... a happy new year

... a happy new year

To friends of Arts for Health who have worked with us in some way this last year, we hope 2016 is a great one for you and long may our friendships and collaborations continue. Excuse the google translator - and I'm aware that not everyone celebrates new year right now!

Laimingų Naujųjų metų - 明けましておめでとうございます - Gelukkig nieuwjaar - Gott nytt år - Onnellista uutta vuotta - Bhliain nua sásta - Head uut aastat - سنة جديدة سعيدة - Felice anno nuovo - с новым годом - Mutlu Yıllar - Blwyddyn Newydd Dda - Feliz año nuevo - 新年快樂 - Gleðilegt nýtt ár - Jabulela unyaka omusha - نیا سال مبارک ہو - Godt nytår

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An Eternal Tree

A small thing from the heart of midwinter - Larisa. A 20 minute documentary from film maker Elem Klimov dedicated to Larisa Shepitko. It is beautiful in so many ways and has at its core, a meditation on love and perhaps, how we might contribute to the world - our possibilities.



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✴︎ {...} ✴︎

Almost the end of another year and a blog crammed with funding opportunities, PhD studentships and a significant exploration of the barriers to marginalised and disabled artists attempting to access mainstream arts opportunities. 

If you celebrate christmas - have a lovely break - and I hope that 2016 is a good one for us all.


PhD Studentships 
The University of Brighton is inviting applications for funded PhD studentship topics to commence in September 2016. Expressions of interest to work on topics related to drawing and embodied experience, drawing and wellbeing or drawing in health contexts are particularly welcomed. For an informal discussion on developing an application on any of these themes, please contact Dr Philippa Lyon, p.lyon@brighton.ac.uk, at the earliest opportunity. Closing deadline for final applications to University of Brighton is 22 January 2016. Deadline for TECHNE funding route is 7 February 2016.

Fair Access to the Arts
Creative Future has just completed Arts Council funded research into the barriers marginalised and disabled artists face when accessing mainstream arts opportunities.

Pink Ribbon Foundation Grants
The Pink Ribbon Foundation has announced it is now accepting applications for its 2016 funding round and that the closing date will be the 27th May 2016. The Foundation is a grant making trust that provides financial support to UK charities which relieve the needs of people who are suffering from, or who have been affected by breast cancer or who work to advance the understanding of breast cancer, its early detection and treatment. Any charity working in the field of breast cancer can apply for a grant. Applications from general cancer charities must demonstrate that the grants requested will be applied to benefit those affected by breast cancer. Where applications relate to general services, details must be given of how many (and what proportion) of the total number benefiting from the charity's work are affected by breast cancer. Read more at:

Wellcome Trust: Arts Awards 
The Wellcome Trust is inviting organisations and individuals to apply for funding through its Arts Awards. The Arts Awards support projects that engage the public with biomedical science through the arts.

Applications are invited for projects of up to £40,000 through their small grants programme, and for projects above £40,000 through their large grant programme. The aim of the awards is to support arts projects that reach new audiences which may not traditionally be interested in science and provide new ways of thinking about the social, cultural and ethical issues around contemporary science.

The next application deadline for small projects is the 4th March 2016. The deadline for large projects is the 17th February 2016. Read more at:

New Arts Council Funding  
A new £17.5 million Catalyst: Evolve programme from the Arts Council launches on 14th January 2016. The fund will support projects that enhance the capacity of arts and cultural organisations to fundraise. Arts and cultural organisations can apply for grants of between £75,000 and £150,000 over three years. To apply applicants must be able to demonstrate an emerging track record in fundraising from at least one of the following - individuals; trusts and foundations; and businesses. It is expected that about 150 grants will be awarded. All activities funded by the programme must be completed by 31 August 2019. The deadline for applications is 19 February 2016. Read more at:

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Pigs (Three Different Ones)

We all love a dancing pig or two, don’t we? This - the earliest footage I've seen - is from the first Edwardian arts & health showcase, and features a very well-dressed pig and it's provocative partner. Stunning.


OK, that was the porcine treat, now here's a grim reality - Lancashire County Council are reducing their cultural services across the county over the next few years. 40 out of 74 Libraries will be closing over the next 15 months, and 5 out of 10 museums will close in March 2016. 

There will be an arts grants budget until March 2018, but after this there will be no arts funding. 

It is a little ironic then, that the next news tidbit, is that Arts Council England is inviting applications through its Grants for the Arts Libraries Fund. The Fund is looking to support projects delivered by public libraries or library authorities working in partnership with artists and cultural organisations across all art forms to encourage communities to take part in artistic and cultural activities. Public libraries can apply for grants of £1,000 to £100,000 for activities lasting up to three years. The lead applicant must be a public library, public library authority, network of public library authorities, or organisation managing a public library authority. Applications are being accepted on a rolling basis until 31 March 2018. Click on the Book of Love below, for more - or - listen to the melancholic music instead.


'So long, and thanks for all the fish’!
...and so, a final farewell from Jayne Howard and Arts for Health Cornwall. Click on the hearts to read her lovely message.


