The Journal

Venues across the region get grants to fund culture

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ASOUTH Tyneside theatre, arts charity and dance company have received a cash boost which it is said will ultimately help unleash creative potential.

It was announced this Wednesday that The Customs House in South Shields, Gateway Studio centre in Gateshead and Southpaw Dance Company in Monkwearmo­uth, Sunderland, will share an award of around £1.14m investment to help improve accessibil­ity; reduce their environmen­tal impact and support new business models - and that all means good news for locals.

The awards from Arts Council England form part of the second round of its Capital Investment Programme which sees a total of £24.2m go to 67 cultural and creative organisati­ons across the country.

And the Arts Council says this infrastruc­ture support – with grants ranging from £100,000 to £750,000 – will in turn support the production of high-quality creative work and unleash more potential.

The Gateway Studio, a dance and arts charity run from a Grade 1 listed former church on Gateshead High Street, receives the largest of the local awards, with a grant of £450,000 to restore and ‘re-purpose’ its historic Trinity Centre premises for contempora­ry use.

The aim is to create an environmen­tally-sustainabl­e community hub there and develop an ‘arts village’ for people from a range of background­s.

And Gateway Studio is “overjoyed” at the news It has now raised £2.3m towards the £2.8m target and its artistic director Martin Hylton said: “Dance and the arts are powerful tools in transformi­ng individual­s and communitie­s.

“This new developmen­t will not only put Gateshead on the map in terms of developing and supporting profession­al artists but will also help to transform and kick start the regenerati­on of Gateshead High Street.”

The Customs House receives a grant for a little less: £446,220, which is to be spent on upgrading facilities and improving the venue’s environmen­tal impact. Planned work includes system upgrades; captioned performanc­es and revamping dressing rooms, rehearsal and community spaces and toilet facilities.

The theatre was also delighted at its award, announcing the “amazing news” on Facebook and adding: “With this much-needed support we will be able to upgrade our facilities and improve the quality of cultural experience.”

And Southpaw Dance Company, creator of both indoor and outdoor dance, is awarded £249,122 which will help make a new studio into a centre for innovation and digital dance, with the purchase of augmented reality and virtual reality equipment aimed at engaging with less-included parts of the community.

The new nationwide grants will be spent across the country on the likes of building adaptation­s and purchase of equipment to improve access, making the most of technology and reducing environmen­tal impact.

An Arts Council spokesman said the local projects “will help secure the creative future of towns, villages and communitie­s across the North East, including in places where cultural investment has previously been too low”.

Jane Tarr, the Arts Council’s north director, said of the awards: “This is brilliant news for organisati­ons in the North East. I’m excited to see the impact this funding from our Capital Investment Programme will have on artists and creative practition­ers to be able to create in their communitie­s through our investment.

“It’s great to see the many projects we are supporting that have environmen­tal responsibi­lity at their core including Customs House which will be using the funding to improve their facilities’ environmen­tal impact.

“This funding will ensure that cultural companies and venues across the region will be able to deliver arts and creative activity to audiences and communitie­s in our villages, towns and cities.”

Lord Parkinson of Whitley Bay, the Minister for Arts, Heritage and Libraries, said the aim is to ensure everyone has access to “life-changing cultural opportunit­ies” and added: “Cultural venues enrich our lives, and it’s vital that their infrastruc­ture matches the excellence of the creative work.”

The first round of the Capital Investment Programme was announced in May 2022 and benefited 16 organisati­ons in the wider north, including Darlington Borough Council, whose award is helping to create a new visitor destinatio­n at the Head of Steam museum site, which will be at the heart of the bicentenni­al anniversar­y of the Stockton & Darlington Railway in 2025.

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