Projects supported by the Fund
Copyright Agency's Board is authorised by Copyright Agency's Constitution to allocate 1.5% of copyright licence fees collected to cultural development.
This is known as the Cultural Fund. The Cultural Fund supports a wide variety of projects that enhance the economic and creative climate in which Copyright Agency's members operate. It is also designed to provide practical assistance to creators to the benefit of the Australian cultural community generally.
For more information contact Copyright Agency's Cultural Fund Manager, Zoe Rodriguez by email culturalfund@copyright.com.au or phone +61 2 9394 7600
Click here to view application guidelines.
Projects supported by the Fund in 2011
4A Centre for Contemporary Asian Art ($15,000)
Copyright Agency Cultural Funding will help 4A Centre for Contemporary Asian Art to run intensive workshops for emerging curators.
Artlink Australia ($11,250)
Artlink Australia will use funding from Copyright Agency to translate the 2011 Indigenous Artlink issue into Chinese and launch it at three separate events in China in 2012.
Arts Access Victoria ($15,000)
Arts Access Victoria (AAV) will use Cultural Funding to run a writer in residence program for writers with a disability.
Asialink Centre, University of Melbourne ($15,000)
Support from Copyright Agency’s Cultural Fund will go towards the design of Asialink’s Pop-up Book Case Library for its tour of India in 2012 and 2013. The aim of the project is to build a profile for Australian writing in India.
Australian Book Review ($5,000)
Funding from Copyright Agency’s Cultural Fund will support the 2012 Calibre Prize for an outstanding essay. 2012 marks the sixth year of the prize.
Australian Cartoonists Association ($2,500)
Copyright Agency’s Cultural Fund supported the Australian Cartoonists Association’s 2011 annual conference and Stanley Awards.
Australian Embassy Beijing ($25,000)
The Australian Embassy Beijing will use support from Copyright Agency’s Cultural Fund to bring authors to China to participate in Australia Writers’ Week in Beijing.
Australian Society of Authors ($39,840 over three years)
The Australian Society of Authors (ASA) will use Cultural Funding to develop and implement a best-practice professional manuscript development service for Australia’s writers and picture book illustrators.
Australian Teachers of Media ($12,000)
Australian Teachers of Media (ATOM) are developing interactive educational study guides for the iPad.
Australian Theatre for Young People ($15,000)
Australian Theatre for Young People (ATYP) will use support from the Cultural Fund to commission and mentor young people to write new works. Entitled the 2012 Monologues Project, the works created will be published by Currency Press.
Black Swan State Theatre Company ($18,000)
With the support of Copyright Agency’s Cultural Fund, Black Swan State Theatre Company will run a project designed to provide dedicated support and mentoring for a Young Writer’s Group in 2012. The project aims to foster the talents of developing Western Australian playwrights to help them create new works.
Centre for Contemporary Photography ($18,150)
The Centre for Contemporary Photography (CCP) will be using Cultural Fund support to run a two day forum to provide Indigenous artists with practical training in photography and in issues relevant to them as artists.
Boomalli Aboriginal Artists Co-operative ($35,000)
Boomalli Aboriginal Artists Co-operative will use support from Copyright Agency’s Cultural Fund to develop and deliver a structured mentoring program for NSW Indigenous Artists.
Griffith Review ($35,000)
Griffith Review will use their grant from the Cultural Fund to commission authors to write novellas. Their aim is to revive novellas as a literary form, ideally for distribution and consumption on digital devices.
History Council of NSW ($20,000)
Copyright Agency Cultural Funding will support the History Council of NSW’s new Speaker Connect Program in 2012. The program will connect professional and academic historians with community and local government organisations through the provision of regional and suburban history events.
Illawarra Children’s Services ($60,000 over three years)
Illawarra Children’s Services’ Artspace will use funding from Copyright Agency’s Cultural Fund to support their Writing Futures in the Illawarra project, a three year program of writers’ residencies, reading a writing projects and one-off events.
Miles Franklin Literary Award ($50,000)
Copyright Agency’s Cultural Fund is supporting cash prizes for the authors shortlisted for the 2012 Miles Franklin Literary Award and an industry event celebrating the authors and their works.
Monash University ($45,000)
Monash University will use Cultural Funding to collaborate with Austlit and the University of Queensland to review the reception and cultural exchange related to translated Australian texts from 1945 onwards in the USA, Italy, Germany, China and Japan.
Museum of Contemporary Art ($35,450)
The Museum of Contemporary Art (MCA) will use Copyright Agency Cultural Funding to support the development of an expanded and reinvigorated online version of the DVD The Artists’ Voice.
