
  • Tell us who you are planning to reach or engage with through this new work, how you plan to do this, and how this may extend your usual practice, in no more than 3,200 characters.
  • Explain what role your partners will play in the development of the new work. Where relevant, describe any new connections or partners you will work with from the public, commercial and private sectors, in no more than 2,400 characters.
  • Tell us what impact this development will have on your organisation, your collaborators and partners, and those engaging with the new work, in no more than 5,600 characters.
  • Tell us how you intend to evaluate the impact of the new work you are developing, in no more than 2,400 characters.
  • Detailed information on key personnel and collaborators, indicating their confirmed involvement.
  • A detailed list of activities and a timeline including milestones and key deliverables.
  • A detailed budget for the duration of your project.
    • Income includes in-kind support, cash contributions and other leveraged income.
    • Expenditure including all aspects of the development.
    • Financial information on your organisations latest forecasted operating results. If you are a calendar year-end organisation, please include a total of actual results for 9 months to 30 September 2024 and forecasted results for 3 months to 31 December 2024. If you are a financial year-end organisation, please provide actual results for the year ended 30 June 2024.

You must submit support material with your full application. The Industry Advisors will review this material to help them assess your proposed activity.

We strongly recommend you curate the support material you provide to make it relevant, targeted and easily accessible.

Our preferred method of receiving support material is via URLs (weblinks) that link to content that is targeted and relevant to your submission.

Industry advisors will not view any URLs that require log in or to sign up to a platform. Please do not provide links to applications or documents that require users to log in or pay for access.

If you are linking to sites or files that are private or password protected, please provide the password in the password field on the application form.

You can include a maximum of:

  • 10 minutes of video and/or audio recording, and/or
  • 10 images, and/or
  • 15 pages of written material (for example, excerpts of writing, scripts and letters of support/confirmation).

If you cannot supply support material via URLs, you may upload support material to your application in the following formats:

  • video (MP4, Windows Media)
  • audio (MP3, Windows Media)
  • images (JPEG, PowerPoint)
  • written material (Word, PDF).

We do not accept support material submitted via post. Support material received by post will not be assessed and will be returned to the sender. If you think you will have difficulty submitting your support material online or need advice on what type of material to submit, please contact creativefuturesfund@creative.gov.au.

You must provide the following essential support material.

  1. Artistic support material

Please provide up to 3 URLs (weblinks) that best demonstrate your organisation’s artistic works for development. These URLs may include video, audio, images and written material. The artistic support material you include should provide clear evidence of the artistic and cultural quality of your proposed activities.

  1. Letters of support/confirmation

You must provide letters for your application to evidence your organisation’s engagement with communities or key partners that are named in the application  – these may be included as one of your 3 URLs or uploaded as a file.

If you are working with a targeted group or community to develop your work, you must upload a community engagement plan as a part of your support material. See point 5.

  1. Bios/CVs of the key personnel

You must provide bios/CVs of key personnel to indicate the skills/expertise and relevance of your key artists and creative workers involved in your development.

  1. Risk and management

Applicants are required to submit a risk management plan for the duration of the project.

Your plan does not need to follow a specific proforma however you may wish to use this template. The document should not exceed 2 pages.

You may want to consider the following details:

  • Identify Risks: Engage key stakeholders, including staff, board members, and volunteers, to brainstorm and identify potential risks relevant to the activities or events of the organization.
  • Description and Likelihood: For each identified risk, provide a clear and concise description of the risk, including its potential causes and consequences. Assess the likelihood of each risk occurring on a scale e.g. low, medium, high.
  • Potential Impact: Evaluate the potential impact of each risk. Consider impacts on the organisation’s objectives, finances, reputation, and stakeholders etc. Assess the impact on a scale, e.g. low, medium, high.
  • Ownership and Responsibility: Assign ownership of each risk to the appropriate individual (i.e. board, program lead, producer, production manager or operations team etc.) responsible for managing and monitoring the risk.
  1. Community engagement plan

If you are working with a targeted group or community for the development of your work, you must upload a Community Engagement Plan. The purpose of this document is to explain how you will effectively engage with your community to develop your work. The document should not exceed 2 pages.

Your plan does not need to follow a specific proforma however you may wish to include the following details:

  • List and identify community organisations and representatives to be invited and involved, e.g. Traditional Owners or Elders, LGA representatives, key community members, representatives of targeted groups.
  • Identify the aims or goals for engaging with the community representatives.
  • Identify when/how the community engagement will occur, e.g. modes of communications, events and timelines.
  • Identify how decisions will be made and who owns these decisions/content produced
  • Identify any resources required.

We may request additional support material specific to your application, as recommended by the Industry Advisors and staff who reviewed your EOI.

Recipients of the fund will be notified in late February 2025 and announced in March.

If your application is successful, we will give you a draft investment agreement that specifies the amount of investment we will provide, the proposed payment schedule, milestones, deliverables, and any other conditions of investment. We will negotiate the final version of this agreement with you.

We will pay you once you have accepted your investment agreement and any reports or deliverables you must provide us with have been approved.

You may be asked to participate in evaluation activities with Creative Australia staff and external evaluators at various times throughout your project. These may include working with Creative Australia’s delivery partners, (e.g. Climate Action Services).

Watch our information session here and below.

Frequently asked questions for Stage 2 applications

  • Applications will be reviewed by Industry advisors who will make recommendations for Creative Australia to consider when making the final investment decisions. The panel of advisors are selected based on their differing arts practice knowledge and experience.
  • Some Industry advisors are participating in both EOI and Stage 2 reviews. We will endeavour to engage a portion of Industry advisors to review across both stages, however this information will not be made public.
  • The full list of Industry advisors will be published on our website following notification of the outcomes of Stage 2.

Only the most competitive organisations have been invited to submit a full application.

In total 28 applicants across both the Development and Delivery streams (10%) have been invited to submit a full application in Stage 2. The success rate will be higher at this stage than at EOI stage.

You may request the same amount as you asked for in your EOI. The final amount of investment and any deliverables will be negotiated directly with successful applicants. The investment may vary (higher or lower) from the amount requested.

The questions and support material requirements are outlined in the guidelines for each stream. You may replicate or update information provided in your EOI, including financial information.

You will need to submit budget details including all income and expenditure for the duration of your project with explanation of the main assumptions underlying key budget estimates. Partners and their income contributions should also be included in the budget.

You will also need to provide financial information on your organisations latest forecasted operating results. If you are a calendar year-end organisation, please include a total of actual results for 9 months to 30 September 2024 and forecasted results for 3 months to 31 December 2024. If you are a financial year-end organisation, please provide actual results for the year ended 30 June 2024.

Support material requirements are included in the guidelines. Please consider submitting materials to demonstrate confirmed partnerships and collaborations alongside artistic examples of your work.

Ensure you abide by the support material limits. Industry advisors are not required to read/view any material that exceeds the limits.

You can include a maximum of:

  • 10 minutes of video and/or audio recording, and/or
  • 10 images, and/or
  • 15 pages of written material (for example, excerpts of writing, scripts and letters of support/confirmation).

If you cannot supply support material via URLs, you may upload support material to your application in the following formats:

  • video (MP4, Windows Media)
  • audio (MP3, Windows Media)
  • images (JPEG, PowerPoint)
  • written material (Word, PDF).

We do not accept support material submitted via post. Support material received by post will not be assessed and will be returned to the sender. If you think you will have difficulty submitting your support material online or need advice on what type of material to submit, please contact creativefuturesfund@creative.gov.au

The only support material we will accept after the Stage 2 closing date is the year end operating results.

If you need to submit these accounts after the closing date, please send them to creativefuturesfund@creative.gov.au. Be sure to include your application reference number in the email.

Please note, late support material is not distributed to Industry advisors with your application. We make a note of it on file and bring it to the attention of Industry advisors at our discretion.

Philanthropy Australia: National Conference Attendance Subsidy

We’re offering 20 mid-to-senior career arts fundraisers and/or CEOs the opportunity to attend and participate in Philanthropy Australia’s National Conference.

Creative Australia is offering 20 mid-to-senior career arts fundraisers and/or CEOs the opportunity to attend and participate in Philanthropy Australia’s National Conference.

The conference will be held between 5-7 August 2024 at the Adelaide Convention Centre. Sessions will include masterclasses, breakout workshops and plenaries delivered by high-profile speakers from across Australia and around the world.

More than 700 delegates are expected to attend the event in person including philanthropists, senior philanthropy and not-for-profit professionals, and leaders from the business, academic, media and government sectors.

This opportunity is for mid-to-senior career arts fundraisers and/or CEOs with a fundraising role representing an arts organisation with an established fundraising program.

This opportunity includes:

  • A pass to the three-day conference (valued at $2,000)
  • A travel subsidy of $1,200, paid to successful applicants outside of Adelaide to contribute to travel and accommodation expenses. Any additional transport and accommodation costs will be the responsibility of the participant.

Applicants must be employed in a role that includes fundraising or development and have at least 3 years of experience as a fundraiser or CEO with a fundraising role.

Applicant organisations must:

  • Be based in Australia and carrying out most of their arts activity or practice within Australia
  • Be a legally constituted entity (with an ABN)
  • Be registered as a not-for-profit organisation, as defined by the Australian Taxation Office (ATO)1, and;
  • Be operating with the primary purpose of providing arts and cultural opportunities for Australian artists and audiences.

[1] Definitions of not-for-profit entities may be found on the ATO and ASIC websites.

Creative Australia is committed to increasing the diversity of leadership in our sector. We strongly encourage applications from First Nations peoples, people with disability and people who are d/Deaf, culturally and linguistically diverse people, LGBTQIA+ people, young people and older people, and those based in regional and remote Australia. We also acknowledge that identity is intersectional and encourage people at intersections of these identities to apply.

All expressions of interest (EOI) must outline:

  • Your organisation’s primary purpose
  • How attending the conference would support your fundraising goals
  • What are your top three reasons for wanting to attend
  • How do you imagine implementing your attendance into your future work
  • Your history of fundraising training.

Assessment of EOIs will be conducted by Creative Australia’s Development & Partnerships Division.

Before you submit your EOI, read these guidelines thoroughly and contact our programs staff with any questions, or if you require assistance with access. To start your EOI, click here.

Your EOI can be saved and edited at any time until the deadline. Once submitted, you cannot make further edits or amendments.

Australian Cultural Fund

A fundraising platform for Australian artists. Upload your project, start your fundraising campaign and invite art lovers and supporters to donate with 100% of donations going directly towards your creative project.

International Travel Fund

$5,000 to $20,000 to support travel costs associated with attending key market development and cultural exchange platforms and gatherings.

Asia Topa 2020 Showcase The Seen & Unseen by Kamila Andini, Ida Ayu Wayan, Arya Satyani, Adena Jacobs, Eugyeene Teh, Jenny Hector. Image: Ifa Isfansyah

 

About the program

The International Travel Fund supports international travel costs associated with Australian artists, creative workers and organisations attending market development or key gatherings overseas.

Market development activities are those that enable applicants to promote, market, pitch, or sell works with a focus on entering or maintaining new or existing international markets.

The aims of the fund are to:

  • support international travel costs associated with individuals, groups or organisations to attend market development, key gatherings, events or opportunities overseas
  • enable support for Australian artists, creative workers and organisations to build and sustain international connections.

Applicants should consider when their travel activities will take place and plan in advance where possible.

Applicants can apply for flat rates of $5,000 or $10,000 or $15,000 or $20,000. Requests for other amounts will not be accepted.

Applications are accepted from:

  • Australian-based individuals
    Australian citizens living overseas are eligible. If your application is successful, you may be required to provide evidence of your Australian citizenship
  • Australian-based groups and organisations.

Applications from internationally based organisations are eligible, however international organisations must demonstrate the request benefits practicing Australian artists or creative workers, their work or Australian audiences.

