Assistance to organisations
For organisations only.
Key dates for this funding round
Opens: 15 February 2012
Closes: 30 April 2012
Notification: August 2012
Resources for this funding round
Arts Tasmania and arts@work Resources 2013 - PDF
Two application tool kits will be available for this round. One is for project funding where the request is $20 000 or less, the other is for larger projects, program and multi-year funding.
2013 Assistance to Organisations toolkit - over 20K and multi-year funding - Word Doc
2013 Assistance to Organisations toolkit - under 20K - Word Doc
2013 Assistance to Organisations toolkit - over 20K and multi-year funding - PDF
2013 Assistance to Organisations toolkit - under 20K - PDF
2013 Assistance to Organisations Budget - over 20K and multi-year funding - Excel
2013 Assistance to Organisations Budget - under 20K - Excel
About this funding round
Arts Tasmania’s assistance to organisations program supports arts activities that employ professional arts practitioners and engage the community in arts activities. These activities may be as diverse as exhibitions, plays, concerts, festivals, literary magazines, publications, industry development, audience development or community cultural development projects.
Organisations may apply for funding in one of the following streams:
- project funding for short term or one-off projects
- one-year program funding for a year-long program of activity
- multi-year funding for a program of activity over two or more years.
To be eligible to apply to any of these funding streams, your organisation must be legally constituted. This includes incorporated associations, companies limited by guarantee, local government councils and other statutory bodies. Eligibility for multi-year funding requires that an organisation must have been in receipt of Arts Tasmania one-year funding for at least two consecutive years immediately prior to the multi-year application.
Arts Tasmania will consider applications for projects from private companies but the outcomes of these projects should be focussed towards benefits to the arts industry, rather than individual commercial gains.