NSW Department of Education ($36,000)
Funding from Copyright Agency’s Cultural Fund will be use to support three projects:
1. Art Express ($10,000)
2. Premier’s reading challenge
3. Premier’s teaching scholarship for innovation
Queensland Arts Council ($5,000)
With the support of Copyright Agency’s Cultural Fund, Queensland Arts Council will be able to continue touring its compact prints exhibition.
Screen Machine ($7,200)
Screen Machine has been publishing long form film criticism online since 2008, showcasing articles and reviews from mostly young Australian writers as well as international talent. Screen Machine will use support from Copyright Agency’s Cultural Fund to commission reviews of Australian films.
SPUNC ($14,000)
The Small Press Underground Networking Community (SPUNC) will use Copyright Agency funding to run a two day forum for small and independent publishers to discuss and review issues of particular and current concern.
Sydney Chamber Opera ($3,000)
Cultural Funding will support the cost of commissioning a new work to be produced and performed by Sydney Chamber Opera.
University of New South Wales Press ($150,000 over three years)
With the aim of elevating the profile of science writing in Australia University of New South Wales Press will use their support from Copyright Agency’s Cultural Fund to establish an annual prize for the best short piece of science writing and a print and e-book anthology of the best science writing of the year.
Writing Australia ($20,000)
Writing Australia will use support from Copyright Agency’s Cultural Fund to establish and manage a national network of writers’ residencies throughout Australia, called the PLACES Program.
Adelaide Writers’ Week ($15,000)
Part of the Adelaide Festival, the Adelaide Writers’ Week will use support from the Cultural Fund for two new initiatives: a Schools Day where international, national and local writers will present to secondary school students and the dedication program for the 2012 Writers’ Week.
Ampersand Magazine ($10,000)
Support from CAL’s Cultural Fund will go towards commissioning contributions from artists and authors to create the autumn 2012 edition of the magazine.
Association of Stories in Macao ($10,000
With the support of CAL’s Cultural Fund, the Association of Stories in Macao (ASM) will be able to bring Chinese translators and poets to Australia to undertake intensive translation workshops with the Australian poets whose works they will translate into Chinese.
Australian Book Review ($66,000 over 3 years)
CAL funding is to support the development of Australian Book Review’s (ABR) online promotion into the Asian-Pacific region. Their objective is to not only build ABR’s readership and profile, but also that of the Australian books reviewed.
Bankstown Youth Development Service ($10,000)
The Bankstown Youth Development Service (BYDS) is a not-for-profit community youth arts organisation which runs various projects across different media. CAL funding will support the costs of running BYDS’s Westside Writers’ Groups in 2012.
Bathurst Regional Council and the Australian Fossil & Mineral Museum ($11,000)
Support from the CAL Cultural Fund will go towards the Scattered Bones project, a joint initiative of Bathurst Regional Council and the Australian Fossil and Mineral Museum. Author Paul Stafford will be running writing workshops for students in Indigenous schools in NSW using video conferencing technology.
Charles Sturt University Journalism Internships ($30,000)
Charles Sturt University will use funding from CAL’s Cultural Fund to provide journalism internships for final year journalism students. They will be given the opportunity to take on an internship at a foreign media outlet, where they will learn about journalistic practices in other countries.
Children’s Book Council of Australia ($10,000)
Funding from CAL’s Cultural Fund will go towards bringing a number of Australian authors to the Children’s Book Council of Australia (CBCA) biennial conference of children’s authors and illustrators, to be held in Adelaide in June 2012.
Cultural Partnerships Australia ($60,000)
Cultural Partnerships Australia, based at Red Gate gallery in Beijing, will use CAL funding to establish a curatorial exchange program which will invite young Chinese curators to meet and work with established and emerging Indigenous artists, curators and gallery directors in Australia. Their aim is to develop Chinese appreciation of Australian art, Indigenous cultural and Australian curatorial practices.
Griffith REVIEW 2011 GREW Prize ($20,000)
With the support of CAL’s Cultural Fund, Griffith REVIEW will be encouraging emerging writers through the 2011 GREW Prize. Two or three promising young writers receive editing assistance and mentorship from Griffith REVIEW and a one week fellowship at Varuna Writers’ House.
Global Poetics Tour ($8,474)
Funding from CAL’s Cultural Fund will enable Global Poetics to bring three of the world’s best poetry slam poets to Australia to tour in August and September 2011. Their aim is to strengthen the profile and presence of Australian slam poetry and to introduce Australian slam poets to three of the world’s best.
Griffin Theatre ($90,000 over 3 years)
CAL funding will support Griffin Theatre’s emerging playwrights’ residency and the Griffin Manuscript Prize.
History Council of South Australia ($1,600)
With the support of the CAL Cultural Fund, the History Council of South Australia will be able to present its annual lecture as they celebrate the 175th anniversary of European settlement in South Australia.
