Community Arts
We work to promote, support and develop arts activity in the county’s communities ranging from visual arts to music, dance, drama, creative writing and film. Community Arts provides opportunities for everyone to participate in the arts regardless of experience, age or background.
We work with a wide range of partners from third sector organisations to community groups across the fields of health and wellbeing, education and regeneration. Our Community Arts programme is designed to support Welsh Government’s Well-being of Future Generations (Wales) Act 2015 and is funded by Denbighshire County Council and the UK Government through the Shared Prosperity Fund as well as other grants and partner funding on a project by project basis.
We are a small team of two – Community Arts Manager, Siân Fitzgerald and Community Arts Project Co-ordinator, Jo McGregor. We also employ a team of creative professionals on a freelance basis to deliver our projects.
For further information you can get in touch via our Contact Us page
You can also follow us on @DLLCelfArts
Art achieves great things in our local communities:
- It brings people together
- Creates Jobs
- Offers opportunities to learn new skills
- Develops new interests
- Makes villages, towns and cities great places to live, work and visit
Night Out
We also support and manage the Night Out Scheme on behalf of Denbighshire County Council. The Arts Council of Wales’ Night Out scheme works in partnership with local authorities to help groups of volunteers across Wales bring the arts to the heart of their communities.
Community groups (known as Promoters) can choose from a huge range of great professional performers and put them on in community or village halls and other non traditional venues across the country. If you want information on how the scheme works and promoting events visit www.nightout.org.uk.
Each year close to 550 shows are booked through the scheme by nearly 350 different community groups. Alongside the main scheme we also run the Noson Allan Fach scheme which offers small shows for member led organsiations such as WI or Merched y Wawr.
Working in conjunction with the local authorities of Wales, the Night Out team operates a guarantee against loss for events where we pay the performer fee and the community promoter pays back ticket income made at the door.
We never take more than the performer costs so as a promoter you will never be worse off by using the scheme. The more money promoters make back the more funds we have available to say yes to another request.
Our promoters are free to book a wide range of professional artists. Many come to Night Out for advice on appropriate high quality shows suitable for small community venues.
Night Out aims to encourage, enable and support:
- High quality professional performances in communities throughout Wales, many of whom have little access to arts events.
- The arts economy – providing a platform for performers from Wales and further afield to reach local communities.
- Community development, volunteering and the local economy and contributing to the use of village halls and community venues as viable hubs for local organisations.
- Promoter groups with advice, ideas and recommendations.
Contact us via our contact us page.
Arts in Heath and Wellbeing
The importance of the arts for the benefit of health and wellbeing is fast becoming widely accepted.
The Arts Council of Wales have been supporting activity in this field for some time and have a Memorandum of Understanding with the Welsh NHS Confederation and they also work closely with Public Health Wales and with participants in the Cross Party Group on Arts and Health in Welsh Government. In May 2017, the Director of the Baring Foundation said that Wales ‘leads the world’ in arts for older people and we have continued to develop our work in this sector. The report of the All-Party Parliamentary Group for Arts, Health and Wellbeing in Westminster also shines a light on the health and wellbeing benefits of arts participation,Creative Health: The Arts for Health and Wellbeing.
We in Denbighshire Leisure Community Arts run a full programme of Arts in Health activity in partnership with local authority services such as Social Service and Housing, public organisations such as Betsi Cadwaladr University Health Board, and third sector organisations and charities such as Mind, KIM Inspire, Grŵp Cynefin and Canolfan Ni in Corwen.
Some of our work was highlighted in the Arts Council of Wales mapping document Arts and Health in Wales: Mapping Study of Current Activity 2018 https://arts.wales/our-impact/how-we-reach-wider-audiences/arts-and-health
Like the Arts Council of Wales, we hold a deep conviction that the Arts have a particularly powerful contribution to make to a healthy, connected and engaged life.
Did you know?
- Attending an arts event at least once a month during life’s later years reduces the risk of depression by 50%.
- Visiting a gallery of museum every few months reduces your risk of developing dementia by up to 44% – and the benefit lasts for up to 10 years after you stop.
Awards and Recognition
Denbighshire Leisure Community Arts was the only delivery partner in Wales of the important research project Dementia and Imagination (http://dementiaandimagination.org.uk/). Following on from this research project the team have continued to develop our work with people living with dementia and are leaders in the sector with the award winning project, Lost in Art.
A visual arts project for people living with dementia and their carers, Lost in Art won The Hearts for the Arts Award for the Best Local Authority Arts Project Encouraging Community Cohesion in 2018.
We are also members of WAHWN.
Visit our Community Rescources page to see all the rescources we offer online:
Lost in Art
Lost in Art is a project aimed at people living with dementia, along with their family members and carers. The aim of the project is to explore the role of the visual arts in addressing issues which can affect people with dementia, including social isolation, confidence, communication and quality of life and wellbeing. The project was developed with the support of the Dementia Services Development Centre at Bangor University.
Lost in Art takes place weekly at Ruthin Craft Centre.
If you are living with dementia or caring for someone with dementia and would like to join us for a taster session, please get in touch.