Australia's cultural life — expressed through visual art, performance, music, film, literature, and the living cultures of its First Peoples — enriches communities, expresses national identity, and contributes significantly to the economy. The cultural funding ecosystem spans federal and state governments, arts agencies, philanthropic foundations, corporate sponsors, and community trusts. Understanding how this ecosystem works is essential for Australian arts and cultural organisations seeking support.
Australia Council for the Arts
The Australia Council for the Arts is the federal government's primary arts funding body — distributing approximately $200 million annually to artists and arts organisations. The Australia Council funds through:
- Investment programs: multi-year investment in major arts organisations (Major Performing Arts companies and others)
- Grants: project grants for individual artists and organisations across all art forms
- First Nations programs: specifically funding for First Nations artists and organisations
Australia Council funding is highly competitive; for many arts organisations, it is the most significant single funding source.
State arts agencies
Each state and territory has its own arts funding agency:
- Create NSW (New South Wales)
- Creative Victoria / Victorian Government (Victoria)
- Arts Queensland
- Department for Industry, Tourism and Trade (Arts) (South Australia)
- ScreenWest / Department of Local Government, Sport and Cultural Industries (Western Australia)
- ArtsNT (Northern Territory)
- Arts ACT (Australian Capital Territory)
- Arts Tasmania
State agencies fund smaller organisations and artists, regional arts, and state-specific cultural priorities. For most community and regional arts organisations, state agency funding is more accessible than Australia Council funding.
Regional arts networks
Regional arts networks — Regional Arts Australia and state affiliates — support arts and cultural activity outside major cities, connecting rural and regional artists with opportunities and funding.
Local government arts funding
Local councils fund community arts, cultural facilities, public art, and local festivals — often the most accessible funding for very local arts activity.
First Nations arts and culture is central to Australian cultural life — and a distinct philanthropic priority.
First Nations funding principles
Funding for First Nations arts should be:
- Self-determined: First Nations artists and organisations leading decisions about First Nations arts
- Culturally safe: respecting Indigenous cultural protocols and sensitivities
- Community-grounded: connected to community life and cultural practice
Australia Council's First Nations Arts programs, state Indigenous arts programs, and the National Indigenous Australians Agency (NIAA) all fund Indigenous arts and culture. Philanthropic foundations increasingly have specific Indigenous arts funding streams.
NAVA and advocacy
National Advocates for the Visual Arts (NAVA) and peak bodies for other art forms advocate for fair pay for artists and equitable arts funding policies.
Australian Heritage Council
The Australian Heritage Council provides advice on heritage matters and oversees the National Heritage List.
State heritage organisations
Each state has heritage protection frameworks — Heritage NSW, Heritage Victoria, etc. — that provide some heritage grants alongside regulatory functions.
Museums and galleries
Major Australian cultural institutions — the National Gallery of Australia, Australian Museum, National Museum of Australia, and state equivalents — receive significant public funding but also rely on philanthropic support for acquisitions, programmes, and innovation.
Philanthropic arts funding
Individual major donors, corporate sponsors, and foundations contribute significantly to Australian arts and culture — particularly for capital projects, international tours, commissioning of new work, and emerging artist support.
The tax environment for arts philanthropy in Australia is generally supportive: the Cultural Gifts Program enables tax-effective donation of artworks and cultural objects; section 78C of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 provides deductibility for cultural gifts to eligible institutions.
Creative Partnerships Australia
Creative Partnerships Australia (formerly Australia Business Arts Foundation) facilitates arts philanthropy — including matching programs (Boost), corporate arts partnerships, and arts fundraising support.
The labour of art
Artists are workers. Grants that pay fair artist fees — at or above NAVA minimum rates — respect the labour of creative practice. Grants that expect artists to work for nothing — or for exposure — devalue creative work.
Access and participation
Cultural funding should reach diverse communities — rural and remote communities, culturally and linguistically diverse communities, communities with disability. Grants that improve cultural access (accessible venues, culturally diverse programming, regional touring) serve equity goals alongside artistic ones.
Sustaining the ecology
Australia's arts ecology — individual artists, small organisations, mid-tier companies, and major institutions — is interdependent. Funding that exclusively supports major institutions at the expense of smaller organisations and individual artists undermines the long-term health of the sector.
Tahua's grants management platform supports arts funders and cultural organisations in Australia — with grant tracking, artist and organisation relationship management, outcome measurement, and the portfolio tools that help funders invest effectively in Australian cultural life.