  • open to individuals, groups and organisations, including small businesses
  • noting that recipients of Creative Australia’s Two-Year Investment for Organisations Pilots 2025-2026 and Four-Year investment for Organisations funding are eligible to apply
  • applicants can submit one (1) application per closing date. Note you cannot submit an individual application as well as a group or organisation application
  • art forms supported:
    • community arts and cultural development
    • dance
    • emerging and experimental arts
    • First Nations arts and culture
    • literature
    • music (excluding contemporary music as per Music Australia’s definition)
    • multi-art form
    • visual arts
    • theatre.
  • you are an internationally based individual artist or creative worker who is not an Australian citizen or permanent resident
  • you are an international individual, group or organisation seeking support for travel to Australia
  • you have already applied to this closing date under this grant category
  • you have already applied to an Arts Projects grant category for the same activity
  • you are an organisation and receive investment through the National Performing Arts Partnership Framework. Overseas organisations wanting to apply to work with a National Performing Arts Partnership Framework organisation are also ineligible
  • you have an overdue grant report to Creative Australia
  • you owe money to Creative Australia
  • you work in contemporary music. You must apply to the Export Development Fund from Music Australia.

Contemporary music, as defined by the Music Australia Council, is:

“Australian contemporary music is any genre or subgenre of music currently composed, written, produced by Australians and licensed, recorded, presented, and distributed through commercial and non-commercial activity. For the purposes of Music Australia’s initial investments, the focus will be on musical works that are new, original and relevant to contemporary Australia.”

You may apply for any and all costs associated with travel and attendance at confirmed international market development or key gatherings.

Eligible costs include but are not limited to:

  • fees for your time to attend the opportunity, (if wages are not covered by your organisation). We strongly advise you refer to and pay at, or above, industry standard rates
  • flights, accommodation, per diems and ground transport costs
  • travel insurance
  • visas
  • freight or baggage costs
  • marketing, promotion and project management costs
  • costs associated with attendance at international book fairs
  • costs associated with attendance at events and activities associated with publication and promotion of literary, art fair or works in international markets
  • costs associated with conferences however, applicants must demonstrate the market development outcome/s
  • childcare, carer and access costs
  • tickets and/or registration costs to attend events
  • costs associated with reducing the environmental impact of your activity
  • access costs, see below.
  • travel costs that are for the same activity across other applications to Creative Australia
  • travel costs for professional development, international tours, showcases or presentations (apply to Arts Projects instead)
  • travel costs to participate in international exchange activities such as residencies, labs, and peer exchange models (apply to the International Engagement Fund instead)
  • travel that does not involve or benefit Australian practicing artists or creative workers
  • travel to events or activities that do not have a clearly-defined arts component
  • travel for events and activities that have already taken place
  • activities engaging with First Nations content, artists and communities that do not adhere to the Creative Australia First Nations Cultural & Intellectual Property Protocols
  • travel to attend contemporary music activities. You must apply to the Export Development Fund from Music Australia.

Access costs are legitimate expenses and may be included. We encourage applicants to ensure that their work is accessible to everyone. This may include costs associated with making activities accessible to a wide range of people (e.g. presentation or delivery activities using Auslan, translation to other languages, captioning, audio description, temporary building adjustments, and materials in other formats).

If you are working with d/Deaf people or people with disability in your application, you may use funds for access costs associated with the use of an interpreter, translation services, specific technical equipment, carer or support worker assistance including travel costs. Please contact Artist Services to discuss your specific needs.

Your application must comply with the following protocols. We may contact you to request further information during the assessment process, or if successful, as a condition of your funding.

Protocols for using First Nations Cultural and Intellectual Property in the Arts

All applications involving First Nations artists, communities or subject matter must adhere to these Protocols, provide evidence of this in their application and support material. More information on the First Nations Protocols is available here.

Commonwealth Child Safe Framework

All successful applicants are required to comply with all Australian law relating to employing or engaging people who work or volunteer with children, including working with children checks and mandatory reporting. Successful organisations who provide services directly to children, or whose funded activities involving contact with children, will additionally be required to implement the National Principles for Child Safe Organisations.

Industry Advisors and Creative Australia staff with relevant experience will assess the applications against the assessment criteria listed below. Creative Australia staff will consider how the proposed activities align with the aims of the fund when making final decisions on submissions.

Applicants are required to nominate the art form expertise required to assess your submission.

Under each criterion are bullet points indicating what assessors may consider when assessing your application. You do not need to respond to every bullet point listed.

Assessors will assess the quality of the applicants’ practice in the context of the opportunity.

They may consider:

  • the quality of your work, demonstrating your professional track record
  • the relevance of the planned activities and the significance of these on your ongoing development
  • realistic and achievable planning and resource use, including contingency and relevant plans for international travel to enable the proposed outcomes
  • where relevant, evidence that the Protocols for First Nations Cultural and Intellectual Property in the Arts have been adhered to.

Assessors will assess the expected impact or outcome of the proposed activities for the applicant.

They may consider:

  • how the activity is relevant to the identified areas of practice and career development
  • the benefit and impact on career, artistic or cultural practice of the applicant
  • the potential to develop new markets, relationships or meet existing market demand
  • the extent to which the activity contributes to a sector that is accessible, inclusive and equitable
  • the capacity to strengthen skills and abilities of those involved.

Creative Australia staff will consider how the proposed activities align to the aims of the fund when making final decisions on submissions.

They may also consider:

  • capacity of the applicant to deliver on the proposed outcomes
  • supporting diversity across investment streams, timelines, activities, art forms, geography, representation, audiences and risk, how the activity supports the development of artists and their works in international markets.

Applications must be submitted via Creative Australia’s Application Management System.

If you are registering to use the System for the first time, make sure you register well before the closing date. It can take up to two business days to process your registration.

The types of questions we ask in the application form include:

  • how you would like your application to be assessed (art form expertise).
  • a summary of your proposal.
  • a description of the international activities and how it meets the assessment criteria:
    • Quality: Tell us about your creative practice in relation to this opportunity
    • Impact: Tell us about the opportunity, possible partners and why this is important for your ongoing development as an artist/creative worker or as an organisation
  • Activity details including dates and locations
  • Supporting material as relevant to your project, including examples of your work, CVs or bios, invitations, and letters of support or permission from participants, communities, First Nations organisations, and Elders where relevant.

Additional material must be submitted to support your application. We will review support material to understand your artistic practice, quality and impact of your proposal. Do not assume that those who are reading your submission, know your work or experience and consider this when deciding what should be included.

We strongly recommend you curate your support material to be relevant, targeted and easily accessible.

Our preferred method of receiving support material is via URLs (weblinks) that link to content that is targeted and relevant to your submission.

Assessors will not access any URLs that require them to log in or sign up to a platform. Please do not provide links to applications or documents that require users to log in or pay for access.

If you are linking to sites or files that are private or password protected, please provide the password in the password field on the application form.

You can provide up to 3 URLs and 3 file uploads.

You can include a maximum of:

  • 10 minutes of video and/or audio recording, and/or
  • 10 images as a single PDF, and/or
  • 10 pages of written material (for example, CVs/bios and letters of support/invitation or confirmation, promotional plans).

If you provide material that exceeds these limits it may not be reviewed as a part of the assessment process.

If you cannot supply support material via URLs, you may upload support material to your application in the following formats:

  • video (MP4, Windows Media)
  • audio (MP3, Windows Media)
  • images (JPEG, PowerPoint)
  • written material (Word, PDF).

We do not accept support material submitted via post. Support material received by post will not be assessed and will be returned to the sender. If you think you will have difficulty submitting your support material online or need advice on what type of material to submit, please contact Artist Services.

Learn more about support material via the Creative Australia website.

  1. Creative/artistic and cultural support material

This should include relevant, recent examples of your creative or cultural work and/or the services you provide using the formats identified above.

Information should be presented as a single document and not exceed the collective total of no more than 10 pages of written material, see above.

  1. Biographies and CVs

You can include a brief bio or curriculum vitae (CV) for key artists, personnel or other collaborators involved in your project.

Brief bios or CV information should be presented as a single document and not exceed the collective total of no more than 10 pages of written material, see above.

  1. Information about the international opportunity

This could include background information on the opportunity you wish to participate in. You may wish to include direct weblinks to the event/schedule of the program.

  1. Letters of support, invitation or confirmation

Individuals, groups or organisations can write letters in support of your project. A support letter should explain how the project or activity will benefit you, other artists or arts professionals, participants or the broader community. It can also detail the support, co-investment (financial or in-kind) or involvement of key project partners, or evidence of consultation.

If relevant to your activity, letters of support must provide evidence of appropriate permissions and support from First Nations organisations, communities, and Elders. Please refer to the First Nations Protocols for more information.

You may wish to include evidence of presenting venues or invitation or attendance to confirm your involvement. Each letter should include confirmation of any invitations, partners fees or contributions to the activity, whether cash or in-kind, if relevant.

Written information should be presented as a single document and not exceed the collective total of no more than 10 pages, see above.

If relevant to your application, evidence of appropriate permissions and support from First Nations organisations, communities and Elders must be provided. Please refer to the First Nations Protocols for more information.

Frequently asked questions

This fund covers many art forms and sectors. Individuals who may wish to apply to the fund could include artists, curators, producers, presenters and literary agents, rights managers and publishers, authors, illustrators and tour managers.

If you have applied as an individual, you are unable to also apply as a part of a group or organisation’s submission.

Applications will be assessed by Industry Advisors and Creative Australia staff. Assessments will also incorporate a moderation process before final decisions are made. This moderation will include the Heads of Practice and the International team.

The assessment team will also consider the suitability of each request in relation to the art form. An example of this may include the literature sector where applicants are encouraged to plan a suite of activities rather than attendance at a single event. This may include literary festivals or promotional opportunities.

International Engagement Fund

$5,000 to $30,000 for creative collaboration and development, cultural exchange and reciprocal activities.

Rainbow Chan, The Bridal Lament, 2022, Image courtesy of the artist.

 

About the program

The International Engagement Fund supports Australian artists and creative workers to undertake reciprocal exchange projects with confirmed international partners. This includes creative collaboration and development; cultural exchange and knowledge sharing; labs and practice-exchange models.

Activities can take place in-person, online, or in a combination of in-person and online (hybrid).

International organisations working with Australian artists or creative workers are eligible to apply.

Only one application can be made to this category per closing date.

Funding amounts are available between $5,000 to $30,000.

Applications must meet at least one of Creative Australia’s International Engagement Strategy 2021–2025 priorities:

  • rethink and expand the concept of mobility through testing dynamic engagement models that include digital, hybrid and in-person connection
  • leverage technologies and digital platforms for creation, distribution, networking, and increasing discoverability of Australian work
  • activate borderless thinking to build reciprocal and multilateral partnerships across regions and industries, and leverage co-investment
  • strengthen First Nations exchange that is First Nations-led and self-determined
  • amplify Asia Pacific engagement, and the perspectives of the Asia Pacific diaspora in Australia
  • diversify income and revenue streams to foster sustainable careers and business models by increasing access to markets, information and networks and showcase Australian work to global audiences and influencers
  • foster creative risk-taking, experimentation and innovation in creation, distribution, connection and profile-building
  • centre equity and access and reflect Australia’s diversity
  • embed sustainability through research and investment in best-practice models and frameworks to minimise the sector’s carbon footprint.

Supported activities must last no longer than two years from the proposed start date.

Please read through the following grant guidelines.

If you need advice about applying, contact an Artists Services Officer.

Community arts and cultural development, dance, emerging and experimental arts, First Nations arts and culture, literature, multi-artform, visual arts, theatre, and music.

This excludes contemporary music, defined by the Music Australia Council as:

“Any genre or subgenre of music currently composed, written, produced by Australians and licensed, recorded, presented, and distributed through commercial and non-commercial activity. For the purposes of Music Australia’s initial investments, the focus will be on musical works that are new, original and relevant to contemporary Australia.”

Music Australia has established an Export Music Development Fund for those artists working in contemporary music. Details to those three funding categories can be found here:

  1. Performance and Touring Activity
  2. Professional and Artistic Development
  3. Market and Audience Development
  • Eligible applicants include Australian artists, and creative workers who do not work in contemporary music (as defined above).
  • You can only submit one application to each closing date for the International Engagement Fund.
  • Individuals, groups and organisations (including small businesses) may apply to this category.
  • International organisations can apply for projects that benefit practicing Australian artists or creative workers, their work or Australian audiences.

You can’t apply for a grant if:

  • you have already applied to this closing date for the International Engagement Fund
  • you have already applied to the 3 September 2024 closing date for the Arts Projects grant categories for the same activity
  • you have an overdue grant report
  • you owe money to Creative Australia
  • you receive, or are working with an organisation that receives, investment through the National Performing Arts Partnership Framework
  • you work in contemporary music (as defined above). You must apply to the Export Development Fund from Music Australia.

