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“Screen Australia launches an access coordinator training program”
- Heather Hill
- Creighton Burns
- Christine Mooney
- Anna Smith
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"High Beam Festival Program 2008" High Beam Program 2008 reads "Australia's international celebration of Arts and Disability - COMEDY | THEATRE| MUSIC | VISUAL ARTS | COMMUNITY EVENTS" -
“The inaugural Undercover Artist Festival, a biennial, disability-led performing arts festival, is held in 2015” In 2015, the inaugural Undercover Artist Festival took place. The festival was founded by Access Arts in consultation with Access Arts participants and a group of artists with disability. The festival has consistently been directed by leaders who identify as experiencing disability.
- Indelability Arts
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"Incite Arts - News, captured 2018" InCite Arts News, captured 2018 – Awards, Announcement of plan to host Arts Access Australia Meeting Place Arts and Disability Forum in 2018, new ‘Sounds Good to Me’ music program, visit from Tutti Arts’s Choir and Sisters of Invention music group, and ‘stArts with D’ Performance Ensemble -
"Tutti Arts - Amalgumation Arts Festival - Promotional Flyer" Tutti Arts - 'Amalgumation Arts Festival' 2006 Promotional Flyer - reads, in part "The program starts with the screening of a short comical film entitled 'Wheel Love' by Emma Butler from Launceston. Then follows 12 personal digital stories,Telling Tales, produced by Arts Access Victoria and the Australia Centre for the Moving Image The final film features Bronwyn Hayward from New Zealand, who wants to become a dancer but is told that she cannot because of her disability. The story tells her journey to become a dancer." -
"Accessible Arts - Annual Report 1995" Accessible Arts - Annual Report 1995 - Mission, Aims, Brief History, Chairperson’s Report, Treasurer’s Report, Executive Officer’s Report,1995 Program Outline, Partnerships, Resources, Financials -
"InCite Arts - History, and 2014, 2015 Annual Reports" InCite Arts history, and 2014, 2015 Annual Reports, captured 2017 - including starting as Alice Springs Youth Arts Group (ASYAG) in 1998, becoming InCite Youth Arts Inc in 2004, auspicing Arts Access Central Australia (AACA) 2005, then revising its constitution to reflect the broader scope of work as it became InCite Arts in 2013 -
“Kate Larsen (2012) Disability Leadership: If You're Gonna Talk the Talk .... ABC: Ramp Up, March 30. https://www.abc.net.au/ram pup/articles/2012/03/30/3467 452.htm.” Reads, in part "Now, I love my job. I'm good at it. I think that I've been useful here. But on the same day I accepted the position last February I also did something else. I gave notice of my resignation, and undertook to hand over the organisation by the end of 2012. The reason? Because I believe that Arts Access Australia should be led by a person with disability."
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"Igneous - Body In Question" Reads, in part, "A multimedia movement-theatre show, incorporating dance, video- and slide- projections, a life-sized puppet and an original soundtrack. A diary come to life, portraying the true story of an Australian dancer who – after paralysing one of his arms in a motorcycle accident – journeys through the worlds of medicine, rehabilitation and disability, in recovery of self-expression. He finds new angles on perceiving the body, and new ways to move. "Body image" and concepts of "normality" are questioned." - Footscray Community Arts Centre
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"Incite Arts - Meeting Place Arts and Disability Forum Poster" Poster for Meeting Place Arts and Disability Forum, hosted by InCite Arts and Arts Access Australia in Alice Springs in 2018 -
"InCite Arts Annual Report 2010" InCite Arts Annual Report 2010 - includes Chairperson, Artistic Director and Community Cultural Development Manager Messages, Arts Access Central Australia, Projects -
"InCite Arts Annual Report 2009" InCite Arts Annual Report 2009 - includes Chairperson, Artistic Director and Community Cultural Development Manager Messages, Arts Access Central Australia, Projects, Mentorships - Blue Roo Theatre Company
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"Interview with CB Mako" CB Mako is a non-fiction, fiction and fanfiction writer and disability advocate. Interview Summary cubbie||CB Mako is a creative practitioner and disability advocate who emphasizes the importance of accessibility in the arts, advocating for digital inclusivity and the elimination of ableist practices. cubbie pushes for systemic change so that future generations, like their disabled child, don't have to fight for access to art and literature. Success for cubbie is defined by the progress made when institutions include disability in their funding, competitions, and programming. Using the pen name CB Mako and going by pronouns cubbie/they/them, urges non-disabled artists, particularly from communities of colour, to proactively incorporate access in their work. - Eva Marks
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"Access Arts Annual Report 2015" Access Arts Annual Report 2015 - Undercover Artist Festival, Performing Arts Program, Exhibitions, Indigenous Advancement Strategy, Awards, Grants -
“Arts Access Victoria - Access Newsletter Spring 1996” -
“Arts Access Victoria - Access Newsletter December 1998” -
“Arts Access Victoria - Access Newsletter October 1998” -
“Arts Access Victoria - Access Newsletter April 1999”