Regional Arts Development Fund (RADF) program

The Regional Arts Development Fund (RADF) promotes the role and value of arts, culture, and heritage as key drivers of diverse and inclusive communities and strong regions. RADF invests in local arts and cultural priorities, as determined by local communities, across Queensland. 

RADF supports arts and cultural activities that:

  • increase access to arts and cultural experiences in regional Queensland
  • grow employment and capacity building opportunities for artists and arts workers across regional Queensland
  • deliver on local arts and cultural priorities and promote the value of arts culture and heritage.

RADF is a flexible fund, enabling local Councils to tailor RADF programs to suit the needs of their communities.

Through this program, Arts Queensland (AQ) provides partnership investment that enables local councils across the State to deliver artistic outcomes, grow employment opportunities for creative and cultural workers, and engage communities to deliver on the priorities as described in Time to Shine 2025-2035.

  • Elevate First Nations arts
  • Activate Queensland’s local places and global digital spaces
  • Drive social change across the state
  • Strengthen Queensland communities
  • Share our stories and celebrate our storytellers

The Regional Arts Development Fund (RADF) is delivered as a partnership between the Queensland Government through Arts Queensland and eligible local Councils across the state.

Details of our local priorities can be found in the current RADF guidelines below.

Enquiries

General enquiries should be directed to the RADF Liaison Officer via email or by calling 131 872.

Current stage of the RADF program

The RADF advisory committee is currently assessing 2025/26 community grant applications. Further details will be supplied to the applicants in due course.

Competitive community grants

RADF competitive community grants applications were due by 23 November 2025. The program is now closed for the current financial year.

Please check back in October 2026 for projects commencing after 1 February 2027.

Please note applications:

For further information on RADF please contact our RADF Liaison Officer via email or by calling 131 872.

Toowoomba Regional Council 2024-26 RADF Guidelines

The Queensland Government recognises local governments as key partners and co-investors in Queensland’s arts and culture.

Purpose

  • The Regional Arts Development Fund (RADF) is delivered as a partnership between the Queensland Government through Arts Queensland and eligible local councils across the state.
  • RADF promotes the role and value of arts, culture and heritage as key drivers of diverse and inclusive communities and strong regions. RADF invests in local arts and cultural priorities, as determined by local communities, across Queensland.
  • RADF is a flexible fund, enabling local councils to tailor RADF programs to suit the needs of their communities.

Objectives

RADF objectives are to support arts and cultural activities that:

  • Increase access to arts and cultural experiences in regional Queensland.
  • Grow employment and capacity building opportunities for artists across regional Queensland.
  • Deliver against local arts and cultural priorities and promote the value of arts, culture and heritage.

RADF assessment

Assessment will be undertaken by the Toowoomba Regional Council’s Regional Arts Development Fund Advisory Committee. This is a committee of independent industry representatives selected from our community for their creative industries experience each term of Council.

Applications will be assessed on how well they reflect the Assessment Criteria relevant to the stated purpose of the application.

Applications will be assessed against their quality, impact, sustainable value and alignment with local priorities.

Assessment criteria

Quality

Impact

  • Creates new employment opportunities and skills development for artists and arts workers in Queensland.
  • Builds new audiences and markets and reputation for Queensland arts and cultures.
  • Demonstrates community and stakeholder involvement in RADF priority setting, decision-making and evaluation.
  • Where applicable, demonstrates support for activities that involve Aboriginal people and Torres Strait Islander people, including adhering to cultural protocols.
  • Helps deliver government priorities including Time to Shine. 

Sustainable value

  • Demonstrates value for money, sound governance, and ethical business practices, including paying amounts not less than industry award rates, recommended or agreed minimum rates.
  • Proposed activity has a strong delivery plan, including understanding potential risks and their management.

Local priorities

Applications should reflect at least two goals of Connecting Through Creativity - Toowoomba Region Cultural Strategy 2023-2028(PDF, 3MB)

Goal 1 – Respect and Recognise

We respect and recognise First Nations culture and heritage.

  • Build ethical, effective, and collaborative processes for policy, programs and promotion concerning cultural knowledge and creative expression of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples.
  • Promote best practice cultural protocols, the principle of self‑determination and cultural safety training in partnership with First Nations communities across arts and cultural organisations.
  • Put effective mechanisms in place to bring the voices and views of First Nations peoples, communities and organisations into the design, delivery and evaluation of programs, services, and facilities.
  • Deliver and support initiatives that increase the visibility of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander cultures in the Toowoomba Region.

