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Creative Connections: Session 4

Tips For An Independent Artist

Guest panelist:

Lenine Bourke – Producer, consultant, educator and strategist, Independent Artist: Lenine Bourke (BA Hons, BED) is currently a freelance artist and consultant. She is Completing her PHD on contemporary arts and new public pedagogies. She is developing new work responding to climate justice and collaborating with All the Queens Men on TOY – a new work for children unpacking gender diversity.

 

Watch The Webinar Recording


About This Episode

From an artist perspective, what are the practical ways that we can ensure we sustain ourselves over the next period – financially, practically and emotionally?

This session will explore some practical and personal admin that independent artists and cultural workers can apply to prepare and organise their lives. Lenine Bourke, independent consultant/artists/producer shares her personal approach she is taking to stabilise her life while her career is on the brink of massive change… again.


About The Series

Creative Connections is an online webinar series for the cultural and arts sectors and will offer practical, accessible and useful content delivered by industry experts on key topics and emerging themes.

The series is focused around the theme of adaptation, and sessions will explore digital adaptation, leadership adaptation and arts practice adaptation. Sessions will be facilitated by experts in specific topic areas, with over thirty sessions available.



Lenine Bourke

Lenine Bourke (BA Hons, BED) is currently a freelance artist and consultant. She is Completing her PHD on contemporary arts and new public pedagogies. She is developing new work responding to climate justice and collaborating with All the Queens Men on TOY – a new work for children unpacking gender diversity. She was with the Australia Council for the Arts as Director of Community Partnerships from 2014 – 2016. 

Prior to this she was the Artistic Director of Contact Inc an arts and cultural organisation committed to social change, ans Executive Director of Young People and the Arts Australia, the national peak body for youth arts. She has a broad range of professional experiences in the arts and cultural sectors, which have taken her work throughout Australia, New Zealand, Indonesia, Korea, Denmark, Thailand, Finland, Canada and the USA. She has led various arts organisations and projects, and worked for peak bodies, local and state government, statutory authorities, educational institutions, galleries, festivals and artists groups. She is a skilled artist and arts executive who has deliberately developed a career across a wide variety of art forms, research, policy development, writing and service delivery. She has focused the majority of her work in engaging children and young people, as well as diverse communities. 

She was recognised as a young leader in 2006 when she was awarded the inaugural Kirk Robson award from the Australia Council and again in 2009 when she received the Brisbane City Council Lord Mayor’s creative fellowship to undertake research in the area of Social Practice and in 2013 – 2014 completed a 1 year Fellowship from the Australia Council on the intersection of community engaged and socially engaged arts practices.