Kaldor Public Art Projects ($49,000)
Kaldor Public Art Projects (KPAP) will use CAL funding for their InTouch: Contemporary Art in Primary Schools project. They will develop unique software modules for interactive whiteboards to provide a wider engagement with contemporary art in Australia.
Kaldor Public Art Projects ($49,500)
Support from the CAL Cultural Fund will go towards KPAP’s National Public Program Strategy project, in which two major international contemporary artists will tour Australia to give presentations aimed at both the tertiary/professional artists’ sector and at the schools sector. Events will be videoed and available online.
Kids’ Own Publishing ($11,000)
With the support of the CAL Cultural Fund, Kids’ Own Publishing will bring in authors and illustrators to run workshops with children as they create their own books. This is part of a project called The Book Factory.
Manning Clark House ($28,500)
Manning Clark House will use CAL funding to support the costs of two month-long residencies at the House for writers of Indigenous Australian History.
Meanjin ($24,000)
Meanjin will use support from the Cultural Fund to commission biographical works, photography and short written pieces about the photography.
National Association for the Visual Arts ($149,700 over 3 years)
With the support of the CAL Cultural Fund, the National Association for the Visual Arts (NAVA) will be developing and delivering a distance education package of online courses for visual artists, craftspeople and designers to assist in building their careers.
Ned Kelly Awards for Australian Crime Writing ($14,000)
The Ned Kelly Awards celebrate Australian Crime Writing and are highly regarded by writers, publishers, booksellers and the reading public in Australia and overseas. Support from the CAL Cultural Fund will go towards prize money for the 2011 Awards and judges’ fees.
New Mardi Gras ($4,500)
In 2011 the CAL Cultural Fund supported an exhibition at the Mardi Gras Gallery. In 2012, CAL funding will support a short story competition to be held in conjunction with the Mardi Gras.
Northern Rivers Writers Centre ($23,000)
Support from the CAL Cultural Fund will go towards the Northern Rivers Writers Centre’s Outreach Projects At Large (OPAL) initiative for remote areas in the region. Support will also enable the Centre to bring writers from Western Australia, Northern Territory and South Australia to the Byron Bay Writers’ Festival.
Perth International Arts Festival ($18,000)
The Perth International Arts Festival will use support from the CAL Cultural Fund to bring Australian authors from outside Western Australia to Perth for the 2012 Perth Writers’ Festival. This will enable the festival to present a publishing seminar and accompanying workshop series.
Platform Contemporary Art Spaces ($1,800)
CAL funding will support a showcase of emerging curators and artists at Platform Contemporary Art Space and at the Platform main exhibition.
Power Institute of the University of Sydney ($20,000)
The Power Institute of the University of Sydney provides a space for the creation, discussion and dissemination of ideas about art in Australia and worldwide. Funding from the CAL Cultural Fund will go towards a new series called New Eyes, New Voices, where novelists, critics, playwrights, poets and writers will be invited to choose a work by a contemporary Australian artist and prepare a piece of writing on it for public presentation.
Queensland Art Gallery ($20,000)
Support from the CAL Cultural Fund will go towards an artist’s research and development fellowship at the Queensland Art Gallery. This is to be undertaken by artist Deborah Kelly.
Queensland University of Technology ($17,984)
Funding from the CAL Cultural Fund will go towards bringing Dr Anita Heiss to Queensland University of Technology (QUT) for an Indigenous Writer-in-residence program.
RMIT ($100,000 over 2 years)
Funding will be used to support a writer-in-residence program and to run a non-fiction writing conference, NonfictionNOW, in consultation with the University of Iowa’s writing school.
Salt Water Murris Quandamooka ($5,000)
The Salt Water Murris Quandamooka (SWMQ) is a non-profit organisation predominantly comprised of direct descendents of the original Nunukul, Ngugi and Gorenpul clans and supports the maintenance and promotion of culture of the Quandamooka region. Support from the CAL Cultural Fund will enable artists from the SWMQ to attend this year’s Cairns Indigenous Art Fair.
Scenic World ($5,000)
Scenic World in the Blue Mountains is using support from CAL’s Cultural Fund to produce a catalogue to complement its Sculpture at Scenic World sculpture prize and exhibition.
Southern Cross University ($7,000)
Southern Cross University is hosting the 2011 annual conference for the Australasian Association of Writing Programs (AAWP). Support from CAL’s Cultural Fund will go towards bringing local and international authors to the conference and provide bursaries for students to attend.
State Library of Victoria ($45,000 over 3 years)
The State Library of Victoria will use CAL funding to tour Australian authors to public libraries in regional Victoria for public events such as readings and speeches.
State Library of Queensland ($85,920.30)
CAL funding will go towards the costs of running the second year of the Black & Write Indigenous Editing and Writing Project, which includes writing fellowships and editing mentorships for Indigenous authors and editors.
