Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER

Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER
HomeIndigenous Language and CultureNew fund aids Murri artists

New fund aids Murri artists

Queensland’s First Nations artists will get the opportunity to show their work off to the world thanks to a new grants program announced by the state government last week.

Arts Queensland’s Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Arts Development Fund launched on 12 November with a deadline of 22 December.

The program offers two funding streams and a sub-stream applicable to both ‘main’ options, with the one-off grants intended to enable Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander artists to design, create and exhibit their works.

Applicants can receive up to $70,000 under the Performing Arts Stream to create new or derivative artworks in fields like dance, theatre, opera, cabaret and musicals.

The stream can also fund the eventual production, presentation and distribution of the works as well as pay for collaborations with artists deemed “nationally or internationally significant.”

The Visual Arts Market Development Stream, meanwhile, allows for funding of up to $30,000, which can be used by artists to showcase or exhibit their works at international galleries, museums or markets of renown.

The grant could fund the crating, shipping, installation and insurance of art, travel costs incurred by the exhibiting artists, or the creation of promotional material by the artist.

The program’s sub-stream of $10,000 applies to both the Performing Arts and Visual Arts Market Development streams. It allows for successful projects to be made more inclusive to both artists and audiences living with disability, funding measures such as transportation, support workers, interpreters or ramps.

The Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Arts Development Fund is exclusively open to Queensland-based First Nations Australians working either alone or as part of an organisation. Organisations must be at least 50 per cent owned and led by Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander people.

Applicants must at least be partially able to fund their proposed projects on their own, as Arts Queensland said in the grant program’s description it was unable to pay for entire projects.

The new fund comes as part of the LNP government’s ten-year plan for the arts, dubbed “Queensland’s Time to Shine.” The Queensland government has reportedly invested $420.7 million into the initiative.

Minister for the arts, John-Paul Langbroek, said successful applicants will be able to make a name for themselves ahead of the 2032 Brisbane Olympic Games.

“Demand for authentic Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander arts and cultural experiences from Queensland continues to grow and we are delivering a plan to ensure the sector goes from strength to strength,” Mr Langbroek said.

“The Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Arts Development Fund will ensure artists, creative professionals and businesses are positioned to thrive as we prepare for the enormous opportunities of the 2032 Brisbane Olympic and Paralympic Games.”

Applications for the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Arts Development Fund close at 2pm on Monday, 22 December. Successful applicants will be notified by the end of February 2026 and be required to start work on their projects after 2 April 2026.

To learn more, visit arts.qld.gov.au/funding-opportunities/funding/aboriginal-and-torres-strait-islander-arts-development-fund

Digital Edition
Subscribe

Get an all ACCESS PASS to the News and your Digital Edition with an online subscription

Hollyman to make Production Sedan Stampede debut

Promising speedway racer Brodie Hollyman is set to make his Production Sedan Stampede debut this King's Royal weekend. The 18-year-old Brisbane driver is very...
More News

Speedway’s president set to race

Kingaroy is set to see engines revving and crowds a plenty as their annual Kings Royal meet draws ever closer. From King and Queen...

Barbeler, a racing family

The Barbeler family are set to hit the track again this weekend for Kingaroy Speedway's King's Royal meet. Barbeler Racing will have the Tyreright...

Australia’s number one to contest King’s Royal

Australia’s current top modified sedans driver is set to contest the King’s Royal. Toowoomba speedway driver Nathan Macdonald is among the King’s Royal Modified...

Burnett’s Best with… Roy

The Ian Boettcher Race Parts Kingaroy Speedway's mascot Roy is excited for the club's biggest event of the year, the 14th Annual King's Royal....

King’s Royal in colour

Children from across Australia have coloured in Kingaroy Speedway mascot Roy. In the lead-up to Kingaroy Speedway’s highly anticipated King’s Royal weekend from...

Crash at Booubyjan

A person has come away with only minor injuries after crashing their car into a tree on the Burnett Highway this morning. Firefighters and paramedics...

Ready to defend the crown

Two-time Top Stars Queen Sarah Franz is hoping to defend her crown. Franz is hopeful it will be third time’s a charm for her...

Next gen Speedway racers

The Caboolture brothers, Archie and Eli Roza, are set to race in the Kids Royal at the upcoming Kingaroy Kings Royal meet. With their...

Wicks keen to keep the crown

The reigning monarch of Kingaroy's Speedway said he was confident his 31 years of racing experience can carry him to a back-to-back King's Royal...

Cousins on the track

Three cousins are set to make their Kid’s Royal debut this weekend as fourth generation speedway drivers. Maryborough siblings Cayliana and Caiden Jones, and...