Arts Therapy Grants in Australia: Funding Creative Approaches to Healing

Arts therapies — music therapy, art therapy, drama therapy, and dance movement therapy — are evidence-based clinical disciplines that use creative processes to support mental health, wellbeing, and recovery. In Australia, arts therapies are increasingly recognised as effective interventions for trauma, dementia, autism, mental illness, and palliative care. Grant funding supports arts therapy programmes in hospitals, community settings, aged care, schools, and rehabilitation — bringing creative healing to people who struggle to engage with traditional talk therapies.

Arts therapies in Australia

The disciplines

  • Music therapy: Registered music therapists use music to address physical, emotional, cognitive, and social needs. Used in hospitals, aged care, paediatrics, rehabilitation, and mental health.
  • Art therapy: Visual art processes to explore emotions, process trauma, and support wellbeing. Used with children, trauma survivors, people with mental illness.
  • Drama therapy: Narrative and theatrical approaches to address psychological and social issues. Used with young people, trauma survivors, and in community settings.
  • Dance movement therapy: Embodied movement to address psychological, emotional, and social needs. Used in trauma recovery, mental health, and with people with disability.

Evidence base

Growing evidence supports arts therapy effectiveness for:
- Trauma and PTSD
- Dementia (music therapy is particularly well-evidenced)
- Mental health (depression, anxiety, schizophrenia)
- Autism and developmental disability
- Palliative care and end-of-life
- Paediatric hospital patients
- Stroke rehabilitation

Professional bodies

  • Australian Music Therapy Association (AMTA) — registered music therapists
  • Australian Creative Arts Therapies Association (ACATA) — art, drama, dance therapists

Government funding for arts therapies

NDIS (National Disability Insurance Scheme)

Arts therapy can be funded through NDIS under Improved Daily Living — individuals with eligible conditions can access registered arts therapists.

Aged Care

Some residential aged care facilities fund music therapy through government subsidies.

Medicare

Limited — some art therapists can provide Medicare-eligible sessions under the Mental Health Treatment Plan (via GP referral).

PHNs (Primary Health Networks)

Some PHNs commission arts therapy services in mental health programmes.

Philanthropic arts therapy funders

The Ian Potter Cultural Trust

Supports creative arts including arts therapy.

The Myer Foundation

Mental health and creative arts.

Lord Mayor's Charitable Fund (Melbourne)

Health and wellbeing including arts therapies.

State arts funding bodies

Arts agencies (Creative Victoria, Create NSW, etc.) sometimes fund arts therapy within health settings.

Hospital foundations

Many hospitals have charitable foundations that fund arts therapy for patients.

Aged care provider foundations

Some aged care organisations fund music therapy through philanthropic arms.

Types of funded arts therapy programmes

Mental health

  • Music therapy in psychiatric inpatient units
  • Art therapy for depression and anxiety
  • Drama therapy for trauma processing
  • Dance movement therapy in mental health community programmes
  • Arts therapy in eating disorder treatment

Aged care and dementia

  • Music therapy for dementia (highly evidence-based)
  • Art therapy for aged care residents
  • Music and memory programmes
  • Personalised music programmes for dementia (using familiar music)
  • Arts engagement in residential aged care

Children and youth

  • Art therapy in schools for at-risk students
  • Music therapy for children with disability
  • Drama therapy for youth mental health
  • Arts therapy in paediatric hospitals
  • Play-based arts therapy for young children

Trauma recovery

  • Trauma-informed art therapy
  • Music therapy for PTSD
  • Drama therapy for domestic violence survivors
  • Arts therapy for refugees and asylum seekers
  • Somatic arts therapy approaches

Disability

  • Music therapy for autism spectrum disorder
  • Art therapy for intellectual disability
  • Dance movement therapy for physical disability
  • Arts therapy for acquired brain injury

Palliative care

  • Music therapy at end of life
  • Art therapy for palliative patients and families
  • Legacy projects (creating artworks or recordings for families)
  • Grief support through arts

Hospital settings

  • Bedside music therapy for acute care patients
  • Art therapy carts in hospitals
  • Music therapy in ICU
  • Paediatric hospital arts therapy

Rehabilitation

  • Music therapy for stroke rehabilitation (rhythmic auditory stimulation)
  • Arts therapy for substance use recovery
  • Creative arts in brain injury rehabilitation

Corrections and justice

  • Arts therapy in prisons and youth justice
  • Drama therapy for offenders
  • Music programmes in correctional facilities

Why arts therapy reaches where words can't

Many people — particularly those with trauma, autism, dementia, or limited verbal capacity — struggle to engage with traditional talk therapies. Arts therapies offer:

  • Non-verbal expression: processing and communicating without words
  • Embodied engagement: movement and sensory involvement
  • Creativity and mastery: building confidence and agency
  • Metaphor and distance: exploring difficult material through creative distance
  • Community and connection: group arts therapy builds belonging

Arts therapies are particularly effective for people who've experienced trauma, abuse, or loss — where words often fail.

Grant application considerations

Evidence base

Music therapy for dementia and stroke rehabilitation has particularly strong evidence. Applications building on evidence-based protocols are more compelling to health funders.

Clinical registration

Grant applications from registered arts therapists (AMTA registered music therapists; ACATA registered arts therapists) are more credible — registration indicates clinical training and professional standards.

Underserved populations

Arts therapy is often unavailable in rural areas, aged care settings outside major cities, and for people with disability in non-NDIS contexts. Applications targeting these gaps have strong equity rationale.

Integration with healthcare

Applications that embed arts therapy within clinical settings — hospitals, mental health services, palliative care — are more credible than standalone arts programmes.


Tahua's grants management platform supports arts therapy funders and creative health organisations — with client outcome tracking, session data, programme reach measurement, and the reporting tools that help arts therapy funders demonstrate their investment in creative healing across Australia.

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