Arts council

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

An arts council is a government or private, non-profit organization dedicated to promoting the arts mainly by funding local artists, awarding prizes, and organizing events at home and abroad. They are often arms length from the government to prevent political interference in their decisions.

In the United States, the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) is the national arts council with each of six regions hosting a regional arts council (RAO) and each state hosting a state arts council and each county within the state hosting a county arts council. Some cities under each county even have their own arts council.

Contents

[edit] List of Arts Councils

[edit] North America

[edit] Canada

[edit] United States

[edit] Regions within the United States

  • Southeast Southern Arts Federation
  • Mid-Atlantic Mid-Atlantic Arts Council
  • Northeast New England Foundation for the Arts
  • Mid-America Mid-America Arts Alliance
  • Mid-West Arts Mid-West
  • West Western States Arts Federation

[edit] State of California

[edit] State of North Carolina
  • Arts Council of Winston-Salem and Forsyth County

[edit] State of Virginia

[edit] Central and South America

[edit] Europe

[edit] Germany

[edit] Great Britain

[edit] Finland

[edit] Netherlands

  • Council for Culture of the Netherlands

[edit] Bulgaria

[edit] Norway

[edit] Asia

[edit] Africa

[edit] Australasia

[edit] External link

Almost every country provides some government support for arts and culture, but not all choose to adopt the arm's length or arts council model. Many national governments rely solely on a government ministry or department to deliver their cultural policies and support programmes. Most of the 'arts council' countries listed above also have a government ministry or department for arts and culture (rare exceptions are the USA and the Philippines); the typical arts council therefore lives in quite a complex environment, wedged between the arts sector and government.

For information on both arts councils and ministries around the world, and on the issues they face, go to: