Following over a year of community engagement, research, and development, the City of Kingston Arts Fund (CKAF) Review is complete! We are excited to work with the City to implement changes to the program based on the recommendations outlined in the CKAF Review Report, pending approvals at the Arts, Recreation, and Community Policies (ARCP) Committee (24 April 2025) and City Council (6 May 2025), respectively.
You can view all of the meeting details and relevant documents online now (click here — reports are included in the meeting agenda).
The CKAF Review Report, along with the Transition Plan for CKAF 2025, will be presented to the ARCP Committee for review and approval on 24 April. A new draft CKAF Framework (which will replace the existing Plan for Administration), developed by City staff and the KAC in response to the recommendations in the CKAF Review Report, will also be presented for input and feedback, before we bring it back for approval this summer. All are welcome at this meeting, and we encourage CKAF recipients and other invested parties to attend in person (Council Chamber, City Hall) or online (register here).
We encourage all CKAF recipients and invested parties to contact the City Councillor in your district in advance of the ARCP Committee meeting to express your support for the CKAF program and/or provide feedback. You can submit a letter of support, request a meeting, or share your thoughts and feedback via email or phone. Contact information for City Councillors can be found here.
Below is a high level overview of some recommendations being brought forward via the CKAF Review Report:
The Report also speaks to strategic considerations for increased investment to the CKAF as part of implementation of the recommendations, and provides the Committee and Council with various budget scenarios.
It is our hope that industry leaders, CKAF-funded groups and individuals, and the broader community will join us at the meeting (in person or virtually) and/or reach out to your Councillors to advocate in support of the CKAF program. This is a critical moment in the program’s history, and an important time to advocate for increased investment into our local arts economy, in light of not only the growth and economic impact of our industry at the municipal level, but additionally the looming threats to our industry at the provincial and national levels.
The recommendations which City staff are bringing forth at this meeting are the result of widespread community engagement and feedback in the CKAF Review process since January 2024, as well as feedback recorded over years prior, research, and analysis of industry trends. The CKAF Review Report and recommendations contained within present an opportunity to better align the program and our work with the realities of our local arts sector today, foster opportunities for growth and development, and better support the needs of our artists, arts workers, and arts organizations.
We hope to see you there, and look forward to working with our community and the City of Kingston to build a stronger, more impactful funding program, to the benefit of all Kingstonians.
Transformations (2023), Agnes Etherington Art Centre, curated by Oriah Scott. Photo courtesy of Agnes Etherington Art Centre.
Agnes Etherington Art Centre | $75,000
Cantabile Choirs of Kingston | $31,000
Centre culturel Frontenac | $13,950
Kingston Canadian Film Festival | $50,000
Kingston Symphony Association | $75,000
Kingston WritersFest | $44,814
Modern Fuel Artist-Run Centre | $53,000
Reelout Arts Project | $24,000
Single Thread Theatre Company | $10,000
Theatre Kingston | $38,007
Union Gallery | $14,391
See more information about CKAF Operating Grant recipients here.
2024 K-TOWN Showdown Dance Battle
Kingston School of Dance | $5,400
2025 GroundUP Dance Festival
Movement Market Collective | $15,000
Airwave YGK
CFRC 101.9FM | $12,000
Create 15
The Mess Studio | $8,240
Festival of Live Digital Art (FOLDA)
SpiderWebShow Performance | $12,000
Half Steps: Musicians and Mental Health
Céline Klein | $11,250
Many Moons 2025 Programming
Many Moons Events | $11,250
Melos' Light in the Dark II
Melos Choir & Period Instruments | $7,870
Providence: a site-specific theatre performance
Eye of the Dawn Collective | $11,250
Seniors' Theatre Club
The Spire | $6,150
Skeleton Park Arts Festival
Skeleton Park Arts Festival | $13,500
Ten Seasons of Love
Sistema Kingston | $13,396
Testify
Prison for Women Memorial Collective | $15,000
The Dragon of Wantley
Kingston Baroque Consort | $7,000
The Juvenis Festival
Blue Canoe Productions | $13,500
The Lost Birds
The Isabel Voices | $9,870
White Pine Travels
Noah Scheinman | $11,250
See more information about CKAF Project Grant recipients here.
Intercomplementary Elements performance by Erin Ball (left/foreground) and Elizabeth Morris (right/background) at SpiderWebShow's Festival of Live Digital Arts (FOLDA) 2023. Photo by Jay Middaugh.
HYDRA: A Story on Water by Calliope Collective (2023). Photo by Randy de Klein Stimpson.
The City of Kingston Arts Fund (CKAF) provides grants to local arts organizations, artists, and collectives to foster creativity at all levels and enrich how Kingston residents experience and engage with the arts. Since its inception in 2007, CKAF has provided a mechanism for the City to invest in the arts, accounting for over $9.2 million invested to date. CKAF is comprised of two funding categories — 70% of the available funds are allocated to Operating Grants and 30% are allocated to Project Grants.
CKAF is an investment in Kingston’s cultural capital that aims to foster cultural vitality, increase the capacity of the arts community to create and produce artistic work, engage residents and enhance our city’s cultural economy, and promote financial stability and sustainability. CKAF is administered by the Kingston Arts Council (KAC) on behalf of the City to ensure that the Fund continues to best support and nurture the capacity of Kingston's artists and the arts sector.
Information on all policies and procedures related to the administration of CKAF can be found in the Kingston Arts Council Plan for Administration of Arts Funding for the Corporation of the City of Kingston in 2024
I. Engage Kingston artists with professional opportunities and industry-standard compensation;
II. Nurture creativity and arts engagement for Kingston residents;
III. Address current needs in the Kingston community;
IV. Strengthen and expand access to the arts;
V. Create inclusive activities and equity practices that reflect the diversity of artists, arts communities and audiences in Kingston;
VI. Foster collaboration between emerging and established artists and arts organizations across disciplines;
VII. Build capacity in the arts and culture sector through professional development, mentorship and investment in sustainable, relevant, high-quality artistic work; and
VIII. Cultivate community partnerships across private and public sectors.
CKAF Operating Grants support incorporated non-profit arts organizations located in the City of Kingston who exhibit high achievement in arts programming and fulfill a significant role in the Kingston community through the arts.
$10,000 - $75,000 for a period of one year.
$5,000 - $15,000 for a period of eighteen months from July 2024 to December 2025.
In 2021, Kingston City Council allocated $200,000 in one-time funding to support individual artists and non-profit arts organizations in recognition of the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic. This investment was in addition to the City’s annual contribution in support of the fund’s Operating and Project Grants. This funding was made available through two new grant streams; Resiliency and Adapt, administered by the KAC on behalf of the City of Kingston.
Resiliency Grants supported individual professional artists to continue to work and work safely in their artistic practice.
Total available funding for the Resiliency Grant was $100,000. Individual professional artists of any discipline applied for grants of $1,000 or $2,000.
This program supported individuals, collectives, ad-hoc groups, and non-profit arts organizations for new projects that directly addressed the challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Total available funding for the Adapt Grant was $100,000 and applicants applied for grants of $4,000 to $10,000.