You may apply for costs associated with creative collaboration and development; cultural exchange and knowledge sharing; research, experimentation, scoping and prototyping activities; and reciprocal relationship-building activities such as residency exchanges, labs and peer exchange models.

Activities may take place in-person, online, or a combination of in-person and online (hybrid activities).

Eligible costs include but are not limited to:

  • artist and creative worker fees. You may refer to industry benchmarks set by the National Association for the Visual Arts (NAVA), and the Australian Society of Authors (ASA), etc
  • flights, accommodation, per diems, ground transport costs
  • travel insurance
  • visas
  • freight or baggage costs
  • production expenses
  • marketing, promotion and project management costs
  • childcare, carer and access costs
  • costs associated with reducing the environmental impact of your activity.

Access costs are legitimate expenses and may be included in your application. We encourage applicants to ensure that their work is accessible to everyone. Budgets may include costs associated with making activities accessible to a wide range of people (e.g. performances using Auslan, translation to other languages, captioning, audio description, temporary building adjustments, and materials in other formats).

If you are a d/Deaf applicant, an applicant with disability, or are working with d/Deaf artists or artists with disability, you may apply for access costs associated with the use of an interpreter, translation services, specific technical equipment, carer or support worker assistance. Please contact Artists Services to discuss your specific needs.

You can’t apply for:

  • costs that duplicate from the same activity across other current applications to Creative Australia
  • international activities that do not involve or benefit Australian practicing artists or creative workers
  • international activities without international partners
  • international activities that do not have a clearly-defined arts component
  • international activities that have already taken place
  • activities engaging with First Nations content, artists and communities that do not adhere to Creative Australia First Nations Cultural & Intellectual Property Protocols
  • travel to attend contemporary music activities. You must apply to the Export Development Fund from Music Australia

Your application must comply with the following Protocols. We may contact you to request further information during the assessment process, or if successful, as a condition of your funding.

Protocols for using First Nations Cultural and Intellectual Property in the Arts

All applications involving First Nations artists, communities or subject matter must adhere to these Protocols, provide evidence of this in their application and support material. More information on the First Nations Protocols is available here.

Commonwealth Child Safe Framework

All successful applicants are required to comply with all Australian law relating to employing or engaging people who work or volunteer with children, including working with children checks and mandatory reporting. Successful organisations who provide services directly to children, or whose funded activities involve contact with children, will additionally be required to implement the National Principles for Child Safe Organisations.

Industry Advisors will assess your application against the published assessment criteria. Creative Australia staff will moderate the assessment.

You must respond to all three selection criteria: viability, impact and strategic focus.

Listed under each criterion are points the assessors may consider when reviewing your application.

Assessors will consider whether your activity is feasible. Some ways to consider viability are listed below. You do not need to respond to every bullet point.

  • The relevance and timeliness of the proposed project.
  • The skills and abilities of those involved, and their relevance to the project.
  • Realistic and achievable planning and resource use, including contingency plans.   
  • Evidence of other sources of income or co-funding, such as earned income, grants, sponsorship and/or in-kind contributions.
  • Well-researched and rationalised activity, particularly if this is your first engagement with an international market.
  • Extent of sustainable practices, multiple engagements and/or slow touring or concept touring, where the idea, process, or work travels but the artist does not.  
  • Appropriate payments to participating artists, creative professionals, collaborators, participants, or cultural consultants.   
  • Measures being applied to ensure the safety and wellbeing of people involved in the project.   
  • Measures being applied to ensure the proposed activity is accessible.   
  • Where relevant to the project, evidence that the protocols for using First Nations Cultural and Intellectual Property in the Arts have been adhered to, or the relevant cultural protocols for the international jurisdiction in which you are working.   
  • Evidence of appropriate consultation with participants, audiences or communities.   
  • Confirmation of the role of partners or collaborators, including any income and co-funding, such as earned income, grants, sponsorship and in-kind contributions.    

Assessors will consider the impact of your activity. Some ways to consider impact are listed below. You do not need to respond to every bullet point.

  • The extent to which this activity develops an international market or relationship for, or enhances international networks, audiences, and profile.
  • The contribution of the activity towards re-imagining the future for international engagement in the cultural and creative industries.
  • The extent to which the activity contributes to a sector that is accessible, inclusive and equitable.

Assessors will consider how your activity aligns with one or more of the strategic priorities identified in our International Engagement Strategy 2021–2025.

You must respond to one or more of the bullet points listed below.

  • Rethink and expand the concept of mobility through testing dynamic engagement models that include digital, hybrid and in-person connection.
  • Leverage technologies and digital platforms for creation, distribution, networking, and increase discoverability of Australian work.
  • Activate borderless thinking to build reciprocal and multilateral partnerships across regions and industries, and leverage co-investment.
  • Strengthen First Nations exchange that is First Nations-led and self-determined.
  • Amplify Asia Pacific engagement, and the perspectives of the Asia Pacific diaspora in Australia.
  • Diversify income and revenue streams to foster sustainable careers and business models by increasing access to markets, information and networks and showcase Australian work to global audiences and influencers.
  • Foster risk-taking, experimentation and innovation in creation, distribution, connection and profile-building.
  • Centre equity and access and reflect Australia’s diversity.
  • Embed sustainability through research and investment in best-practice models and frameworks to minimise the sector’s carbon footprint.

The types of questions we ask in the application form include:

  • a title for your project
  • a summary of your project
  • a brief description of the individual/group/organisation applying
  • an outline of your project and what you want to do
  • a timetable or itinerary for your project
  • a description of the outcome your project delivers
  • a projected budget which details the expenses, income, and in-kind support of the project
  • supporting material as relevant to your project, including examples of your work, bios of additional artists, and letters of support or permission from participants, communities, First Nations organisation, and Elders.

You should submit support material with your application. The Industry Advisors may review this support material to help them gain a better sense of your project.

We do not accept application-related support material submitted via post. Application-related material received by post will not be assessed and will be returned to the sender. If you think you will have difficulty submitting your support material online, or need advice on what type of material to submit, please contact Artists Services.

There are three types of support material you may submit:

1. Artistic support material

This should include relevant, recent examples of your artistic or cultural work, or the services you provide.

Types of support material we accept

Our preferred method of receiving support material is via URLs (weblinks).

You can provide up to three URLs (weblinks) that link to content that is relevant to your proposal. This may include video, audio, images, or written material.

These URLs can include a total of:

  • 10 minutes of video and/or audio recording
  • 10 images
  • 10 pages of written material (for example, excerpts of literary writing).

Please note: Our industry advisors will not access any URLs that require them to log in or sign up to a platform. Please do not provide links to Spotify or other applications that require users to log in or pay for access.

If you are linking to media files that are private or password protected like Vimeo, please provide the password in the password field on the application form.

Other accepted file formats

If you cannot supply support material via URLs, you may upload support material to your application in the following formats:

  • video (MP4 and Windows Media)
  • audio (MP3 and Windows Media)
  • images (JPEG and PowerPoint)
  • written material (Word and PDF).

2. Biographies and CVs

You can include a brief bio or curriculum vitae (CV) for key artists, personnel or other collaborators involved in your project.

Brief bios or CV information should be presented as a single document no longer than two A4 pages in total.

3. Letters of support

Individuals, groups or organisations can write letters in support of your project. A support letter should explain how the project or activity will benefit you, other artists or arts professionals, participants or the broader community. It can also detail the support or involvement of key project partners, or evidence of consultation.

If relevant to your activity, letters of support must provide evidence of appropriate permissions and support from First Nations organisations, communities, and Elders. Please refer to the First Nations Protocols for more information.

You can include up to five letters of support, with each letter not exceeding one A4 page.

Please provide a single link to all letters or scan the letters into one PDF file. 

There were 170 eligible applications; 26 applications were funded.

From Monday 6 January 2025, you can use our online grants database to see the list of funded applications.

You can review the guidelines for the opportunity on our website.

Although there is no specific feedback on applications, the industry advisors provided some general feedback on applications to this round below which you may find helpful.

General feedback on applications to this round:

  • competitive applications had a reciprocal international exchange component
  • competitive applications clearly articulated the rationale, outcomes, and/or the longevity of a proposed international partnership, exchange or engagement
  • proposals that demonstrated community engagement, long-term relationship building, and deeper connection beyond a one-off activity were generally more compelling
  • the strongest applications demonstrated deeper thinking around international engagement as well as finding new ways of working, including innovative uses of technology
  • residencies where there was no reciprocity (i.e. an international artist coming to Australia as well as an Australian artist travelling overseas) were uncompetitive
  • the strongest proposals provided evidence of confirmed activities and project partners and provided strong letters of support
  • applications that articulated the timeliness and relevance of the activity were more competitive, as well as those that demonstrated their viability through detailed and thorough planning and an effective use of resources
  • applications that did not provide a detailed breakdown of the budget, appropriate payments to artists and cultural consultants, and confirmed income from other sources did not score as highly
  • proposals that articulated a clear rationale for why they were engaging with the country or region were more competitive
  • where First Nations artists, creative workers or communities were involved in a project, successful applications demonstrated that the activity was self-determined and First Nations led, and complying with the Protocols for using First Nations Cultural and Intellectual Property in the Arts.

MATCH Lab

Up to $10,000 in matched funding for independent artists and collectives to run a fundraising campaign, and build fundraising and business skills.

About the program

MATCH Lab is a matched funding program for independent artists and collectives. The program aims to build artists’ skills in fundraising, increase their knowledge of philanthropy and business partnerships, develop their broader arts business experience and learn more about creating sustainable sources of revenue for their work into the future.

We’re looking for enthusiastic independent artists and collectives of artists who have a project to fund and are keen to learn the art of fundraising and building a sustainable arts practice.

Where does the ‘match’ part come in?  

Creative Australia will give your project a boost by matching dollar-for-dollar (up to $10,000) what you raise during your fundraising campaign. This incentive should help you leverage support for your new project.

MATCH Lab is for individual artists and small groups of artists. If you are unsure, please contact the Private Investment Capability team.  

To be eligible, applicants must:   

  • be a practicing artist, or group of artists
  • be an Australian Citizen or permanent resident
  • be aged 18 years or over
  • have an ABN and be prepared to receive project funds; OR have an agreement in place with an auspicing body
  • be available to participate in the Raising Money for Your Art clinic taking place on 22 and 23 October 2024 in Melbourne
  • be prepared to run a fundraising campaign beginning after Fundraising Plan approval and concluding before 31 May 2025 (fundraising campaigns must run for a minimum of 4 weeks). 

Screen (film, documentary, web series) applicants please note: When making your application and selecting your main arts practice please select experimental arts practice and for your arts practice genre please select experimental arts practice.


Who can’t apply:

  • Arts organisations
  • School groups or tertiary training institutions
  • Applicants that have outstanding funding or acquittals with us

  • Applicants that have previously participated in MATCH Lab.

Applicants that have previously received funding from Creative Australia must have met all existing acquittal and reporting requirements, including the Australian Cultural Fund, to be eligible for MATCH Lab. 

Please note that all successful applicants will need to meet the National Framework for Protecting Australia’s Children 2009-2020. More information regarding the framework can be found here.   

We strongly encourage you to read our MATCH Lab resources to help you think about your professional practice before you apply.  

Your application can be saved and edited at any time until the application deadline. Once submitted, you cannot make further edits or amendments.  

The information you’ll need to provide in your application includes:  

  • A brief outline of your art practice
  • Three of your artistic achievements or career highlights
  • A brief description of the project you’re seeking to fundraise to support
  • Information about your auspicing body (if applicable)
  • A project budget
  • Your experience with fundraising
  • The skills you hope to gain from participating in MATCH Lab

Screen (film, documentary, web series) applicants please note: When making your application and selecting your main arts practice please select experimental arts practice and for your arts practice genre please select experimental arts practice.

The assessment process will consider:

 

Industry Advisors will assess the quality of the fundraising plan. They may consider:

  • A clearly articulated fundraising strategy that demonstrates a strong likelihood of success
  • Well communicated case for support

Industry Advisors will assess the viability of the proposed fundraising activities, planning and budget. They may consider: 

  • A demonstrated track record of your arts practice
  • Evidence of any previous experience in fundraising or your willingness to learn new skills
  • Evidence of your capacity to fundraise and deliver a fundraising plan that builds private sector support (individual donations, crowdfunding, philanthropy, trusts or foundations, and business sponsorship)
  • Evidence the budget is realistic and well-planned

Industry Advisors will assess the expected impact or outcome of the opportunity on the applicant and their future capability to secure support through fundraising. They may consider: 

  • Evidence that your proposed plan will build skills in fundraising and increase your knowledge of philanthropy and business partnerships, to create sustainable sources of revenue into the future
  • Evidence that your proposed plan will assist in the ongoing sustainability of your arts practice

Final decisions will be made by Creative Australia. Consideration is also given to ensuring that successful applicants reflect a geographical spread across all states and territories, as well as a spread across art forms. 