Sydney PEN ($45,000 over 3 years)
Sydney PEN is an association of Australian writers and readers, publishers and human rights activists that promotes the right to freedom of expression for writers, editors and translators. With the support of the CAL Cultural Fund, Sydney PEN will run a three year essay and lecture series with the aim of raising awareness of the issues surrounding freedom of expression.
Sydney Story Factory ($1,000)
Sydney Story Factory is a place for children to develop their love of words, where volunteers offer free help with any writing project a child can imagine. Support from the CAL Cultural Fund will cover the cost of transport and materials for the workshops in terms 2 and 3 of 2011.
Tasmanian Poetry Festival ($5,400)
With the support of the CAL Cultural Fund, the Tasmanian Poetry Festival will be able to bring poets from the mainly to Launceston for the festival.
Tom Bass Sculpture Studio School ($10,000)
With CAL funding, the Tom Bass Sculpture Studio School will run an emerging sculptor program, which will provide artistic and professional development and training to support an emerging sculptor over a twelve month period.
Ubud Writers & Readers Festival ($5,000)
In October 2011 the 8th International Ubud Writers & Readers Festival will take place in Bali, Indonesia. With the support of the CAL Cultural Fund two Australian authors will be able to attend.
University of Sydney Journalism Internships ($10,000)
With the support of CAL’s Cultural Fund, the University of Sydney will be sending up to six students on internship programs at English language media outlets in Asia. The program allows students to practice journalism, engage with new media systems and experience the work expectations and communication environment of their host country.
University of New England ($8,000)
The University of New England (UNE) will host a two day symposium to set up an editorial steering committee to commence work on a website that will support the teaching of Australia’s top books. This is part of a digital libraries project, a joint venture between various industry partners, including the CAL Cultural Fund, the Australian Society of Authors and the National Library of Australia.
University of New England Children’s Literature Residencies ($90,000 over 3 years)
CAL funding will support residencies for children’s books authors and illustrators in the Armidale region of NSW – to focus on their own creative works and to conduct a number of workshops, talks, masterclasses and community talks.
Varuna the Writers’ House and Batchelor Institute of Indigenous Tertiary Education ($4,800)
Varuna is a residential writers’ house, located in Katoomba NSW and the Batchelor Institute of Indigenous Tertiary Education (BIITE) is an Indigenous tertiary education institution based in the Northern Territory with campuses in Batchelor and Alice Springs that provides VET and Higher Education programs for Indigenous adults in the Northern Territory and throughout Australia. This joint venture will use CAL funding to support Indigenous students’ writing residencies at Varuna.
Victorian Indigenous Art Awards ($13,000)
This is the second year that the Cultural Fund has pledged support of the Victorian Indigenous Art Awards. CAL’s support will provide prizes for the winners and runners up in two categories of the Awards: for works on paper and three dimensional works.
Victoria University ($45,000)
Victoria University’s Offset journal will use funding from the Cultural Fund to commission journal articles by authors from the western Melbourne region, run a festival for writers from western Melbourne and mentor the students who work on the journal.
Victorian Association for the Teaching of English ($10,000)
The Victorian Association for the Teaching of English (VATE) is hosting the national conference for English teachers in Melbourne in December 2011. Funding will go towards sponsorship of this conference.
We Australians ($12,000)
We Australians.org is a not-for-profit artist-run organisation based in Melbourne that promotes an inclusive platform for emerging Australian artists. CAL funding will be used to run artist development workshops, leading up to exhibition, public forum and publication.
Word Travels ($10,000)
Word Travesls is not-for-profit arts association that organises literary and literacy programs for libraries, schools, festivals and cultural institutions. CAL funding will support the 2011 national slam poetry performance competition.
Write As Rain ($2,178)
Write As Rain is a collective that promotes and supports writing and reading in order to promote and enhance creativity, literacy, connectivity and well-being using a multi-artform and collaborative approach. Support from the CAL Cultural Fund will go towards the Write As Rain Literature Festival for Children & Young People, to be held in Castlemaine.
Australian Publishers Association Internships Program ($137,750)
Australian Publishers Association (APA) will use CAL funding to support its internships program in 2011. The APA will allocate the funding to 5 publishing houses across Australia.
Australian Society of Authors Professional Development Program and Teaching and Learning Materials ($121,500 over 3 years)
Australian Society of Authors (ASA) will develop its Professional Development Program by providing seminars for Australian authors across three main areas; business, craft and inspirational/behavioural. ASA will also develop online information resources for authors.
Australian Children’s Literature Alliance ($60,000 over 2 years)
Australian Children’s Literature Alliance (ACLA) will use CAL funding to support its Australian Children’s Laureate Program, to promote the importance of reading and engagement with books in a series of public events across Australia.
Australian Writers’ Guild Australian Screenwriting Online ($50,000)
Funding from CAL’s Cultural fund will go towards Australian Writers’ Guild’s (AWG) Australian Screenwriting Online project; the development of an e-commerce website to promote, market and sell Australian film and television scripts.
