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Art Fund announces recipients of £1m Reimagine funding

Image: Spike Island Associates, Open Studios 2023 (Dan Weill)

Twenty one museums and galleries have been offered funding for projects supporting their workforce and improve inclusion and diversity

Art Fund has announced the recipients of its latest funding to museums and galleries, totalling £1m.

Twenty one museums and galleries across the UK have been offered a total of £800,000 for projects to support their workforce and improve inclusion and diversity.

A further £200,000 has been awarded through Museum Development UK (MDUK) to support smaller museums to retain and train staff, with an emphasis on curatorial posts and members of the workforce who work directly with collections including learning, engagement and conservation.

MDUK will distribute the £200,000 grant from Art Fund through a combination of grants and creative programmes developed in response to needs identified by Museum Development providers. MDUK are match-funding the grant with around £100,000 of their own investment.

The UK-wide Museum Development providers administering the grants and programmes are: The Museum Development (MD) Programme across England; Museums Galleries Scotland; Welsh Government (Culture Division); and Northern Ireland Museums Council.

Part of the Reimagine funding programme, the £1m capital is hoped to enable increased stability for museums and galleries, supporting organisations to develop or refresh their work in response to their current situation.

Art Fund cites its report on diversity in the curatorial workforce, It’s about handing over power, commissioned in partnership with Museum X and Culture&, which was published last year.

The report suggests “significant barriers remain to increasing ethnic and racial diversity in the museum and gallery workforce”, it said.

In this round of capital, Art Fund said it was particularly interested in applications that respond to the findings and recommendations of the report and aim to make their organisations more inclusive.

Among recipients is Spike Island (pictured above) a centre for visual arts in the southwest, which will provide 40 free Associate Bursary places to young people from marginalised and underrepresented communities in Bristol.

Glasgow Women’s Library, the only accredited museum dedicated to women’s history, will support artists and communities to interrogate and shape collections.

The first round of Reimagine grants were announced in August 2020 as part of an effort to support organisations to deliver projects or activity that would provide a positive change in offering new or improved ways of working during and as part of the longer-term response to the COVID19 crisis.

Since its initial round, £7.3m has been awarded. In the most recent round, organisations were able to apply for support of between £10,000 and £50,000.

Jenny Waldman, Director, Art Fund, said: “This year’s Reimagine grants will enable museums and galleries to foster inclusivity and create opportunities for diverse voices to contribute to the cultural sector.

“Together, these projects make a step towards a more inclusive and diverse museum workforce. Huge congratulations to all recipients.”

Successful projects in this round of Reimagine grants include:

Contemporary Visual Arts Network CVAN has been awarded £50,000 for Fostering Equity in the Visual Arts Sector – a two-year professional development programme supporting artists and arts professionals from marginalised communities across England to develop skills in leadership and governance through training and mentoring, as well as offering them access to meaningful and supportive networking opportunities and partnerships. The project is led by CVAN in partnership with the Baltic Centre for Contemporary Art.

Dundee Contemporary Arts (DCA) has been awarded £49,944 for Strengthening and Diversifying our Workforce a major organisational project which will create opportunities for people to work in museums and galleries through paid internships at DCA, deliver training for DCA’s workforce to develop digital skills, and to provide further training in equity, diversity and inclusion with a focus on anti-racism.

Glasgow Women’s Library has been awarded £42,446 for Re/imagining a Framework for Inclusive Collecting at Glasgow Women’s Library – to support collections staff, as part of a larger participatory project, to explore the organisation’s collecting history, to encourage discussion around the processes by which artworks enter collections, and to support artists and communities to feel empowered to understand and shape collections that resonate with them.

GRAIN Projects, based in the West Midlands, has been awarded £48,000 for REFLECTOR – a new professional development residency and programme for emerging artists from diverse backgrounds. Delivered in partnership with The New Art Gallery Walsall and led by diverse artists, REFLECTOR will empower artists and create new opportunities for collaboration and career development.

National Paralympic Heritage Centre in Buckinghamshire has been awarded £29,236 for Working Towards Seamless Inclusion Across the Volunteer Workforce a project creating inclusive, meaningful volunteering opportunities and employment pathways for disabled and neurodivergent people within museums and the cultural sector, including a work-placement programme for disabled, neurodiverse young people to work across collections, exhibitions and learning programmes.

Oriel Myrddin Gallery in Carmarthenshire has been awarded £36,350 for Engagement Curator: Perspective(s) Programme an action learning project developing new ways of working with underrepresented communities, including the creation of a new Engagement Curator post for Perspective(s), a partnership programme between Oriel Myrddin Gallery, Arts Council of Wales and Amgueddfa Cymru/Museum Wales aiming to redefine existing narratives told by collections in each of the Museums’ seven sites across Wales.

Peak Cymru in Crickhowell and Abergavenny has been awarded £25,000 for Co-leadership for and with young people – to recruit a Director for Young People who will work alongside Peak’s two other Directors to centre young people across the organisation’s programme and governance, enabling dedicated focus on delivery for and with young people aged 14 to 30 years.

Studio Voltaire in London has been awarded £50,000 for The Step-Change Programme to develop a new curatorial role and accompanying wellbeing programme to create a supportive work environment that results in greater retention of diverse staff with meaningful benefits for the team.

Spike Island in Bristol has been awarded £31,520 for Reimagining Spike Island Associates programme – to work with a group of youth and creative access organisations in the southwest to develop the reach and impact of their artist development programme, Spike Island Associates, and to provide free Associate Bursary places to 40 young people from marginalised and underrepresented communities in Bristol.

Towner Eastbourne has been awarded £48,000 for Collectively: a new model for structural inclusivity through acquisitions & workforce development – to provide career development pathways for individuals from diverse backgrounds to enter the culture sector, to create a supported coordinator role for an early career curator or arts professional to develop their skills, and to develop the workforce through skills development and training.