Dates: Tuesday 22 and Wednesday 23 October 2024 in Melbourne. 

We offer up to 25 places to participate in MATCH Lab. Participants will be fully supported to attend the Raising Money for Your Art clinic, including cost of attendance, return domestic airfares and accommodation.  

Only one representative of a successful group will be able to attend the Melbourne clinic. At this clinic you’ll connect with experts and your peers to develop a fundraising strategy for supporting your arts practice and your next artistic project.  

Fundraising campaign window: after fundraising campaign approval to 31 May 2025 (fundraising campaigns must run for a minimum of 4 weeks).  

Armed with the fundraising plan developed at the clinic, your next step is to implement your own tailored fundraising campaign.  

We’ll provide matched funding for fundraising activities up to $10,000 per applicant. 

This program will match funds sourced from: 

  • Philanthropy (including individual giving) 
  • Fundraising events 
  • Crowdfunding

This program will not match: 

  • Bequests 
  • In-kind support 
  • Loans 
  • Earned income (including membership, box office and non-deductible ticket expenses)
  • Local, state or federal government funding 
  • Pre-existing fundraising commitments made prior to commencement of the fundraising window

Funded projects can start from the conclusion of fundraising campaigns and must be completed by 30 June 2026. 

Recipients are expected to liaise regularly with the Private Investment and Capability team and communicate any project changes or challenges. Any changes to the funded project/activity must be approved by us in advance. 

Recipients are required to report on the progress and results of their campaign and project. Templates are provided to the recipient prior to the report due date via Fluxx. 

Acquittal 1: Fundraising campaign report due at the end of the fundraising campaign or no later than 13 June 2025.  

  • Value of funds raised and the number and type of campaign contributors 
  • Evaluation of their campaign strategy
  • Assessment of unexpected problems and challenges and opportunities encountered through the campaign


Acquittal 2: Project and updated fundraising report
due by 30 June 2026. 

  • How private sector funding and MATCH Lab matched funds were spent
  • Additional information as requested, including testimonials, media, promotional material and details of ongoing donor relationships

Before you submit your application, read these guidelines thoroughly and contact the Private Investment Capability team with any questions.

Frequently asked questions

Successful participants will come together for the Raising Money for Your Art clinic, a two-day intensive fundraising and professional development opportunity.

This clinic will help attendees workshop their fundraising aspirations and develop their careers as creative entrepreneurs. Attendees will benefit from a wealth of information on raising money for projects, planning projects for different types of fundraising activities, strategies for fundraising success and nurturing relationships with donors and sponsors.

Armed with that planning, the next step is to develop and implement your own tailored fundraising campaign. We’ll match whatever you raise, up to $10,000 – a great incentive to get people on board with your project and practice.

As part of MATCH Lab we’ll fund your attendance at the Raising Money For Your Art clinic if it takes place in person, including your return airfares, two-nights’ accommodation and selected meals. We’ll match dollar-for-dollar money raised through your fundraising campaign up to $10,000 per participant.

Glad you asked! We are focused on helping artists learn how to fund their art in sustainable ways, so they can build a career. Our research shows that matched funding is an especially powerful tool in leveraging support from the private sector and maximising an investment in you as an artist.

It’s a great incentive that encourages more value for donations, higher levels of engagement from donors, and helps artists build relationships that can continue long after a particular project has been and gone.

MATCH Lab isn’t for everyone. This isn’t a traditional arts or grants program – it’s designed as an intensive, hands-on professional and business development opportunity.

We’re looking for people who have lots of ideas and passion for their art and want to arm themselves with knowledge of how they can make a sustainable path for their work.

When assessing applications, we’re looking for independent artists or small group of artists who can show:

  • a demonstrated track record of arts practice
  • your professional experience, direction and goals
  • your capacity to fundraise and build private sector support (individual donations, crowdfunding, philanthropy, trusts or foundations, and business sponsorship) for your work.

The type of project you want to fundraise for is up to you! We will support costs associated with development of new works, touring costs, paying artists, venue hire, recording, purchasing equipment – whatever your next creative endeavour is.

No. If you have been a recipient of MATCH Lab in the past you cannot apply.

We’re able to fund up to 25 participants to attend the two-day fundraising and professional development clinic and receive up to $10,000 in matched funding from us for their fundraising campaign.

Yes! However, an important part of MATCH Lab is the development, with our help, of the fundraising strategy that’s right for you, your practice and your project.

Yes! We strongly recommend that you give us a call or  email us to discuss your application before submitting it. We’re here to help and answer any questions you may have.

No. We will only consider one application from each applicant in each round.

We can’t read over your application, but we can guide you through the process and talk through your ideas.

We’ve developed resources and case studies on our website that help you think holistically about your professional practice and develop knowledge about the various income streams available to artists across government funding, crowdfunding, donations, foundations, sponsorship, and selling products and services. Our expectation is that you have taken the time to read these important resources before applying.

If you’d like to talk to someone, no problem at all – pick up the phone and call our Private Investment Capability team (03 9616 0321), or book an appointment with one of our State Managers Development & Partnerships.

No. You don’t need to upload or attach any support material to your application. Any additional information (letters of support etc.) that is uploaded or attached to the application won’t be included in the assessment.

The most important thing you can do is read all the resources we’ve put together for you. Read the guidelines and application forms thoroughly before you apply, and well before the closing date!

Before applying, we encourage you to chat to our Private Investment Capability team (03 9616 0321), or book an appointment with one of our State Managers Development & Partnerships.

The budget in the application is for your PROJECT that you are raising the funds for. It should also include your fundraising costs.

In your budget you must also:

  • include your private sector fundraising target AND the Plus1/MATCH Lab funding amount you are requesting in your income
  • include all income sources for your project/activity. e.g. other government sources (federal/state/local council), ticket income etc.
  • include CONFIRMED (C) or NOT CONFIRMED (NC) next to all income sources
  • balance your budget for the application to be eligible for assessment (total income = total expenditure)

See below example for how to complete the budget in your application.

Income $ Expenditure $
Plus1 or MATCH Lab grant (NC) $3,000 Expense item 1 $300
Fundraising event 1 (NC) $1,000 Expense item 2 $1,200
Online fundraising campaign (NC) $2,000 Expense item 3 $4,000
Other government grant (C) $12,000 Expense item 4 $6,708
Ticket sales (NC) $1,800 Expense item 5 $3,000
Expense item 6 $250
Expense item 7 $3,500
Expense item 8 $842
Total $19,800 Total $19,800

Leveraging is just another way of explaining how you will use the dollar-for-dollar matched funding to attract donors and partners and reach your fundraising target. This is not your typical grant or funding opportunity – the harder you work it, the better the result!

No. You only need to upload a budget quote or invoice for large expenses to qualify a large amount of money.

Victorian Circus and Physical Theatre Projects for Individuals and Groups

Announcement

Recipients of this opportunity have been announced. The full list can be found on the awarded grants page.

About the program

This program is designed to specifically support the circus and physical theatre sector in Victoria. It provides investment into artist and artform development, projects and activities to support skills development, employment, market development and artistic outcomes. This program supports circus and physical theatre practice; it does not extend to dance or dance-theatre.

Victorian applicants may apply for activity to take place in Victoria, nationally and internationally.

Applicants from outside of Victoria may apply for activity in Victoria if the proposed activity is in partnership with Victorian individuals, groups or organisations and the applicant can demonstrate impact for the Victorian circus and physical theatre sector.

Individuals and groups can propose a single project; a series of projects; or a suite of activities over a fixed period of time.

This Investment is offered following changes to the circus and physical theatre landscape in Victoria during 2021. The Australia Council and Creative Victoria are jointly managing strategic investments to support the circus and physical theatre sector, guided by the principles of the National Performing Arts Partnership Framework.

Grants are available from $10,000 to $80,000. Supported activities must last no longer than two years from the proposed start date.

Please note: Your project must consider the latest government advice regarding COVID-19.

Please read through the following grant guidelines.

If you need advice about applying, contact an Artists Services Officer now.

Who can apply

  • Only individuals and groups may apply to this category.
  • Australian citizens or Australian permanent residents and a practicing artist or arts professional.

The proposed activity must support the circus and physical theatre sector in Victoria

 

Who can’t apply

You can’t apply for this grant if:

  • you are an organisation
  • you have an overdue grant report
  • you owe money to the Australia Council

What can be applied for

We will fund a range of activities which support and build capacity in the circus and physical theatre sector in Victoria, for example:

  • professional skills development, including mentoring and residencies. This may include a suite of activity over a fixed period of time.
  • the creation of new work
  • practice based research
  • creative development
  • experimentation
  • collaborations
  • touring
  • festivals
  • productions
  • exhibitions
  • performances
  • publishing
  • recording
  • promotion and marketing
  • market development activity
  • activities that creatively engage communities.

Access costs are legitimate expenses and may be included in your application. We encourage applicants to ensure that their work is accessible to everyone. Therefore, budgets may also include costs associated with making activities accessible to a wide range of people (e.g. performances using Auslan, translation to other languages, captioning, audio description, temporary building adjustments, and materials in other formats).

If you are an applicant with a disability, or are working with artists with disability, you may apply for access costs associated with the use of an interpreter, translation services, specific technical equipment, carer, or support worker assistance. Please contact Artists Services to discuss your specific needs.

What can’t be applied for

You can’t apply for:

  • projects or activities that do not involve or benefit the Victorian circus and physical theatre sector
  • projects or activities that do not have a clearly defined arts component
  • projects that have already taken place
  • activities engaging with First Nations content, artists and communities that do not adhere to the Australia Council First Nations Cultural & Intellectual Property Protocols.

Your application must comply with the following Protocols. We may contact you to request further information during the assessment process, or if successful, as a condition of your funding.

Protocols for using First Nations Cultural and Intellectual Property in the Arts

All applications involving First Nations artists, communities or subject matter must adhere to these Protocols, provide evidence of this in their application and support material. More information on the First Nations Protocols is available here.

Commonwealth Child Safe Framework

All successful applicants are required to comply with all Australian law relating to employing or engaging people who work or volunteer with children, including working with children checks and mandatory reporting. Successful organisations who provide services directly to children, or whose funded activities involve contact with children, will additionally be required to implement the National Principles for Child Safe Organisations.

Your application will be assessed by a panel of artists and arts workers with expertise in the Australian circus and physical theatre sector.

You must address three assessment criteria in this category.  

Under each criterion are bullet points indicating what peers may consider when assessing your application. You do not need to respond to every bullet point listed. 

First criterion 

Quality 

  • Peers will assess the quality of the artistic and cultural activities at the centre of your proposal. They may consider: 
  • vision, ideas and artistic rationale 
  • benefit and impact on career, artistic and cultural practice 
  • level of innovation, ambition, experimentation or risk-taking 
  • rigour and clear articulation of creative, engagement or development processes 
  • significance of the work within the relevant area of practice and/or community 
  • contribution to diverse cultural expression 
  • timeliness and relevance of work 
  • quality of previous work 
  • responses to previous work from artistic or cultural peers, or the public. 

Second criterion 

Viability 

Peers will assess the viability of your proposal. They may consider: 

  • relevance and timeliness of proposed activity 
  • skills and ability of artists, arts professionals, collaborators, or partners involved, and relevance to activity 
  • realistic and achievable planning and resource use, including contingency and COVID-safe plans for activities involving public presentations, national or international travel 
  • appropriate payments to participating artists, arts professionals, collaborators, participants, or cultural consultants 
  • the safety and wellbeing of people involved in the project 
  • role of partners or collaborators, including confirmation of involvement 
  • the diversity and scale of income and co-funding, including earned income, grants, sponsorship, and in-kind contributions 
  • where relevant to the project, evidence that the Protocols for using First Nations Cultural and Intellectual Property in the Arts have been adhered to 
  • evidence of appropriate consultation with participants, audiences, or communities 
  • where relevant, evidence that you have considered and addressed any access issues associated with your project 
  • where relevant, evidence that you have addressed the environmental impact of your project. 