Ballarat Writers Inc. Ballarat Writers and Illustrators Festival ($5,000)
Funding from CAL’s cultural fund will support the presentation and travel costs of featured authors, illustrators and industry experts and the festival.
The Big Issue annual fiction edition ($15,000)
The Big Issue magazine will use funding to produce its annual fiction edition, featuring work by established and up-and-coming Australian authors.
Chamber Made Opera Professional Development Workshop ($6,000)
With the support of CAL’s Cultural Fund, Chamber Made Opera will run a week long professional development workshop for librettists.
Currency House Platform Papers ($10,000)
Currency House will use funding from CAL’s Cultural Fund to support the creation of video presentations by selected authors to be posted to Currency House’s website and followed by a one month online chat room where the author can interact with the audience.
The Dreaming ($10,000)
The Dreaming is a multi-arts, multi-venue festival, showcasing the diversity of the world’s Indigenous cultures and their artistic production. Funding from CAL’s Cultural Fun will go towards its literature program; supporting Indigenous authors’ presentation costs at forums and workshops during the festival.
Freeplay ($6,000)
Freeplay is an independent games festival and a non-profit organisation that focuses on the creative and artistic side of game development. Freeplay will use funding from CAL’s Cultural Fund to support their festival in 2011, with a special emphasis on digital art and introducing graphic novelists to games.
J M Coetzee Centre for Creative Practice Master Classes ($20,000)
The J M Coetzee Centre at the University of Adelaide will use CAL funding to run its 2011 intensive professional writing master classes in July 2011. This will provide writers Australia-with the opportunity to work under the guidance of acclaimed master practitioners to develop and enhance their skills.
Malthouse Theatre Female Directors Internships ($90,000)
Malthouse Theatre will offer two six-months internships for female directors. This project is being supported because of a lack of female theatre directors in Australia.
Malthouse Theatre The Engine Room ($30,000)
Malthouse Theatre will use funding from CAL’s Cultural Fun to support intense script development of new Australian theatre work in 2011.
Media Entertainment and Arts Alliance 2011 Freelance Conference ($10,000)
Funding from CAL’s Cultural Fund will support Media Entertainment and Arts Alliance’s (MEAA) 2011 Freelance Conference to be held in May. Themed Cash for ContentI, the conference is aimed at developing business skills amongst freelance journalists.
Melbourne PEN FreeSpeak ($10,000)
Melbourne PEN will run three events across Victoria and use CAL funding to pay authors’ presentation and travel costs. They will also pay authors to publish selected writing from the events.
Melbourne Writers’ Festival Drawn from Life (15,850)
Melbourne Writers’ Festival will use the funding to produce a free tabloid newspaper Drawn from Life to be distributed before and during the 2011 festival. It will showcase the works of Victorian and international graphic novelists an illustrators.
Miles Franklin Literary Award ($50,000)
Funding from the Cultural Fund will be used to support two events to promote and celebrate the 2011 Miles Franklin short-listed authors; a consumer event for a general reading audience and a publishing industry soiree for publishers, authors an booksellers. CAL will also be supporting cash prizes for each of the short-listed authors.
Museums & Galleries NSW Artist and Curator in residence program ($100,000 over 2 years)
Museums & Galleries NSW (M&G NSW) will use funding from CAL’s Cultural Fund to expand upon its National Exhibition Touring Support program, to offer an Artist and Curator in Residence program in 2011 an 2012. Two residencies will be offered each year.
National Year of Reading 2012 Festival of Indigenous Reading, Writing and Storytelling ($15,000)
Indigenous reading, writing and storytelling will be the focus of the National Year of Reading 2012. Funding will be used to support the costs of having Indigenous authors and illustrators attend precursor events and the festival.
PlayLab Lab Rats program ($15,000)
CAL funding will be used to run a series of creative and professional development activities for emerging playwrights in Queensland.
Public Interest Journalism Foundation News News 2011 Conference ($10,000)
The Public Interest Journalism (PIJ) Foundation at Swinburne University will use funding from CAL’s Cultural Fund to support their News News 2011 Conference to be held in conjunction with the Melbourne Writers’ Festival. The conference will include roundtables, panel sessions and workshops for journalists.
Society of Editors (NSW) National Editors Conference ($11,000)
Support from CAL’s Cultural Fun will go towards the travel and presentation costs of an international expert to give the keynote address at the National Editors Conference. It will also pay for bursaries for four emerging editors to attend the conference.
Style Council public forum ($5,060)
CAL funding will support venue hire and presenters’ travel costs for the Style Council’s public forum on controversies and changing details of the English Language, entitled ‘What’s New?’.