Goal 2 – Celebrate

Our unique culture, stories and heritage are multicultural, reflecting and shaping our local identities and communities, as we celebrate and nurture diversity.

  • Broaden the community’s understanding of cultural and linguistically diverse opportunities through the delivery of Council services focused on access, equality, participation, planning and consultation.
  • Engage our community and visitors in the cultural life of the Region through the continued development of innovative and dynamic cultural activities and programs.
  • Ensure the stories of our Region’s people and places are preserved and showcased.

Goal 3 – Activate

Our arts, culture, creativity, and heritage stimulate local spaces and places, fostering opportunities to connect with others and activate communities.

  • Plan, develop and maintain high-quality community and cultural facilities, precincts, and spaces that contribute to inclusive, culturally rich, and vibrant communities.
  • Work with government partners and culture stakeholders to maximize the use of public libraries, museums, galleries, halls, open spaces, and other cultural facilities as community hubs and explore opportunities to integrate arts and culture activities and spaces into other community facilities.
  • Implement a public art program that reflects and promotes the distinctive character and lifestyle of the Region and embrace opportunities that will instil pride in communities by supporting projects and programs that build a sense of place.

Goal 4 – Connect, Collaborate and Create

We value creativity and strive to increase access to, and engagement with, the arts, culture, and heritage across the Region.

  • Support creative initiatives that target diverse audiences, encouraging their participation in the arts as a vehicle to social and cultural inclusion.
  • Facilitate the production of creative content, supporting, disseminating, and showcasing multi-faceted creative endeavours.
  • Provide grant funding that builds and sustains the viability and productivity of community-based organisations and enhances the capacity and capability of local artists and cultural and creative practitioners.

Goal 5 – Govern

Our leadership and governance enable the cultural development of an inclusive, culturally rich, and vibrant community.

  • Seek to position Toowoomba Regional Council as a leader and champion of arts, culture, and creativity.
  • Partner with communities and all levels of government to support new and revitalised infrastructure that enhances community engagement in cultural experiences, supports artists and creative industries, and delivers economic and social outcomes for communities.
  • Help build strong community-based cultural organisations.

Goal 6 – Thrive

Our local arts and creative industries are thriving, and we cultivate opportunities for this to occur.

  • Support the development of a cohesive arts and cultural sector that maximises cooperation and resource sharing and builds creative capacity.
  • Recognise, promote, and share the importance of arts, culture, and creativity to an enhanced quality of life by highlighting the inherent social, cultural, and economic value of a vibrant creative sector to the community.
  • Support local practitioners and creative enterprises; facilitating professional development, commissioning, and platforming local artists, increasing the vitality and reach of the cultural economy and supporting contemporary practice.

Goal 7 – Cultivate

We promote the arts, culture, creativity, and heritage of the Region, communicating the wide range of events, festivals, programs, exhibitions and collections to visitors and our community.

  • Develop and market cultural and creative tourism as part of Toowoomba Region’s identity and image.
  • Actively promote arts, culture, and heritage events, festivals, programs, exhibitions and collections to residents and visitors using traditional and digital media channels.

Funding categories for the Toowoomba Region

RADF applications in the Toowoomba Region can be for professional development, creation and or presentation of new work or for projects.

Applications can be for major or minor activities within these categories. Priority will be given to applications that best address the assessment criteria.

Eligibility

Who can apply for RADF funding

  • Individual emerging and established artists, producers and creative practitioners
  • Businesses
  • Registered not-for-profit organisations
  • Groups and collectives.

Applicants must

  • reside or be based in the Toowoomba Region local council area, or if based outside our local council area, be able to demonstrate how their application will directly benefit arts and culture in the Toowoomba Region
  • have an ABN or be auspiced by an eligible organisation with an ABN
  • be Australian citizens or permanent residents
  • have met all acquittal conditions of previous Council grants
  • discuss their proposal with the Cultural Services Officer and/or RADF Liaison officer prior to submission
  • follow the application process as outlined below
  • have appropriate insurance and adhere to sound workplace health and safety practices
  • be able to demonstrate viability.

Applicants may only submit one RADF grant application per round.

Applications cannot be made by

  • government agencies or departments of state or federal government
  • educational, religious or medical organisations, where the application is for the organisation’s core business.
  • individuals where the application is for content directly related to educational coursework, study or research.

Funds are not available for activities that

  • begin before completion of the assessment of grants in the relevant financial year.
  • seek ongoing operational expenses.

RADF grants require a co-funding contribution

All applications are required to show a co-funding contribution in the budget.

This could be in the form of:

  • applicant cash contributions
  • grants from other funding bodies
  • fundraising, sponsorship and partnership contributions
  • in-kind support.

Interested parties are advised to check the TRC website and/or contact the Cultural Services Officer or RADF Liaison Officer for up-to-date information on the progress of the program.

How to apply

There is a two-stage application process for RADF in Toowoomba Region.

A written expression of interest (EOI) is to be provided on the RADF EOI form accessed via SmartyGrants.

At the EOI stage a preliminary budget will be required.

Expressions of interest will be reviewed by the RADF Advisory Committee.

Selected applicants will be invited to present in person to the RADF Advisory Committee. They may also be asked to submit supplementary information at this stage.

After successful presentation a detailed budget and project management plan may be required before funding agreements are formulated for successful applicants.

When to apply

Expressions of interest for projects starting after 1 February 2026 can be submitted at any time up until midnight Sunday 23 November 2025.

Stage One - Expression of interest: Close Sunday 23 November 2025

Decision advised by mid- December- date to be confirmed.

Decision advised by via email through SmartyGrants.

Stage Two - Selected Applicants

Applicants selected from the expressions of interest will be invited to present their proposal to a meeting of the RADF Advisory Committee in late January 2026, Exact date and time to be advised.

Email invitations will be sent to the representative of each selected project via SmartyGrants.

Outcomes of these presentations will be advised via email by the end of January 2026.

Further Expressions of interest may be encouraged via a further funding round depending on the outcome of this round.

Interested parties are advised to check the TRC website and/or contact the Cultural Services team for up-to-date information on the progress of the program.

Reporting

All successful applicants will be required to provide an Outcome Report within 8 weeks of the completion of the funded activity.

Public feedback surveys are mandatory for activities receiving $10,000 or more in RADF funds, and optional for activities receiving less than $10,000.

Any project receiving $10,000 or more from RADF is required to report on specific statistics and feedback captured by the successful applicant via a public feedback survey to gain direct responses from and rating by attendees and or participants.

Statistics must still be captured and reported for projects receiving less than $10,000 but additional public feedback is optional for these projects.

Outcome report requirements will be provided to successful applicants with their with funding agreements so these requirements are clear from the beginning.

Failure to report on the outcome of a funded activity will result in the applicant becoming ineligible for any future Council funding.

*Note: funding recipients are expected to meet all legal obligations in relation to accessibility including access to web content.

# Where applicable, applicants must demonstrate evidence of adhering to appropriate cultural protocols for activities that engage and respect the work of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people.

For further information on RADF please contact Toowoomba Regional Council’s RADF Liaison Phone: 131 872 or Email: RADF@tr.qld.gov.au

For information on other Arts Queensland programs and opportunities and access to helpful resources please visit www.arts.qld.gov.au

Past program details

2025-26 projects and grants

In 2025-26 we initiated two projects and three community grants:

  • We delivered the Creative Communities Initiative, which included a creative industries half day summit and five professional development workshops for creatives across the Toowoomba Region.
  • We funded Creative Mornings Toowoomba chapter to deliver their program for another two years.

Under the competitive community grants program three applicants were funded for projects starting in 2026:

  • ARC Circus Residency - The Empire will engage ARC Circus Dance Theatre Company as resident artists for Thrive Festival 2026. The residency will include a mainstage show called 'Into Space', a free short presentation of 'How the Birds Got Their Colours' (First Nation's Story), roving astronauts and circus skills workshops for children.

    Applicant – Empire Theatres Ltd
  • Reckoning - Reckoning is a feature documentary exploring local, grassroots initiatives in truth-telling across Australia. One such is the annual Battle of Meewah (One Tree Hill) commemoration in Toowoomba, celebrating the famous 1843 victory of the mountain tribes alliance led by Multuggerah over encroaching squatters. This is a regular and rare public acknowledgement of First Nations resistance to colonisation.

    Applicant – Ruby Entertainment Pty Ltd
  • Shane Warne The Musical – Showing at The Empire Theatre, Toowoomba for three performances only, Shane Warne The Musical celebrates the humour, heart and humanity behind Shane Warne's roller-coaster life, as crafted through the lens of performer and Australian icon Eddie Perfect. 

    Applicant – NJOY Productions

2024-25 projects and grants

In 2024-25 we initiated one project and three community grants:

  • We partnered with Museum and Galleries Queensland to deliver the State Conference for the sector in Toowoomba.