Shared Ground Fund 
The Paul Hamlyn Foundation has launched a new programme that makes grants to not-for-profit organisations that work with young people, and/or work that seeks to influence relevant policy or practice in immigration. The "Shared Ground" programme will provide financial support for projects to test new approaches and explore ways of addressing new challenges. Applications must contribute to one or both aims of the Shared Ground Fund.
These are:
"Living well together" - supporting work which helps communities experiencing high levels of migration become stronger and more connected
"Staying safe" - ensuring that young migrants in greatest need can get help and support.
There are two kinds of grants available:
Shared Ground ‘explore and test' grants - to help explore and test new approaches and ways of addressing new issues (awards will be for a maximum of £60,000, usually for up to two years).
Shared Ground ‘more and better' grants - larger grants to help develop and embed more established activities (awards will be for between £100,000 and £400,000 for up to four years). Click on the bathroom mirror for details.

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WAR

Time for reflection, I think.*


Here’s a painting by Albert Namatjira. I include it, as it marks a time and space in this blog’s history and future - and in the life of your blogger. A marker.

As I shared ‘…all the time, the buzzing’ in Wales, all jet-lagged and bleary eyed, my thoughts turned to friends and colleagues and all the wheels that turn in our arts/health world. So much happens as we all beaver-on in our countries, towns, streets and individual minds.


A question from the floor in Cardiff - in essence - has this arts/health agenda got political teeth -  momentum - a future? My response - if it’s ‘on trend’ it’s doomed to fail. If its commandeered by the opportunist middle managers, filling a ‘hole in the market’ - then it’s riddled with disease. But if it’s born on the streets, evolving, changing, proactive and responsive - driven by vision, born of a passion that things can be different - then it is rich and nuanced and will feed generations of people - equal humans who might not yet know, that cultural change is driven by them, and not those who simply dress up in the garb of leaders. This change is happening despite the bloated egos of those who position themselves as leaders of innovation. The people are the decision makers. We are a social movement and let’s remember that word which will not be excised from our lexicon - passion.
Superb to meet like-minded, free thinkers in Wales. Thank you.


   
Here’s a painting by Breughel - it’s been here before, and will be again - I include it, as it marks a time and space in this blog’s history and future - and in the life of your blogger. Deja vu.


Arts and Health Check Up, Check In...
...now open for bookings
Bookings are now being accepted for Arts and Health Check Up, Check In, the unique arts and health get-together planned by artsandhealth.ie, WHAT, Create and Dublin City Council’s The LAB. Taking place on 29 January 2016, this event aims to take the pulse of arts and health in Ireland and promote solidarity and connection among practitioners. Set against the backdrop of 1916 commemorations, Arts and Health Check Up, Check In will explore the notion of a shared manifesto for this field of practice.


Lloyds Bank Foundation Announces Next Funding Round 
The Lloyds Bank Foundation for England & Wales, which provides funding to charities for projects to help people break their cycle of disadvantage, has announced that its grants programmes will re-open for enquires on the 4th January 2016. The Foundations operates two funding programmes. These are:

"Invest" which is a flexible, long term core funding programme for charities helping disadvantaged people. Grants are up to £25,000 per year for between 2 and 6 years, with the opportunity for continuation funding for up to six years in total

"Enable" which is a smaller and shorter grants programme for charities that have identified clear development needs. This funding aims to help the organisations deliver their mission more effectively.

These grants are up to a total £15,000 for up to two years. The funding is available to registered charities and charitable incorporated organisations (CIOs) with an income of between £25,000 and £1 million. To be eligible, organisations are expected to be working with people 17 years or older, experiencing multiple disadvantage at one of the critical points in their life. The only exceptions are young people who are under 17 years of age and young parents or looked after children and disabled young people moving into independent living.

The next deadline for applications is the 18th March 2016. Read more at: 

HEALTH RECORDS
Health Records is an exhibition of new work by artists Claire Tindale and Niki Colclough created in response to their experience delivering workshops on the Renal Unit at the Manchester Royal infirmary. The project was delivered in collaboration with CFCCA and Kidneys for Life
CFCCA's engagement programme works with artists to connect with individuals and communities, exploring themes such as cultural and social diversity as it supports UK audiences to better understand Chinese contemporary society through art. In Health Records the artists use practices developed through cultural exchange to respond to the personal identities and narratives of the patients on the Renal Unit.
You are warmly invited to the opening. 
Exhibition: 11 December 2015 - 24 January 2016

Preview: Thursday 10 December, 6-8pm 
RSVP HERE


*I was brought up with the war poets and all those moving elegiac stories from the trenches of the First World War. My diet of extremis now includes the work of Harold Pinter and his short poem, American Football, written during the Gulf War in 1991. It’s not just that its blistering, laser-guided, foul-mouthed lyricism - for me, never has a short poem provided such clarity to questions surrounding the justification of war. It’s worth bracing yourself before soaking up Michael Sheen’s rendition (although, the laughter grates on me) and if you want to dig deeper, read Michael Billington’s excellent account of the media’s refusal to publish it on the grounds of it being indecent. Indecent? Now I hear the word ‘medieval’ used by our PM and we know ‘crusade’ will be just around the corner. I’m certainly not a ‘terrorist sympathiser’, but a deeply concerned human - who will now meditate on Pinter - and who feels a horror at what lies ahead.


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