University of Technology ($300,000 over 3 years)
The University of Technology will establish a Writer in Residence Non-Fiction, a Chair in Australian Poetry and scholarships for authors to obtain teaching qualifications.
University of Western Sydney China Australia Literary Forum ($10,000)
The Writing and Society Research Group within the University of Western Sydney will use funding from CAL’s Cultural Fund to organise the China Australia Literary Forum, a high-level exchange between Chinese and Australian authors.
Wet Ink Short Story Prize ($30,000 over 3 years)
Funding from CAL’s Cultural Fun will help Wet Ink magazine to run a short story competition, providing winners, runners-up and short-listed authors with prize money for their stories.
Wheeler Centre Long Form Literary Reviews Online ($20,000)
The Wheeler Centre will commission long form literary reviews from writers who are featured at the Centre in its public program over the course of a year.
University of Wollongong Writing and Region ($60,000)
CAL funding will support the University of Wollongong’s Writers in residence, UK placement and Community and Culture projects in 2011 and 2012.
Yarra Plenty Regional Library Festival of Stories ($3,480)
Funding from CAL’s Cultural Fund will support Yarra Plenty Regional Library’s Festival of Stories for school-aged children. The festival will run over 3 days and consist of a series of 2 hour workshops on writing and illustration.
Projects supported by the fund in 2010
Arts Law Centre of Australia Wills and Administration Toolkit ($46,500)
The Arts Law Centre developed a toolkit for drafting wills and administration of estates to assist indigenous artists to value and manage their intellectual property rights. As part of the project, Arts Law Centre staff and other professionals travelled to remote communities to run training sessions and workshops.
Association for the Study of Australian Literature (ASAL) Conference 2011-13 ($45,000)
ASAL will use CAL funding to support their annual conference over three years to pay for authors’ travel and speaking expenses and to provide travel fees for post graduate students to attend the conference.
Australian Theatre for Young People (ATYP) Fresh Ink Writers Studio ($20,000)
With CAL’s support, ATYP brought together young playwrights from around Australia to attend a one week intensive workshop to develop their writing skills.
Blake Society Educational Website Development ($10,000)
The Blake Society used their funding from the CAL Cultural Fund to develop a website to showcase its poetry award and poetry entered for the award to the educational sector.
Charles Sturt University (CSU) Journalism Internship Program 2010 ($30,000)
This was the fourth year that the CAL Cultural Fund has supported overseas internships for final year journalism students at CSU. Students will participate in internships at foreign media outlets and learn about journalistic practices which are not undertaken in Australia.
Express Media NEWS Conference ($30,000)
Express Media will deliver three years worth of training to editors of student magazines and journals at the outset of their terms as editors. In the workshops, new editors will learn about managing editing cycles, commissioning works and complying with different laws relevant to publishing.
Magabala Books ($18,915)
Magabala Books brought authors and illustrators to Broome to run workshops for indigenous writers and authors with the aim of enhancing their professional skills and enabling them to create works for publication.
Media Entertainment & Arts Alliance/Walkley Media Conference 2010 ($30,000)
The conference, held in August 2010, was developed in collaboration with other key industry groups and discussed different narrative forms and delivery platforms in the changing media landscape.
Ned Kelly Awards for Crime Writing ($14,000)
The Ned Kelly Awards used CAL funding to pay winning authors an award. Judges of the award were also paid judging fees and travel expenses.
SCBWI Children’s Book Conference 2010 ($10,000)
The Society of Children’s Book Writers & Illustrators (SCBWI) brought children’s book publishers and agents from Australia and overseas to their Children’s Book Conference in 2010, with the aim of creating opportunities for Australian authors and illustrators to trade their works.
Art Monthly’s Oz Pacifica thematic issue ($7,500)
Art Monthly published a special edition focused on Australian Pacific Art. It included a 16 page insert and was launched in the Cooke Islands.
ASA Manuscript Assessment Service Plan ($7,500)
The Australian Society of Authors (ASA) devised a plan for assessing manuscripts that has provisions for reviewing limited amounts of a work through to a thorough assessment of complete works.
UWS and UTS Australia-Germany Writer in Residency ($6,500)
University of Western Sydney (UWS) and University of Technology Sydney (UTS) sent two emerging Australian writers to Berlin for a four-week residency. In Berlin, they had the opportunity to work on a text and to take German language classes.
Art Association of Australia and New Zealand (AAANZ) ($15,000)
The AAANZ used funding from CAL’s Cultural Fund to invite an international expert to address the AAANZ conference in Adelaide. They uploaded pod casts of the conference to their website along with reviews of artists’ exhibitions. Conference papers were also published in an edition of the AAANZ Journal of Art.
Australian Book Review (ABR): Calibre Award 2010 ($12,000)
ABR will run the Calibre Prize for an outstanding essay in 2010 and market the Young Calibre prize, which was not awarded in 2009.
