Status update: arts policy
In January 2023, the Government launched Australia’s first arts policy in a decade. Revive – the National Cultural Policy sets out a suite of discrete actions and
measures to be achieved over 5 years. Two years on, and with an inquiry
into the policy underway, this FlagPost outlines what has been achieved so
far, what can be expected in 2025, and new issues that have arisen since Revive was published.
Current progress
The most substantial change arising from Revive has
been the restructuring of the Australia Council for the Arts into a new body
called Creative Australia (through passage of the Creative
Australia Act 2023, and the Creative
Australia Amendment (Implementation of Revive) Act 2024). The new Creative
Australia has subsumed the functions of Creative Partnerships Australia and includes 4 new boards, 3 of which are now operational: Music Australia, Creative Workplaces, First
Nations Arts and Writing
Australia (to commence from July 2025).
Other noteworthy developments include:
In the 2023–24
Budget (p. 182) the Government also provided pilot funding to support access
to art and music therapy programs, satisfying an action from Revive. It
is unclear how this funding was directed. Notably however, the level
of access to these therapies through the National Disability Insurance
Scheme is now in
doubt, following announced changes to the treatment of these therapies from
February 2025. An independent
review into the matter is now underway.
A full list of
actions that have been achieved or are in progress is available on the Office
for the Arts’ website.
Incomplete actions
A list of all intended actions under Revive is included at pages 97 to 106 of the policy. Noteworthy actions that
remain incomplete include:
What to expect in 2025
The work of Writing Australia is
expected to commence on 1 July 2025. Recruitment for the council is currently
underway. Relatedly, Australia’s inaugural
poet laureate is scheduled to be appointed in 2025.
With the new First
Nations Arts Board of Creative Australia having commenced in 2024, progress
is also expected on the promised First
Nations Creative Workforce Development Strategy.
New developments and further actions
Since the publication of Revive, the Government has
committed to further arts policy actions contained in Equity:
the Arts and Disability Associated Plan (see chapter ‘Advancing
Revive’). Voices
of Country also includes a list of recommendations (pp. 33–36), which
are framed as ‘guidance’ to stakeholders working with Aboriginal and Torres
Strait Islander people and communities, including government, rather than
discrete actions.
The current inquiries into the challenges
and opportunities within the Australian live music industry and the National
Cultural Policy itself may also lead to recommendations for further action.
In its May 2024 interim report, the latter inquiry recommended that the Government
provide further support to the festivals sector through both funding and insurance.
In line with concerns around the viability of the live music and events
industry, the Government provided $8.6 million towards the new Revive Live program in the 2024–25 Budget.
Revive has been well
received by a sector that has struggled
to attract attention and funding over the last ten years. Given this
history, there is no doubt that the sector will continue to closely watch, and
advocate for, the delivery of Revive into 2025 and beyond.