Third criterion 

Impact 

The peers will assess how your activity contributes towards building a sustainable and diverse Victorian circus and physical theatre sector. They may consider how your activity: 

  • contributes to increasing diversity (including First Nations, disability, gender, LGBTIQ+, age and cultural diversity) within the circus and physical theatre sector in reference to artists, key creatives, programming and audiences. 
  • contributes to artform development through the commissioning, development and/or presentation of new Australian work that reflects contemporary Australia  
  • contributes to building capacity in the circus and physical theatre sector 
  • demonstrates collaboration and/or leadership on key sector issues.

You should submit support material with your application. The peer assessors may review this support material to help them gain a better sense of your project.

What you should provide

We do not accept application-related support material submitted via post. Application-related material received by post will not be assessed and will be returned to the sender. If you think you will have difficulty submitting your support material online, or need advice on what type of material to submit, please contact Artists Services.

There are three types of support material you may submit:

  1. Artistic support material

This should include relevant, recent examples of your artistic or cultural work, or the services you provide.

Types of support material we accept

Our preferred method of receiving support material is via URLs (weblinks).

You can provide up to three URLs (weblinks) that link to content that is relevant to your proposal. This may include video, audio, images, or written material.

These URLs can include a total of:

  • 10 minutes of video and/or audio recording
  • 10 images
  • 10 pages of written material (for example, excerpts of literary writing).

Please note: Our peer assessors will not access any URLs that require them to log in or sign up to a platform. Please do not provide links to Spotify or other applications that require users to log in or pay for access.

If you are linking to media files that are private or password protected like Vimeo, please provide the password in the password field on the application form.

Other accepted file formats

If you cannot supply support material via URLs, you may upload support material to your application in the following formats:

  • video (MP4, QuickTime, and Windows Media)
  • audio (MP3 and Windows Media)
  • images (JPEG and PowerPoint)
  1. Biographies and CVs

You can include a brief bio or curriculum vitae (CV) for key artists, personnel or other collaborators involved in your project.

Brief bios or CV information should be presented as a single document no longer than two A4 pages in total.

  1. Letters of support

Individuals, groups or organisations can write letters in support of your project. A support letter should explain how the project or activity will benefit you, other artists or arts professionals, participants or the broader community. It can also detail the support or involvement of key project partners, or evidence of consultation.

If relevant to your activity, letters of support must provide evidence of appropriate permissions and support from First Nations organisations, communities, and Elders. Please refer to the First Nations Protocols for more information.

You can include up to five letters of support, with each letter not exceeding one A4 page.

Frequently asked questions

You will receive your grant payment within two weeks of accepting your funding agreement. Please note we pay our grants in the financial year which they are approved. We will not adjust payment timelines to the particular circumstances of individuals. 

The deadline for applications is at 3:00pm AET on the closing date. We strongly recommend submitting before this. Administrative and technical support is only available during office hours (Monday-Friday) 9am to 5 pm AET. Late applications will not be accepted. 

Yes, if you have support materials such as letters from project partners, collaborators or participants that are in languages other than English (including Auslan), we can arrange translation or captioning. 

Please contact the Artists Services team at least four weeks before the closing date of the grant round to which you are intending to make an application. If you do not contact us at least four weeks before the closing date, we may not have sufficient time to meet your translation needs. 

Our online application form also has a checkbox at the top which you can tick if you have attached materials in a language other than English. This alerts the Artists Services team that you have submitted these materials. 

We do not accept applications submitted via post. Any material received by post will not be assessed and will be returned to the sender. If you think you will have difficulty submitting your application online, please contact Artists Services. 

We do not amend, correct, update or change any part of your application once it has been submitted. However, if you receive additional confirmations for activities or artists after the closing date you may alert us to these, and we may bring them to the attention of peer assessors at the assessment meeting. These updates could include confirmation that a proposed activity will take place, a partnership has been secured, or funding from another source has been received. 

You can update us about such confirmations by contacting us. Briefly describe the nature of the confirmation and cite your application reference number.  You do not need to send us copies of confirmation emails from third parties – if we need to see evidence of the confirmation we will request it. 

If you wish to update your application once it has been submitted, but the closing date has not yet passed, you can submit a new, updated application and request to withdraw the original one by emailing operationsservicedesk@creative.gov.au 

Grant applications can be found and are submitted through our online system. If you are using the system for the first time you will need to register your details before filling out a grant application form. 

When will I be notified about the outcome of my application? 

Applicants will be notified of the outcome of their application approximately 12 weeks after the closing date. Please see the guidelines page for the grant category you are interested in for more details. 

Yes, however you must be the applicant. Contact us to discuss your proposal prior to submitting your application.

To apply for this category your project must be circus or physical theatre activity or proposing to support the Victorian circus and physical theatre sector.

This program supports circus and physical theatre practice, it does not extend to dance or dance-theatre. 

Following changes to the circus and physical theatre landscape in Victoria during 2021, the Australia Council for the Arts and Creative Victoria are jointly managing new investments to support the circus and physical theatre sector, guided by the principles of the National Performing Arts Partnership Framework. 

We define a ‘group’ as two or more individuals who do not form a legally constituted organisation.  This can include co-collaborators and collectives.  Groups are not eligible to apply to programs open only to organisations. 

An ‘organisation’ is a legally constituted organisation that is registered or created by law. For example, incorporated associations, companies limited by guarantee or government statutory authorities are all defined as organisations. Organisations that are not legally constituted are not eligible to apply for funding in grant categories that are open to organisations only. Organisations may be required to provide a certificate of incorporation or evidence of their current legal status.  Funding programs for organisations are not intended for sole traders or partnerships. 

No. 

Yes. However, the contact person for group applications must be an Australian citizen or permanent resident. 

We provide funding to practising artists or artsworkers. While you may not regularly earn income from your practice, you must be identified and recognised by your peers as a practising artist or artsworker. This may include cultural practitioners, editors, producers, curators and arts managers. 

No. If you have an overdue grant acquittal you will not be eligible to apply for any further grants. 

No. Only Australian citizens and Australian permanent residents may apply to the Australia Council for funding. Foreign nationals who are permitted to live and work in Australia by holding visas such as a Special Category visa or a Bridging visa are not eligible to apply. 

Yes. Creative research and development is a key component of the creative process and can be funded through this category.

Yes. We accept applications in languages other than English, including Auslan. 

If any part of your application requires translation into English, please contact the Artists Services team at least four weeks before the closing date of the round to which you intend to apply. We will use our best and all reasonable endeavours to assist in having some or all of the material translated. However we reserve the right to refuse an application in a language other than English if we believe there is no genuine reason to accept such an application, or if the time-frame for translation precludes us from making the materials available for assessment in the round to which it was submitted.

If you wish to request an application form in a language other than English, please contact the Artists Services team at least 12 weeks before the closing date of the round to which you intend to apply.

We reserve the right to refuse an application form translation request if we believe there is no genuine reason for the request. We also reserve the right to refuse an application form translation if the time-frame for translation prevents us from providing a translated form in time for assessment in the round to which it was submitted. 

Where you have supplied creative content in a language other than English, we may engage an industry expert to provide the peers with an evaluation of the artistic merit of that creative content. 

You can speak with staff at the Australia Council in your first language. Please telephone the Translating and Interpreting Service on 131 450 (local call anywhere in Australia) and ask to be connected with the Australia Council. 

Applications that focus solely on academic studies, or are for activities that are part of assessable coursework are unlikely to be successful with our assessment panels. Assessment panels are also unlikely to support applications requesting the costs of academic fees or courses. 

If you wish to apply for study costs, explain to the panel how your project extends, or supplements, the course’s standard curriculum requirements. Also, bear in mind that your project will be assessed on artistic merit of the work. 

If you are applying for funding to complete a training program, course, workshop or diploma, explain how doing so will impact positively on your career or practice. 

Do you fund feature film, television or documentary? 

While we can support screen-based art, we do not generally support activities associated with feature film, television or documentary. See Screen Australia, the Federal Government’s primary agency for production of Australian screen activity. https://www.screenaustralia.gov.au/  

No, we do not offer quick response grants. Outside of our regular grants program, we do offer a number of other grants and opportunities. 

Yes. Early career artists are eligible to apply for funding through this category.  

Yes. Individuals and Groups can propose a program of projects and/or activities. This could be a series of projects; or a suite of activities over a fixed period of time.

We encourage applicants to be mindful of the following considerations: 

The activities should each contribute toward a clear, unifying overall objective –  for example,  the development of an individuals or group’s artistic practice. The suite of activity could include creative development or presentation alongside professional development opportunities. It is important to demonstrate the rationale for the inclusion of these activities and how the overall program or suite of activity will align with the individuals or group’s artistic practice and ambition.

In proposing a program consisting of multiple projects or activities, it is possible that some individual projects may be less compelling than others. If you are submitting an application proposing multiple activities or projects, we encourage you to ensure that a similar level of consideration, planning, and artistic merit is common to each to avoid one component of your program potentially letting down the others. 

You may wish to consider using one of the 3 URLs you can provide as support material to link to a document that provides more detail about each individual project or activity in your program. 

As a national arts funding body, all Australia Council grant rounds are competitive. Success rates are usually between 15% and 20%. Success rate for this category may be higher depending on demand.

Yes. Projects must have a start date that falls after we notify you of the outcome of your application, and no later than one year from that date. We will notify you of the outcome of your application approximately 12 weeks after the closing date. 

No. However, applications involving venues and partners are likely to be more competitive if their involvement is confirmed. 

Australia Council staff are available to assist you in understanding the purpose of the grant, application requirements, and submitting your application. Staff can assist over email, phone and using Skype. We cannot review application drafts. 

Additional support can be discussed where needed. Where the additional support required is beyond the scope of what our staff can provide, we may recommend speaking to an appropriate organisation for further assistance. 

The best applications are those where the voice of the artist comes through. Where possible you, ‘the artist’, should write your application. Your manager may administer the grant on your behalf to undertake the financial and reporting requirements. 

If you are applying as an unincorporated entity, unincorporated association or partnership you do not need to have an administrator for your grant. However, you must be able to provide an ABN and bank account that are in the group’s name. If you cannot do this you must nominate an administrator. For more information about this, please contact us. 

All individual or organisation grant applicants based in Australia must have an active Australian Business Number (ABN). Individual applicants without an ABN may have their grant administered by an individual or organisation with an ABN. Organisations operating outside of Australia do not need an ABN to apply. Individuals based outside of Australia may not need an ABN to apply, depending on their circumstances (please check with your accountant or tax advisor). 

Furthermore, the name of the applicant must match the name of the ABN and the name of the bank account into which we pay the funds. There are no exceptions to this rule. If you cannot provide an ABN and bank account that are in the same name as the applicant, you will need to nominate an administrator for your grant. 

For more information about this, please contact us.

Grants can be considered income by Centrelink. The amount is generally assessed as a lump sum and could affect your Centrelink payment for the financial year. Artists who are running a business (even on a small scale) may have their grant treated differently. It is possible to have your grant paid to an administering body if you wish. 

Applicants should contact Centrelink on 13 28 50 for advice. Additionally, Centrelink’s Financial Information Service (FIS) is an education and information service available to everyone in the community and may be of benefit to applicants who also receive assistance through the social security system. To contact FIS phone 13 23 00. 

Yes.  The Australia Council expects that artists professionally employed or engaged on Australia Council-funded activities will be remunerated for their work in line with industry standards. Payment of artist fees should be reflected in your application budget. 

For more information, see our Payment of Artists page. 

Our grants program is primarily designed to support projects that have a defined start and end date, rather than ongoing organisational administration costs. Project budgets that include a high proportion of administration costs may be less competitive. However, if you do need funding to cover administration costs directly related to the delivery of your project, you can include them in your grant request. 

Grants paid by the Australia Council may be considered part of your income in a financial year and may be subject to tax. You must determine your own taxation liabilities. We suggest you consult your financial adviser or contact the Australian Taxation Office on 13 28 66. 

No. The Australia Council encourages applicants whose projects will take place in regional and remote locations to budget accurately and realistically, as it is recognised that costs may differ between regions and major cities. 

If you are GST-registered when you receive an Australia Council grant, the Australia Council will pay the grant amount plus GST. The budget provided in your application should be exclusive of GST. 