Under the competitive community grants program three applicants were funded for projects starting in 2025:

  • Creative Mornings Toowoomba chapter. Creative Mornings Toowoomba is a monthly breakfast lecture series that brings together the creative community for free talks, connection, and inspiration. Each month features local creative leaders and innovators speaking on global themes, creating a platform for creative professionals and community members, to network, share ideas, and build community connections. The events run one Friday morning per month from 8 - 9am at the Empire Theatre in Toowoomba City.

    Applicant: Jessica Staskiewicz auspiced by Toowoomba Art Society.
  • Windows into Queer Lives Project culminating in an exhibition 19 May to 13 June at The Lighthouse Toowoomba’s Write Gallery. Windows into Queer Lives is an art and storytelling program designed to amplify LGBTQIA+ voices, foster connection, and celebrate queer identities through creative expression. This program included a series of workshops to support LGBTQIA+ people explore their stories and identities through art and creativity, and a four-week long art exhibition at The Toowoomba Write Gallery, showcasing art from queer creators. The project was supported by The Lighthouse Toowoomba (Gallery space and curatorial assistance), created by Inclusive Counselling Collective in conjunction with Amnesty International and it showcased the talents and lived experiences of Queer people in the Darling Downs region. Windows Into Queer Lives sought to empower the LGBTQIA+ community through the transformative power of art and storytelling.

    Applicant: Inclusive Counselling Collective.
  • Sea of Light – Thrive Festival At this year's Thrive Festival embark on a journey of light and imagination in this illuminating interactive installation by Patch Theatre. As you explore Sea of Light, artworks by Aboriginal Contemporary Visual Artist Elizabeth Close are painted in light across the sea floor. Sea of Light brings together magical light and a gentle soundscape to create a unique adventure for the whole family.

    Applicant: Empire Theatres Pty Ltd

2023-24 projects and grants

In 2023-24 there was one project funded:

  • A revitalised approach to public art at Toowoomba Regional Council. Our cultural strategy identifies several actions in relation to public art in 'Goal 3 Activate'. To move forward in this space, the Public Art Policy and all associated documents were completely revised. This work included provision of toolkits to make compliance with the new policy as easy as possible.

2022-23 projects and grants

In 2022-23 there was one strategic initiative funded:

  • We partnered with the Regional Arts Services Network to prepare and deliver a Creative Industries Summit in Toowoomba.

2021-22 projects and grants

In 2021/22 there was one project funded:

  • Arts and Cultural Strategy: our Library and Cultural Services Team partnered with a number of local stakeholders to deliver an Arts and Cultural Strategy for the Region. The objectives of the project included:
    • acknowledging an investment in arts and culture that has tangible economic and social benefits for our region
    • producing an evidence based cultural strategy that redefines how we address the expansive role the arts, culture and heritage play within our community
    • promoting Toowoomba Region as a place with a distinct and enviable cultural identity and lifestyle.

 

2020-21 projects and grants

In 2020/21 there were two projects funded:

  • Live and Local: our Community Development, Tourism and Facilities Team partnered with a number of stakeholders to deliver a Live and Local Strategy to strengthen local grassroots live music communities in Toowoomba Region.
  • Regional Arts Australia selected Empire Theatres Toowoomba to become a presenting venue partner for the 2021 Artlands Conference. Regional Arts Development Funding supported the provision of the local programming and local content for this engagement.

 

2019-20 projects and grants

In 2019-20 there were three projects funded:

  • The Virtual Public Art Project: a strategic partnership with Arts Council Toowoomba to review how public art works in the Toowoomba Region.
  • Lit Festival Masterclass: festival educational extension auspiced by Story ARC Inc.
  • My Corona project: an entrepreneurial collaboration that supported economic development through partnerships with local business owners, nurtured local innovation, and offered creative development to local artists across a range of artforms.

 

2018-19 projects and grants

In 2018-19 there were two projects funded:

  • Performing Arts Support Program (PASP) and Toowoomba Regional Touring Initiative (TRTI) managed by Empire Theatre Projects Company
  • The Regions Contemporary art projects for the Toowoomba Region managed by Alexandra Lawson - Alexandra Lawson Gallery

2017-18 projects and grants

In 2017-18 there were two projects funded:

  • Lit Festival auspiced by Arts Council Toowoomba.
  • Millmerran Historic Walk managed by Millmerran Commerce and Progress in association with Millmerran and District Historical Society.