Australian Poetry Slam ($10,000)
Australian Poetry Slam will use CAL funds to hire presenters for their Slam competition events across Australia in 2011. They will host heats, run workshops in schools, community centres and libraries.
Bankstown Youth Development Service (BYDS): Westside Writing Workshops ($10,000)
In 2009, funding from CAL enabled BYDS to hold fortnightly workshops for writers from Western Sydney. Funding will allow BYDS to run the workshops weekly in 2011.
Children’s Book Council of Australia (CBCA): Children’s literature in the centre ($10,000)
In August 2010, CBCA hosted a children’s literature festival in Alice Springs. Funding was used to support travel expenses for writers and illustrators to speak at the festival.
Emerging Writers Festival ($5000)
The Emerging Writers Festival was held online for ten days and allowed emerging writers to learn about new digital technologies via panels, launches, interviews and events using the web-portal Webconnect.
Fremantle Children’s Literature Centre author days ($45,000 over three years)
Seven groups of talented young authors and avid readers in years 7 and 8 from Fremantle, Albany, Bunbury and Geraldton will meet four times per year to work with one of Australia’s top authors for their age group in a full-day creative writing workshop.
Griffith Review: mentoring emerging writers ($20,000)
The Griffith Review used the majority of their CAL funding to publish pieces by emerging writers and to provide them with editorial mentorship. $5000 was used to present the GREW prize for the most outstanding work from an emerging writer.
Inscription: Edward Albee Master Class ($5,000)
Inscription, an organisation for script writers, organised intensive workshops for Australian script writers with Pulitzer Prize winner, Edward Albee in October 2010. They explored the work of five 20th century playwrights and then developed their own scripts to be showcased using an ensemble of Australian actors.
May Gibbs Children’s Literature Trust Fellowship ($10,000)
The May Gibbs Children’s Literature Trust supports creative writing fellowships for children’s book authors and illustrators. The fellowships are designed to give creators undisturbed time out of their regular lives to focus on their writing.
Literature Live: Video conferencing into classes ($12,500)
Six Australian authors created the content to run the ‘Literature Live!’ festival, which reached approximately 30 schools, including schools from remote and regional areas that do not usually have access to these creators.
National Association for the Visual Arts (NAVA): Artist Run Initiatives conference ($12,870)
NAVA hosted a conference to bring together peers working in artist run initiatives with the aim of enabling professional networking and discussion. This conference sits alongside the artist run initiatives website run by NAVA, an interactive information portal and social networking site for the sector.
The Nib: Waverly Library Award for Literature ($26,000)
The Nib award acknowledges excellence in research in the creation of literary works. Funding from CAL’s Cultural Fund will go towards prizes for the winner and the 6 shortlisted authors in 2011.
National Library of Australia (NLA): Writing History conference ($20,000)
In April 2011 the National Library of Australia hosted the Writing History Conference to bring together authors to discuss the depiction of Australia and its history in different works. CAL funding was used to support speakers’ fees and travel expenses for up to 25 Australian authors.
Overland: Commissioning minority writers’ works ($20,000)
Overland is an Australian literary journal and used funding from CAL to commission works from writers of minority backgrounds, including indigenous, homosexual and minority ethnic groups.
Scribe Fiction Prize ($24,000 for 2011 and 2012)
The Scribe Fiction Prize is open to unpublished manuscripts by any Australian writer over 35 years of age, who may or may not have been published before. CAL funding went towards funding the prize and Scribe will work with the author to bring the work to a publishable standard.
Sisters in Crime: 2011 Crime writing conference ($15,000)
Sisters in Crime is an Australian literary society, born from a shared interest in women’s crime and mystery fiction. They will use CAL funding to bring a key-note speaker from the US for their crime writing conference in October 2011.
Swimming with stories: China children’s book festival development ($45,000 over three years)
CAL funding will be used to support an Australian children’s book exhibition, a showcase of Australian books and workshops aimed at children, families, educators and Chinese publishers. This project will run over three years from 2011 to 2013.
This is not art: Visual arts 2010 ($6,000)
This is not art is an independent, emerging and experimental arts festival held in Newcastle over the October long weekend. CAL funding supported a visual arts program.
Writing WA: Content development ($20,000)
Writing WA \collaborated with the Western Australian department of education to develop multi-media material related to a number of texts for use in schools.
Art Education Australia: South East-Asia Pacific Regional Congress ($1,000)
Art Education Australia used CAL funding to support an established Australian artist’s attendance and presentation at their congress in Melbourne in October 2010.
Arts OutWest: Dead Bones on the road ($5,500)
Arts OutWest is the regional arts development service for Central West NSW. Writer Paul Stafford, with the Australian Fossil and Mineral Museum, delivered writing workshops via video conferencing to remote and regional schools across NSW.