Yes. The Australia Council recognises that funding may be required for access costs incurred by applicants with disability, or for costs associated with working with artists with disability – who may have particular access needs (e.g. use of an interpreter, translation services, specific technical equipment, support worker/carer assistance). Access costs are viewed as legitimate expenses and may be included in an applicant’s budget. The Australia Council encourages applicants to ensure that their work is accessible to everyone. Therefore, budgets may also include costs associated with making activities accessible to a wide range of people (e.g. performances using Auslan, captioning, audio description, temporary building adjustments, materials in other formats such as Braille or CD). 

The application form calculates your grant request as the difference between your total cash income, and your total cash costs. The gap between these two numbers is the grant request. In-kind contributions are not included in this calculation. 

Total cash costs – total cash income = grant request 

For example – 

$50,000 cash costs – $30,000 cash income = $20,000 Australia Council grant request. 

Yes. The Australia Council recognises that childcare needs may impede access to employment in the arts. Accordingly, childcare is a legitimate expense to include in an applicant’s budget. 

We encourage our applicants to seek funding from other sources to cover the complete costs of their projects. While it does depend on the size of your grant request to us, we would expect that applicants with large grant requests would also secure funding from elsewhere to cover all costs associated with a large-scale project. 

Yes. Out-of-pocket expenses such as telephone calls or petrol for travel, are recognised as legitimate expenses and may be included in an applicant’s budget. 

Yes. In-kind support refers to resources, goods and services (for example, use of a venue, materials, and/or people’s time) provided by yourself or others either free of charge, or below market value. Detailing in-kind costs in the budget is important as it gives peers a full understanding of the viability of your project and levels of support you are receiving. In-kind costs are also an expense so, when you save your application, any in-kind income you included will auto-populate to the expenses side of the budget. 

Victorian Circus and Physical Theatre Projects for Organisations

Announcement

Recipients of this opportunity have been announced. The full list can be found on the awarded grants page.

About the program

This program is designed to specifically support the circus and physical theatre sector in Victoria. It provides investment into artist and artform development, projects and activities to support skills development, employment, market development and artistic outcomes.

This program supports circus and physical theatre practice, it does not extend to dance or dance-theatre.

Victorian applicants may apply for activity in Victoria, nationally and internationally.

Applicants from outside of Victoria may apply for activity in Victoria if the proposed activity is in partnership with a Victorian organisation and the applicant can demonstrate impact for the Victorian circus and physical theatre sector.

Organisations that undertake arts programs, projects or that provide services to artists are welcome to apply. Organisations can propose a single project, a suite of projects or annual programs of activity.

Applicants do not need to be a specialist circus or physical theatre organisation however the application must propose circus or physical theatre activity or capacity building for this sector.

This Investment is offered following changes to the circus and physical theatre landscape in Victoria during 2021. The Australia Council and Creative Victoria are jointly managing strategic investments to support the circus and physical theatre sector, guided by the principles of the National Performing Arts Partnership Framework.

Grants are available from $20,000 to $150,000. Supported activities must last no longer than two years from the proposed start date.

Please note: Your project must consider the latest government advice regarding COVID-19.

Please read through the following grant guidelines.

If you need advice about applying, contact an Artists Services Officer now.

Who can apply

  • Only organisations may apply to this category.
  • The proposed activity must support the circus and physical theatre sector in Victoria

Who can’t apply

You can’t apply for this grant if:

  • your organisation receives $600,000 or more per year in Multi-Year Investment from the Australia Council
  • you are an international organisation
  • you have an overdue grant report
  • you owe money to the Australia Council
  • you are an individual or group

What can be applied for

We will fund a range of activities which support and build capacity in the circus and physical theatre sector in Victoria, for example:

  • professional skills development, including mentoring and residencies
  • the creation of new work
  • practice based research
  • creative development
  • experimentation
  • collaborations
  • touring
  • festivals
  • productions
  • exhibitions
  • performances
  • publishing
  • recording
  • activities to develop the arts sector
  • promotion and marketing
  • market development activity
  • activities that creatively engage communities.

Access costs are legitimate expenses and may be included in your application. We encourage applicants to ensure that their work is accessible to everyone. Therefore, budgets may also include costs associated with making activities accessible to a wide range of people (e.g. performances using Auslan, translation to other languages, captioning, audio description, temporary building adjustments, and materials in other formats).

If you are an applicant with a disability, or are working with artists with disability, you may apply for access costs associated with the use of an interpreter, translation services, specific technical equipment, carer or support worker assistance. Please contact Artists Services to discuss your specific needs.

What can’t be applied for

  • projects or activities that do not involve or benefit the Victorian circus and physical theatre sector.
  • projects or activities that do not have a clearly defined arts component
  • projects that have already taken place
  • activities engaging with First Nations content, artists and communities that do not adhere to the Australia Council First Nations Cultural & Intellectual Property Protocols.

Your application must comply with the following Protocols. We may contact you to request further information during the assessment process, or if successful, as a condition of your funding.

Protocols for using First Nations Cultural and Intellectual Property in the Arts 

All applications involving First Nations artists, communities or subject matter must adhere to these Protocols, provide evidence of this in their application and support material. More information on the First Nations Protocols is available here.

Commonwealth Child Safe Framework 

All successful applicants are required to comply with all Australian law relating to employing or engaging people who work or volunteer with children, including working with children checks and mandatory reporting. Successful organisations who provide services directly to children, or whose funded activities involve contact with children, will additionally be required to implement the National Principles for Child Safe Organisations.

Your application will be peer assessed by a panel of artists and arts workers with expertise in the Australian circus and physical theatre sector.

You must address three assessment criteria in this category.

Under each criterion are bullet points indicating what peers may consider when assessing your application. You do not need to respond to every bullet point listed.

First criterion 

Quality of artistic activity or services to artists 

Peers will assess the quality of the artistic and cultural activities at the centre of your proposal. They may consider:

  • vision, ideas and artistic rational
  • benefit and impact on careers, artistic or cultural practice
  • level of innovation, ambition, experimentation or risk-taking
  • rigour and clear articulation of creative, engagement or development processes
  • significance of the work within area of practice and communities
  • contribution to diverse cultural expression
  • relevance of work
  • quality of previous work
  • responses to previous work from artistic or cultural peers, or the public.

Second criterion 

Viability

Peers will assess the viability of your proposal.

They may consider:

  • capacity to deliver the proposed activities or services
  • timeliness of proposed activity
  • skills and ability of artists, arts professionals, collaborators, or participants involved, and relevance to activity
  • realistic and achievable planning and resource use, including contingency and COVID-safe plans for activities involving public presentation, national or international travel
  • meaningful evaluation
  • appropriate payments to participating artists, arts professionals, collaborators, participants, or cultural consultants
  • the safety and wellbeing of people involved in the project
  • governance arrangements
  • role of partners or collaborators, including confirmation of involvement
  • diversity and scale of income and co-funding, including earned income, grants, sponsorship and in-kind contributions
  • where relevant to the project, evidence that the Protocols for First Nations Cultural and Intellectual Property in the Arts have been adhered to
  • evidence of appropriate consultation and engagement with participants, audiences or communities
  • Where relevant, evidence that you have considered and addressed any access issues associated with your project
  • Where relevant, evidence that you have addressed the environmental impact of your project.

Third criterion 

Impact

Peers will assess how your activity contributes towards building a sustainable and diverse Victorian circus and physical theatre sector.

They may consider how your activity:

  • contributes to increasing diversity (including First Nations, disability, gender, LGBTIQ+, age and cultural diversity) within the circus and physical theatre sector in reference to artists, key creatives, programming and audiences
  • contributes to artform development through the commissioning, development and/or presentation of new Australian work that reflects contemporary Australia
  • contributes to building capacity in the circus and physical theatre sector
  • demonstrates collaboration and/or leadership on key sector issues

You should submit support material with your application. The peer assessors may review this support material to help them gain a better sense of your project.

What you should provide

We do not accept application-related support material submitted via post. Application-related material received by post will not be assessed and will be returned to the sender. If you think you will have difficulty submitting your support material online, or need advice on what type of material to submit, please contact Artists Services.

There are three types of support material you may submit:

  1. Artistic support material

This should include relevant, recent examples of your artistic or cultural work, or the services you provide.

Types of support material we accept

Our preferred method of receiving support material is via URLs (weblinks).

You can provide up to three URLs (weblinks) that link to content that is relevant to your proposal. This may include video, audio, images, or written material.

These URLs can include a total of:

  • 10 minutes of video and/or audio recording
  • 10 images
  • 10 pages of written material (for example, excerpts of literary writing).

Please note: Our peer assessors will not access any URLs that require them to log in or sign up to a platform. Please do not provide links to Spotify or other applications that require users to log in or pay for access.

If you are linking to media files that are private or password protected like Vimeo, please provide the password in the password field on the application form.

Other accepted file formats

If you cannot supply support material via URLs, you may upload support material to your application in the following formats:

  • video (MP4, QuickTime, and Windows Media)
  • audio (MP3 and Windows Media)
  • images (JPEG and PowerPoint)
  1. Biographies and CVs

You can include a brief bio or curriculum vitae (CV) for key artists, personnel or other collaborators involved in your project.

Brief bios or CV information should be presented as a single document no longer than two A4 pages in total.

  1. Letters of support

Individuals, groups or organisations can write letters in support of your project. A support letter should explain how the project or activity will benefit you, other artists or arts professionals, participants or the broader community.  It can also detail the support or involvement of key project partners, or evidence of consultation.

If relevant to your activity, letters of support must provide evidence of appropriate permissions and support from First Nations organisations, communities, and Elders. Please refer to the First Nations Protocols for more information.

You can include up to five letters of support, with each letter not exceeding one A4 page.

Frequently asked questions

You will receive your grant payment within two weeks of accepting your funding agreement. Please note we pay our grants in the financial year which they are approved. We will not adjust payment timelines to the particular circumstances of individuals. 

The deadline for applications is at 3:00pm AET on the closing date. We strongly recommend submitting before this. Administrative and technical support is only available during office hours (Monday-Friday) 9am to 5 pm AET. Late applications will not be accepted. 

Yes, if you have support materials such as letters from project partners, collaborators or participants that are in languages other than English (including Auslan), we can arrange translation or captioning. 

Please contact the Artists Services team at least four weeks before the closing date of the grant round to which you are intending to make an application. If you do not contact us at least four weeks before the closing date, we may not have sufficient time to meet your translation needs. 

Our online application form also has a checkbox at the top which you can tick if you have attached materials in a language other than English. This alerts the Artists Services team that you have submitted these materials. 

We do not accept applications submitted via post. Any material received by post will not be assessed and will be returned to the sender. If you think you will have difficulty submitting your application online, please contact Artists Services. 

We do not amend, correct, update or change any part of your application once it has been submitted. However, if you receive additional confirmations for activities or artists after the closing date you may alert us to these, and we may bring them to the attention of peer assessors at the assessment meeting. These updates could include confirmation that a proposed activity will take place, a partnership has been secured, or funding from another source has been received. 

You can update us about such confirmations by contacting us. Briefly describe the nature of the confirmation and cite your application reference number.  You do not need to send us copies of confirmation emails from third parties – if we need to see evidence of the confirmation we will request it. 

If you wish to update your application once it has been submitted, but the closing date has not yet passed, you can submit a new, updated application and request to withdraw the original one by emailing operationsservicedesk@creative.gov.au 

Grant applications can be found and are submitted through our online system. If you are using the system for the first time you will need to register your details before filling out a grant application form. 

When will I be notified about the outcome of my application? 

Applicants will be notified of the outcome of their application approximately 12 weeks after the closing date. Please see the guidelines page for the grant category you are interested in for more details. 

Yes, however you must be the applicant. Contact us to discuss your proposal prior to submitting your application.

To apply for this category your project must be circus or physical theatre activity or proposing to support the Victorian circus and physical theatre sector.

This program supports circus and physical theatre practice, it does not extend to dance or dance-theatre. 

Following changes to the circus and physical theatre landscape in Victoria during 2021, the Australia Council for the Arts and Creative Victoria are jointly managing new investments to support the circus and physical theatre sector, guided by the principles of the National Performing Arts Partnership Framework. 

We define a ‘group’ as two or more individuals who do not form a legally constituted organisation.  This can include co-collaborators and collectives.  Groups are not eligible to apply to programs open only to organisations. 

