Cultural Spring project praised
A project aimed at spreading arts participation has been praised for meeting targets, despite the pandemic.
Sunderland and South Tyneside’s Cultural Spring is well on target to meet ambitioustargets–evenamidcovid.
The project, is only halfway through its third threeyear phase, but has already achieved some targets despite many unforseen difficulties.
FundedthroughArtsCouncil England the organisation has developed free, hybrid workshops with activities taking place in people’s homes withonlineandtelephonesupport. Other workshops were shifted entirely online.
Local artists were commissionedtocreatecraftpacks,delivered free to people’s homes.
Extra funding was secured to support those suffering lonelinessandsocialisolationwith more craft packs. Non-digital projects also featured.
The Cultural Spring was launched in 2014. Its partners are University of Sunderland, the Customs House, Sunderland Music, Arts and Culture (MAC) Trust, women’s health organisation Sangini and the Cultural Spring Charity. The project has worked with more than 50,000 people.
A report, covering April 2020 to August 2021, from evaluation consultancy CoLibra, gives huge praise.
It said: “The Cultural Spring’s range of arts and cultural engagement opportunities provided vehicles for connections to be made, created a sense of ‘all being in it together’ and the much needed safe, calm spaces and time out where individuals could temporarily immerse and distract themselves from the stresses caused by Covid-19.”
Emma Horsman, Cultural Spring project director, said: “Our team worked incredibly hard to pivot from our in-person activity to online delivery; then ensured anyone wanting to access but had no digital access could also take part.
“Wefirmlybelieveourwork took on extra significance during the lockdowns and we made a genuine difference to people’s lives, particularly thosefeelinglonelyorisolated. We welcome the report from CoLibra. It’s reassuring to see they recognise our approach was one that worked well.
“I’d like to thank all of the community champions who have been involved in our decision making panels and the artists and creative companies we’ve worked with over the last few months. They’ve had to change the way they worked too.”