Ballarat International Foto Biennale: Fringe award ($5,000)
Ballarat International Foto Biennale sent the winner of their fringe award to the UK where they will participate in portfolio reviews as part of Rhubarb Rhubarb, an international photography review and festival of the image.
Film and Television Institute (FTI) WA ($1,500)
FTI used their CAL funding to run screenwriter workshops for newcomers to screenwriting.
Mardi Gras Gallery Prize 2011 ($5,000)
CAL cultural funding was used to award the prize for the best entry into the Mardi Gras Gallery exhibition. The exhibition is displayed throughout the Sydney Gay & Lesbian Mardi Gras and is launched during the festival.
Professional Historians Association (NSW): 25th anniversary conference ($2,100)
The Professional Historians Association (NSW) used CAL funding to pay the registration fees for six keynote speakers to attend their 25th anniversary conference, held on Norfolk Island in July 2010.
Art Gallery of New South Wales ($16,840)
The Art Gallery of New South Wales will run an Aboriginal Artist in Residence Research Program during NAIDOC week. During the residency, artists will research and engage with the Gallery’s ATSI collection, meet curators and artists, receive specialised, tailored professional development training and have the opportunity to develop networks.
ArtLink ($60,000 over 3 years)
ArtLink will use funding from CAL’s Cultural Fund to produce an annual Indigenous edition of ArtLink – ArtLink Indigenous. Their aim is to give Indigenous artists a voice and to document change and development in the sector.
Australian Embassy Beijing ($30,000)
With the support of CAL’s Cultural Fund, the Australian Embassy in Beijing held the 2011 Australian Writers’ Week in China during March which included a series of literary and publishing events in Beijing, Chengdu and Anhui Province to promote Australian literature.
Australian Historical Association ($30,000 over 3 years)
Australian Historical Association (AHA) plans to offer bursaries to postgraduate students to attend the Association’s annual conference. In addition, AHA will run professional writing workshops and provide follow-up mentoring. This project aims to assist students in making the transition into becoming professional historians, capable of writing history at a level publishable in professional journals.
Australian Poetry Centre ($5,000)
Australian Poetry will run a national symposium for leading poets and representatives of key poetry organisations around the country to discuss what is currently happening to poetry in Australia; how it’s promoted, distributed, sold and how to best to collaborate with the newly created national poetry organisation, Australian Poetry. It will be held in Newcastle over the 2011 October long weekend.
Black Mermaid Productions ($10,000)
With the support of CAL’s Cultural Fund, Black Mermaid Productions (BMP) will develop a Comics/Graphic Novels Portfolio Masterclass Program with the Australian Society of Authors (ASA).
Brisbane Writers Festival 2011 ($15,000)
Brisbane Writers’ Festival will use funding to bring writers from regional Queensland and interstate to the festival in 2011.
Castlemaine State Festival ($5,000)
CAL funding was used to support artists’ fees, workshops and materials at the 2011 Castlemaine State Festival.
Centre for Contemporary Photography ($10,000)
Support from CAL’s Cultural Fund will go towards the Centre for Contemporary Photography’s (CCP) 2011 documentary photography prize and touring exhibition.
China Arts Projects ($10,000)
China Art Projects (CAP) was established in 2008 to support cultural exchange and artistic dialogue between China, Australia and England. Support from CAL’s Cultural Fund will enable CAP to write and publish a book in English and Chinese about an exhibition that is to tour China and Australia.
Creative Clunes Inc. ($10,000)
Funding from the Cultural Fund will go towards bringing writers to the town of Clunes in Victoria for their annual festival Clunes Back to Booktown.
Extempore (2,830)
Support from CAL’s Cultural Fund will go towards a prize for writing inspired by jazz, which will be published in the jazz journal, Extempore.
New England Writers Centre ($6,000)
The New England Writers Centre will run another year of its Youth Online project, where primary and secondary school students from remote and regional New England will be mentored by Australian professional authors.
RMIT University ($30,000 over 2 years)
RMIT University will use funding to develop a comprehensive statistical mapping of retail book sales in Australia for the ten-year period January 2002-December 2011. This information will be publicly available for the first time.
South Coast Writers Centre ($10,000)
The South Coast Writers Centre will use CAL funding to bring together Indigenous authors and educators for the 2011 Indigenous Writers and Educators Symposium.
Victorian Indigenous Art Awards ($13,000)
Support from CAL’s Cultural Fund has gone towards prizes at the Victorian Indigenous Art Awards 2011. Funding supported prizes for works on paper and for sculpture at the March 2011 event.
Watermark Literary Society ($3,000)
The Watermark Literary Society will use funding from the Cultural Fund to bring four authors to its biennial event, the Watermark Literary Muster 2011.
Click here to view projects supported in previous years.
Updated 30 November 2011.