An ‘organisation’ is a legally constituted organisation that is registered or created by law. For example, incorporated associations, companies limited by guarantee or government statutory authorities are all defined as organisations. Organisations that are not legally constituted are not eligible to apply for funding in grant categories that are open to organisations only. Organisations may be required to provide a certificate of incorporation or evidence of their current legal status.  Funding programs for organisations are not intended for sole traders or partnerships. 

No. 

Yes. However, the contact person for group applications must be an Australian citizen or permanent resident. 

No, international organisations are not eligible to apply for this category.

We provide funding to practising artists or artsworkers. While you may not regularly earn income from your practice, you must be identified and recognised by your peers as a practising artist or artsworker. This may include cultural practitioners, editors, producers, curators and arts managers. 

No. If you have an overdue grant acquittal you will not be eligible to apply for any further grants. 

No. Only Australian citizens and Australian permanent residents may apply to the Australia Council for funding. Foreign nationals who are permitted to live and work in Australia by holding visas such as a Special Category visa or a Bridging visa are not eligible to apply. 

Yes. Creative research and development is a key component of the creative process and can be funded through this category.

Yes. We accept applications in languages other than English, including Auslan. 

If any part of your application requires translation into English, please contact the Artists Services team at least four weeks before the closing date of the round to which you intend to apply. We will use our best and all reasonable endeavours to assist in having some or all of the material translated. However we reserve the right to refuse an application in a language other than English if we believe there is no genuine reason to accept such an application, or if the time-frame for translation precludes us from making the materials available for assessment in the round to which it was submitted.

If you wish to request an application form in a language other than English, please contact the Artists Services team at least 12 weeks before the closing date of the round to which you intend to apply.

We reserve the right to refuse an application form translation request if we believe there is no genuine reason for the request. We also reserve the right to refuse an application form translation if the time-frame for translation prevents us from providing a translated form in time for assessment in the round to which it was submitted. 

Where you have supplied creative content in a language other than English, we may engage an industry expert to provide the peers with an evaluation of the artistic merit of that creative content. 

You can speak with staff at the Australia Council in your first language. Please telephone the Translating and Interpreting Service on 131 450 (local call anywhere in Australia) and ask to be connected with the Australia Council. 

Applications that focus solely on academic studies, or are for activities that are part of assessable coursework are unlikely to be successful with our assessment panels. Assessment panels are also unlikely to support applications requesting the costs of academic fees or courses. 

If you wish to apply for study costs, explain to the panel how your project extends, or supplements, the course’s standard curriculum requirements. Also, bear in mind that your project will be assessed on artistic merit of the work. 

If you are applying for funding to complete a training program, course, workshop or diploma, explain how doing so will impact positively on your career or practice. 

Do you fund feature film, television or documentary? 

While we can support screen-based art, we do not generally support activities associated with feature film, television or documentary. See Screen Australia, the Federal Government’s primary agency for production of Australian screen activity. https://www.screenaustralia.gov.au/  

No, we do not offer quick response grants. Outside of our regular grants program, we do offer a number of other grants and opportunities. 

Yes. Early career artists are eligible to apply for funding through this category.  

Yes. Organisations can propose a program of projects and/or activities. This could be an organisation’s full artistic program for a given calendar year, for example.

We encourage applicants to be mindful of the following considerations: 

The activities should each contribute toward a clear, unifying overall objective –  for example,  the organisation’s artistic vision. It is important to demonstrate the rationale for the inclusion of these activities and how the overall program will align with the organisation’s vision.

In proposing a program consisting of multiple projects or activities, it is possible that some individual projects may be less compelling than others. If you are submitting an application proposing multiple activities or projects, we encourage you to ensure that a similar level of consideration, planning, and artistic merit is common to each to avoid one component of your program potentially letting down the others. 

You may wish to consider using one of the 3 URLs you can provide as support material to link to a document that provides more detail about each individual project or activity in your program. 

As a national arts funding body, all Australia Council grant rounds are competitive. Success rates are usually between 15% and 20%. Success rate for this category may be higher depending on demand.

Yes. Projects must have a start date that falls after we notify you of the outcome of your application, and no later than one year from that date. We will notify you of the outcome of your application approximately 12 weeks after the closing date. 

No. However, applications involving venues and partners are likely to be more competitive if their involvement is confirmed. 

Australia Council staff are available to assist you in understanding the purpose of the grant, application requirements, and submitting your application. Staff can assist over email, phone and using Skype. We cannot review application drafts. 

Additional support can be discussed where needed. Where the additional support required is beyond the scope of what our staff can provide, we may recommend speaking to an appropriate organisation for further assistance. 

The best applications are those where the voice of the artist comes through. Where possible you, ‘the artist’, should write your application. Your manager may administer the grant on your behalf to undertake the financial and reporting requirements. 

If you are applying as an unincorporated entity, unincorporated association or partnership you do not need to have an administrator for your grant. However, you must be able to provide an ABN and bank account that are in the group’s name. If you cannot do this you must nominate an administrator. For more information about this, please contact us. 

All individual or organisation grant applicants based in Australia must have an active Australian Business Number (ABN). Individual applicants without an ABN may have their grant administered by an individual or organisation with an ABN. Organisations operating outside of Australia do not need an ABN to apply. Individuals based outside of Australia may not need an ABN to apply, depending on their circumstances (please check with your accountant or tax advisor). 

Furthermore, the name of the applicant must match the name of the ABN and the name of the bank account into which we pay the funds. There are no exceptions to this rule. If you cannot provide an ABN and bank account that are in the same name as the applicant, you will need to nominate an administrator for your grant. 

For more information about this, please contact us.

Grants can be considered income by Centrelink. The amount is generally assessed as a lump sum and could affect your Centrelink payment for the financial year. Artists who are running a business (even on a small scale) may have their grant treated differently. It is possible to have your grant paid to an administering body if you wish. 

Applicants should contact Centrelink on 13 28 50 for advice. Additionally, Centrelink’s Financial Information Service (FIS) is an education and information service available to everyone in the community and may be of benefit to applicants who also receive assistance through the social security system. To contact FIS phone 13 23 00. 

Yes.  The Australia Council expects that artists professionally employed or engaged on Australia Council-funded activities will be remunerated for their work in line with industry standards. Payment of artist fees should be reflected in your application budget. 

For more information, see our Payment of Artists page. 

Our grants program is primarily designed to support projects that have a defined start and end date, rather than ongoing organisational administration costs. Project budgets that include a high proportion of administration costs may be less competitive. However, if you do need funding to cover administration costs directly related to the delivery of your project, you can include them in your grant request. 

Grants paid by the Australia Council may be considered part of your income in a financial year and may be subject to tax. You must determine your own taxation liabilities. We suggest you consult your financial adviser or contact the Australian Taxation Office on 13 28 66. 

No. The Australia Council encourages applicants whose projects will take place in regional and remote locations to budget accurately and realistically, as it is recognised that costs may differ between regions and major cities. 

If you are GST-registered when you receive an Australia Council grant, the Australia Council will pay the grant amount plus GST. The budget provided in your application should be exclusive of GST. 

Yes. The Australia Council recognises that funding may be required for access costs incurred by applicants with disability, or for costs associated with working with artists with disability – who may have particular access needs (e.g. use of an interpreter, translation services, specific technical equipment, support worker/carer assistance). Access costs are viewed as legitimate expenses and may be included in an applicant’s budget. The Australia Council encourages applicants to ensure that their work is accessible to everyone. Therefore, budgets may also include costs associated with making activities accessible to a wide range of people (e.g. performances using Auslan, captioning, audio description, temporary building adjustments, materials in other formats such as Braille or CD). 

The application form calculates your grant request as the difference between your total cash income, and your total cash costs. The gap between these two numbers is the grant request. In-kind contributions are not included in this calculation. 

Total cash costs – total cash income = grant request 

For example – 

$50,000 cash costs – $30,000 cash income = $20,000 Australia Council grant request. 

Yes. The Australia Council recognises that childcare needs may impede access to employment in the arts. Accordingly, childcare is a legitimate expense to include in an applicant’s budget. 

We encourage our applicants to seek funding from other sources to cover the complete costs of their projects. While it does depend on the size of your grant request to us, we would expect that applicants with large grant requests would also secure funding from elsewhere to cover all costs associated with a large-scale project. 

Yes. Out-of-pocket expenses such as telephone calls or petrol for travel, are recognised as legitimate expenses and may be included in an applicant’s budget. 

Yes. In-kind support refers to resources, goods and services (for example, use of a venue, materials, and/or people’s time) provided by yourself or others either free of charge, or below market value. Detailing in-kind costs in the budget is important as it gives peers a full understanding of the viability of your project and levels of support you are receiving. In-kind costs are also an expense so, when you save your application, any in-kind income you included will auto-populate to the expenses side of the budget. 

Translation Fund for Literature

Support for international publishers to translate Australian works by living authors of creative writing, and Australian publishers to translate non-English works into English by Australian translators.

About the opportunity

International publishers may apply for a contribution towards the translation of Australian works by living authors of creative writing such as fiction, poetry, writing for children and young people, graphic novels, and narrative non-fiction (defined as autobiography, biography, essays, histories, literary criticism, or analytical prose).  Most of the funding must be used to pay the rights holder and translator.

Australian publishers may also apply to support the translation of non-English language works to English, providing they are using an Australian translator.

Contributions of AUD $5,000 per successful applicant are available.

Who can apply:

  • International publishers may apply for a contribution towards the translation of Australian works of creative writing, and a contribution towards promotion of the translated work
  • Australian publishers may apply to support the translation of foreign language works provided they are using Australian translators, and a contribution towards promotion of the translated work
  • A maximum of two applications per publisher / applicant will be accepted per closing date.

Who can’t apply:

  • Applicants who do not hold the rights of the work to be translated
  • Indie (self-published) authors
  • Applicants who have not provided the required support material – the translator’s CV and a signed copy of the rights agreement
  • You exceed the maximum number of applications per publisher/applicant beyond two for this closing date
  • Individuals and organisations who have an overdue grant report
  • Individuals and organisations who owe money to Creative Australia.

Your application must comply with the following protocols. We may contact you to request further information during the assessment process, or if successful, as a condition of your funding.

Protocols for using First Nations Cultural and Intellectual Property in the Arts
All applications involving First Nations artists, communities or subject matter must adhere to these Protocols, providing evidence of this in their application and support material. More information on the First Nations Protocols is available here.

Commonwealth Child Safe Framework
All successful applicants are required to comply with all Australian law relating to employing or engaging people who work or volunteer with children, including working with children checks and mandatory reporting. Successful organisations who provide services directly to children, or whose funded activities involve contact with children, will additionally be required to implement the National Principles for Child Safe Organisations.

Applications will be considered by Creative Australia in consultation with industry advisors.

Applications will be assessed against two criteria.

1. Quality

Assessors will consider:

  • the quality of the work submitted for translation
  • why this work is the right fit for your list
  • the track record of the translator.

2. Viability

Assessors will consider the publisher’s ability to market and promote the translated work.

The types of questions we ask in the application form include:

  • a title for your application
  • a description of your proposed activities that comprises:
    • a brief description of the literary title
    • why you consider that this work or author is right for your list
    • a description of your publishing house, if relevant
    • the language of the proposed edition
    • how many copies of the book will be printed (minimum print run of 500 copies)
    • how and where the book will be distributed and promoted
    • for Australian publishers: whether you have published any other translated works, listing comparable titles.
  • An outline of how the funds will be spent that comprises:
    • the retail price of the book
    • the amount the author/rights holder will be paid.

You must submit support material with your application. Creative Australia and industry advisors will review this support material to gain a better sense of your project.

Your application will only be eligible if it includes the following essential support material:

  • the translator’s CV, listing their relevant experience
  • a copy of the signed rights agreement. If your agreement is in a language other than English, please also provide a brief summary in English.

The following support material may also be included with your application:

  • evidence of other titles in your catalogue, or previous books published.

Our preferred method of receiving support material is via URLs (weblinks).

You can provide up to three URLs that link to content that is relevant to your proposal.

If you cannot supply support material via URLs, you may upload support material to your application as written material (Word and PDF).

Translation Fund for Literature FAQs

Yes. You must provide copies of rights agreements for all titles in the series. You may include more than one title in the same application. You may also submit separate applications for each title. A maximum of two applications per publisher/applicant is allowed per round.

