23 Jun 2022

This content is tagged as All Artforms .

NEWS

Arts Grant Round six

Our recent Arts Grants Round 6 funding attracted a high number of strong applications; we received nearly three times the available budget in requests.

We received 202 eligible applications, with a total of $7,581,265 requested. We have offered 61 grants totalling $2,709,712 to support projects by New Zealand artists and practitioners in this funding round, across the three funding pools (General, Māori and Pacific).

As part of the additional Government funding to help the arts sector respond to the challenges of the Delta variant of COVID-19 (announced in September 2021) we had an additional $1.2 million for both rounds 2 and 3, increasing the budget to $3.6 million per round. Unfortunately, we weren’t able to boost this round in the same way and have returned to our original budget, as we did recently in both round 4 and round 5.

We distributed the additional pūtea in the last quarter of 2021 through our existing funding and investment programmes. This included increasing the budget for the Arts Grants programme budget in rounds 2 and 3.

At this stage of the cycle we are now having to revert to our pre COVID-19 budget, this means that we are unable to support many of the excellent applications we receive.

September 2021 announcement: Creative New Zealand welcomes an additional $5 million from Government to support the arts sector through Delta

Results of the latest round (round 6)

The 61 grants totalling $2,709,712 have been offered to support projects broken down as follows:

  • General Arts: 39 projects totalling $1,341,828 were supported. $5,230,479 was requested by 162 applicants.
  • Ngā toi Māori: 12 projects totalling $744,447 were supported. $1,071,408 was requested by 18 applicants.
  • Pacific Arts: 10 projects totalling $623,438 were supported. $1,279,378 was requested by 22 applicants.

Also:

  • 24 of the funded projects supported the development of arts practice and the creation of new work.
  • 13 supported projects enabling New Zealanders to experience high-quality arts.
  • 7 supported projects enabling New Zealanders to participate in the arts.
  • 6 supported building the resilience of the New Zealand arts sector.
  • 11 supported New Zealand arts to gain international success.

See who got funded in Arts Grants Round 6 – including artforms and regional breakdown

Overall comments

Here we provide an overview of the results for Arts Grants round 6.

There were some common features in the strongest applications for this round. These comments apply to all artforms and applications for Arts Grants round 6.

In this Arts Grants round, the strongest applications tended to include:

  • strong COVID-19 contingency planning (clear descriptions of traffic light change impacts and a consideration of future planning)
  • clearly expressed ideas and timelines
  • projects that considered accessibility through multi-platform delivery and/or that had a long life and delivered high public value
  • fair remuneration for all contributors
  • clarity about the gap the project fills in the current arts and culture landscape
  • clearly expressed project aims
  • evidence not only of the artist’s ability, but of a team with the skills to deliver the project
  • detailed information about the people involved in the People section of the application
  • letters of intent/confirmation from all project participants in the People section of the application
  • support material that didn’t assume too much background knowledge from the assessors about the applicant, the applicants’ values and ways of working
  • clear examples of how their arts practice was to be developed by doing the project
  • concise support material directly relevant to the project
  • a short and clear direction in the text to a relevant attachment so the key information could be easily found
  • a detailed description of:
    • the proposed project and its goals
    • a strong project plan and how it would be carried out
    • clear and achievable timeframes.
  • letters of support that were recent, relevant and specific to the application rather than generic letters

When discussing budgets, the strongest applications tended to include:

  • thorough and accurate budgets, using the Creative New Zealand templates, that clearly show:
    • fair and appropriate remuneration/payment for both artists and practitioners
    • realistic revenue forecasting
    • how any funding gaps will be funded with evidence of support from relevant parties.
  • clear financial narrative accompanying the budgets that includes any assumptions made in the budget, including the extent to which “in kind support” contributes to the overall cost of the project

For Ngā Toi Māori, the strongest applications also:

  • showed clearly how Mātauranga Māori is used in the process and visible in the final result
  • included budgets with fair remuneration/payment for the artists, kaumātua and/or tohunga.
  • included Cultural Advisers that had expertise in the chosen artform (if that was relevant to the application).

For Pacific Arts applications, the strongest applications also:

  • showed an understanding of what it means by ‘Pasifika-led and supported’
  • were clear about how the benefits of the project were not just focused on the applicant, but emerging artists too.

General feedback for emerging artists and practitioners

  • Assessors want to understand your voice as a practitioner, as well as your practice, so think about that when drafting your application.
  • Many emerging practitioners enlist the assistance of established artists to support them in the development of work or their practice. It’s useful to understand why you have chosen your mentor, how they will help you and what this process will look like. 

General feedback for established artists and practitioners

  • When applying for the development and presentation of new work, assessors are interested in how this work fits in your future or previous body of work. How will this challenge, expand or deepen your practice? How does this manifest in workshops or rehearsals (if appropriate)? What is the feedback process to continue refining your practice? 
  • If your project includes emerging performers, what is the process you have put in place to help them develop as practitioners? 

About Arts Grants

Arts Grants offer short-term project funding for New Zealand artists, arts practitioners and arts organisations (including groups and collectives). This funding enables more sustainable careers, encourages innovation and the development of arts practice, and provides opportunities for diverse communities to access the arts.

More about the Arts Grants programme