Image of Artwork 'Mappings' by Janice Rieger

The archives curated by these organisations may also be of interest to those interested in the history of Disability Arts in Australia.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Image of Artwork 'Mappings' by Janice Rieger

AusStage:  The Australian Live Performance Database

AusStage provides an accessible online resource for researching live performance in Australia and New Zealand. Development is led by a consortium of universities, government agencies, industry organisations and collecting institutions with rounds of funding from the Australian Research Council, the Australian Research Data Commons and many other sources.

Collaborators in the AusStage consortium have assisted in the development of the Disability Arts History Australia website, and members of our research team - Prof Bree Hadley and Dr Morgan Batch - have contributed records to the AusStage database.

NDACA: National Disability Arts Collection & Archive

"NDACA is a £1-million project that brings to life the heritage and rich history of the UK Disability Arts Movement. The Disability Arts Movement began in the late 1970s and continues today. It involved a group of disabled people and their allies who broke down barriers, helped change the law with the Disability Discrimination Act of 1995, and made great culture and art about those struggles.

The-ndaca.org is the only location to discover our online catalogue of 3,500 images. You can also engage with our learning resources, oral history films, learn about emerging disabled artists, biographies of those who contributed to the Disability Arts Movement, and much more."