No. We need evidence that you hold the rights to the work in the application.

Yes. However, you will need to provide a copy of the rights agreement and details of how the work will be published and distributed if there is no publisher in place. Applications from translators who don’t have a publisher in place can be submitted to Arts Projects for Individuals and Groups.

Yes. However, most of the funds should go towards the costs of translation.

Yes. However, you will need to explain how the funds will be allocated. The funds should not be used for printing and editorial costs.

No. We can only pay grants in Australian dollars. Please make sure your bank can transact in Australian dollars or has an established relationship with an intermediary bank that can.

If you need help with your application, contact Artists Services.

Arts Projects for Organisations

This program funds a range of activities that deliver benefits to the arts sector and wider public, including national and international audiences and communities.

 

About the program

This program funds a range of activities that deliver benefits to the arts sector and wider public, including national and international audiences and communities. Organisations that undertake arts programs, projects, or that provide services to artists, are welcome to apply.

Organisations can propose a single project, a suite of projects or an annual program of activity.

Grants are available from $20,000 to $100,000. Supported activities must last no longer than two years from the proposed start date.

Please read the following grant guidelines.

If you need advice about applying, contact an Artists Services Officer.

Who can apply

You can only submit one application from your organisation’s account to each closing date for Arts Projects for Organisations.

Only organisations may apply to this category.

Organisations that provide a service to the arts may apply.

International organisations can apply for projects that benefit practicing Australian artists, their work or Australian audiences.

Applications for funding to the First Nations panel must come from First Nations organisations.


Who can’t apply

You can’t apply for a grant if:

  • you have already applied to this closing date for Arts Projects for Organisations
  • you are applying to our International Engagement Fund for the same activities
  • you have an overdue grant report
  • you owe money to Creative Australia
  • you are an individual or group
  • you receive multi-year investment through the National Performing Arts Partnership Framework
  • your organisation receives an amount of over $160,000 per year through any Creative Australia multi-year investment program in the years 2025 to 2028 – if you are unsure please contact your Multi Year Investment Manager or Artists Services.

What can be applied for

We fund a range of activities, for example:

  • professional skills development, including mentoring and residencies
  • the creation of new work
  • practice based research
  • creative development
  • experimentation
  • collaborations and exchanges
  • touring
  • festivals
  • productions
  • exhibitions
  • performances
  • publishing
  • recording
  • activities to develop the arts sector
  • promotion and marketing
  • market development activity
  • activities that creatively engage communities.

Activities can take place nationally, internationally, online, or a combination of in-person and online (hybrid activities).

If your project involves a partnership or collaboration with organisations in the National Performing Arts Partnership Framework you must discuss your application with us before applying. The Partnership Organisation must make a significant contribution to the activity, and the outcome must not be already programmed in the mainstage season of the company.

Access costs are legitimate expenses and may be included in your application. We encourage applicants to ensure that their work is accessible to everyone. Budgets may include costs associated with making activities accessible to a wide range of people (e.g. performances using Auslan, translation to other languages, captioning, audio description, temporary building adjustments, and materials in other formats).

If you are a d/Deaf applicant, an applicant with disability, or are working with d/Deaf artists or artists with disability, you may apply for access costs associated with the use of an interpreter, translation services, specific technical equipment, carer or support worker assistance. Please contact Artists Services to discuss your specific needs.


What can’t be applied for

You can’t apply for:

  • projects or activities that do not involve or benefit Australian practicing artists or arts professionals
  • projects or activities that do not have a clearly defined arts component
  • projects that have already taken place
  • the same projects you are applying for via our International Engagement Fund
  • activities engaging with First Nations content, artists and communities that do not adhere to Creative Australia’s First Nations Cultural & Intellectual Property Protocols.

Your application must comply with the following Protocols. We may contact you to request further information during the assessment process, or if successful, as a condition of your funding.

Protocols for using First Nations Cultural and Intellectual Property in the Arts

All applications involving First Nations artists, communities or subject matter must adhere to these Protocols, provide evidence of this in their application and support material. More information on the First Nations Protocols is available here.

Commonwealth Child Safe Framework

All successful applicants are required to comply with all Australian law relating to employing or engaging people who work or volunteer with children, including working with children checks and mandatory reporting. Successful organisations who provide services directly to children, or whose funded activities involve contact with children, will additionally be required to implement the National Principles for Child Safe Organisations.

You must choose which peer assessment panel you wish to apply to.  The panels are:

Learn more about assessment panels. If you are unsure which peer assessment panel to choose, contact Artists Services.

Learn more about how we assess your application.

You must address three assessment criteria in this category. For some criteria, you will be asked to choose between two or more options.

Under each criterion are bullet points indicating what peers may consider when assessing your application. You do not need to respond to every bullet point listed.

First criterion

You must choose one of the following two options:

Quality of artistic or cultural activities

Peers will assess the quality of the artistic and cultural activities at the centre of your proposal. They may consider:

  • vision, ideas and artistic rational
  • benefit and impact on careers, artistic or cultural practice
  • level of innovation, ambition, experimentation or risk-taking
  • rigour and clear articulation of creative, engagement or development processes
  • significance of the work within area of practice and communities
  • contribution to diverse cultural expression
  • timeliness and relevance of work
  • quality of previous work
  • responses to previous work from artistic or cultural peers, or the public.

or

Quality of services for the arts

Peers will assess the quality of the services for the arts at the centre of your proposal.

They may consider:

  • quality of the services provided
  • impact of services for artists, arts professionals, participants, or audiences
  • diversity and breadth of those benefitting from the services
  • capacity-building potential, including a contribution to sustainable arts practice
  • skills and professional development opportunities for artists and arts professionals
  • breadth and quality of community engagement, partnerships, and collaborations
  • responsiveness to identified need or demand
  • innovation and improvement of operating models and frameworks.

Second criterion

Viability

Peers will assess the viability of your proposal.

They may consider:

  • capacity to deliver the proposed activities or services
  • relevance and timeliness of proposed activity
  • skills and ability of artists, arts professionals, collaborators, or participants involved, and relevance to activity
  • realistic and achievable planning and resource use, including, where relevant, contingency and safety plans for activities involving public presentation, national or international travel
  • meaningful evaluation
  • appropriate payments to participating artists, arts professionals, collaborators, participants, or cultural consultants
  • the safety and wellbeing of people involved in the project
  • governance arrangements
  • role of partners or collaborators, including confirmation of involvement
  • diversity and scale of income and co-funding, including earned income, grants, sponsorship and in-kind contributions
  • where relevant to the project, evidence that the Protocols for First Nations Cultural and Intellectual Property in the Arts have been adhered to
  • evidence of appropriate consultation and engagement with participants, audiences or communities
  • where relevant, evidence that you have considered and addressed any access issues associated with your project
  • where relevant, evidence of an environmental impact plan which may include cost-benefits.

Third criterion

Alignment

The third criterion tells us how the outcome of your proposal aligns with our strategic goals, as described in our Corporate Plan.

You must choose one of the four options that best reflects the primary outcome of your proposal. Please contact Artists Services if you are unsure which criterion to select.

Peers will consider how your proposal aligns to the strategic objective you select. Remember, you do not need to respond to every bullet point listed.

Australians are transformed by arts and creativity

This criterion is about Australian audiences and experiences. For example, your project may

  • create inspiring artistic and cultural experiences and works
  • provide opportunities for communities to come together, celebrate and connect
  • provide creative and accessible experiences in unexpected places and ways
  • increase and diversify participation in arts and culture, particularly among diverse cultural groups and regional / remote communities
  • increase the experience of First Nations arts and culture by Australians
  • explore emerging mediums and digital technologies to create, share and experience art, creating connections with new audiences
  • demonstrate strong audience development and engagement strategies.
  • foster international opportunities that benefit Australian audiences.

or

Our arts reflect us

This criterion is about diversity, access, and equity. For example, your project may

  • enhance, strengthen, and celebrate community and social connections
  • address barriers to participating in or experiencing arts and culture
  • support artistic and creative work that reflects the diversity of contemporary Australia
  • support artists and arts professionals from culturally and linguistically diverse backgrounds, and those in regional and remote Australia, to make work
  • supports artists and arts professionals with disability to extend their arts practice, networks, or skills
  • support First Nations people’s artistic and cultural expression
  • engage young people in the creation of work
  • promote the diversity of Australian arts and creativity internationally.

or

First Nations arts and culture are cherished

This criterion is about First Nations self-determination and artistic and cultural expression. For example, your project may

  • strengthen and embed First Nations arts and culture within arts and cultural organisations, leadership roles and sectors
  • grow experiences of First Nations arts and culture by supporting artists and organisations to create and present work locally and/or internationally
  • promote greater access and participation in First Nations arts experiences
  • support international opportunities for First Nations arts and cultural practitioners
  • support First Nations young people’s artistic and cultural expression
  • uphold First Nations cultural rights through self-determination and recognition of cultural and intellectual property.

or

Arts and creativity are thriving

This criterion is about creation, capabilities, distribution, and reach. For example, your project may

  • enable Australian artists to create new works
  • enable risk taking, experimentation and freedom of expression in the creation and realisation of new works
  • develop the skills and capabilities of artists and arts professionals
  • develop sustainable and viable artists careers and arts organisations, including diverse income streams or business models
  • support a safe environment and wellbeing for people working in the arts
  • enable national or international opportunities for Australian artists and arts professionals
  • engage international audiences and communities with Australian work
  • use emerging technologies to experiment with content, format, delivery, or business models
  • develop strong partnerships and collaborations.

The types of questions we ask in the application form include:

  •  a title for your project
  • a summary of your project
  • a brief description of the organisation applying
  • an outline of your project and what you want to do
  • a timetable or itinerary for your project
  • a description of the outcome your project delivers
  • a projected budget which details the expenses, income, and in-kind support of the project
  • supporting material as relevant to your project, including examples of your work, bios of additional artists, and letters of support or permission from participants, communities, First Nations organisation, and Elders.

You should submit support material with your application. The peer assessors may review this support material to help them gain a better sense of your project.

We do not accept application-related support material submitted via post. Application-related material received by post will not be assessed and will be returned to the sender. If you think you will have difficulty submitting your support material online, or need advice on what type of material to submit, please contact Artists Services.

There are four types of support material you may submit:

1. Artistic support material

This should include relevant, recent examples of your artistic or cultural work, or the services you provide.

Types of support material we accept

Our preferred method of receiving support material is via URLs (weblinks).

You can provide up to three URLs (weblinks) that link to content that is relevant to your proposal. This may include video, audio, images, or written material.

These URLs can include a total of:

  • 10 minutes of video and/or audio recording
  • 10 images
  • 10 pages of written material (for example, excerpts of literary writing).

Please note: Our peer assessors will not access any URLs that require them to log in or sign up to a platform. Please do not provide links to Spotify or other applications that require users to log in or pay for access.

If you are linking to media files that are private or password protected like Vimeo, please provide the password in the password field on the application form.

Other accepted file formats

If you cannot supply support material via URLs, you may upload support material to your application in the following formats:

  • video (MP4, QuickTime, and Windows Media)
  • audio (MP3 and Windows Media)
  • images (JPEG and PowerPoint)
  • written material (Word and PDF).

2. Biographies and CVs

You can include a brief bio or curriculum vitae (CV) for key artists, personnel or other collaborators involved in your project.

Brief bios or CV information should be presented as a single document no longer than two A4 pages in total.

3. Letters of support

Individuals, groups or organisations can write letters in support of your project. A support letter should explain how the project or activity will benefit you, other artists or arts professionals, participants or the broader community. It can also detail the support or involvement of key project partners, or evidence of consultation.

If relevant to your activity, letters of support must provide evidence of appropriate permissions and support from First Nations organisations, communities, and Elders. Please refer to the First Nations Protocols for more information.

You can include up to five letters of support, with each letter not exceeding one A4 page.

4.  Letter of confirmation

If your application involves an international presentation, you must provide letters of confirmation from your presenting partners, such as festivals and venues. Each letter must include confirmation of any invitations, partners fees or contributions to the activity, whether cash or in-kind.

Please provide a single link to all letters, or scan the letters into one PDF file and attach to your application.

Frequently asked questions

Download our FAQs for using the Application Management System in Word and PDF.

You can only submit one application per closing date to each of the following categories: Arts Projects for Individuals and Groups, Fellowships and Arts Projects for Organisations.