Oak Bay artist Pat Hindmarch-Watson paints The Whisperer, a piece she brings to life through inspiration from rock walls. Hindmarch-Watson was invited to city hall to work on her art during the B.C. Arts Council funding announcement by Minister of Tourism, Arts and Culture Lisa Beare on Monday, April 29.

Oak Bay artist Pat Hindmarch-Watson paints The Whisperer, a piece she brings to life through inspiration from rock walls. Hindmarch-Watson was invited to city hall to work on her art during the B.C. Arts Council funding announcement by Minister of Tourism, Arts and Culture Lisa Beare on Monday, April 29.

Victoria Fringe Festival operators applaud increase in grant funding

B.C. boosts arts council funding $15 million over three years

Victoria’s Intrepid Theatre executive director Heather Lindsay is breathing a little easier this week following the creation of a three-year funding announcement from the B.C. Arts Council.

The latest round of Arts Council grants (there are three grant periods throughout the year) is a total of $1.5 million, distributed to 191 people and organizations.

The decision to create a three-year grant commitment came from a round of community consultations by the B.C. Arts Council. For theatre companies such as Intrepid, which has doubled in size the last 10 years, the B.C. Arts Council funding is vital, Lindsay said.

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“Without it, there would be no Fringe,” she said, adding tickets to Fringe shows could cost as much as $75 each, instead of under $10.

Intrepid runs the annual Victoria Fringe Festival at which time their employee numbers swell from five full-time members to an additional 47 seasonal and part-time employees.

“This is really crucial for strengthening the foundation of companies who present [festivals] annually,” Lindsay said. “We all applaud them for it.”

reporter@oakbaynews.com


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