Abstract

Can the arts change how we view cities? How can we evaluate the broad social impacts of arts programs, particularly in elusive areas such as the local image of urban communities? This article examines the cultural renaissance of Western Sydney, long considered a crass, working-class cultural wasteland. In the last two decades, the region has experienced a proliferation of new artistic initiatives, and advocates now hail Sydney’s West as the true face of multicultural Australia’s cultural vitality. This article also documents how community arts and development programs have contributed to these shifting perceptions, analysing these contributions in terms of social impact evaluation. It argues that evaluating social impact expands the parameters of conventional evaluation techniques, which typically focus on program-level outputs and outcomes. It presents a case study of a Western Sydney community organisation, Information and Cultural Exchange (ICE), which, for 20 years, has delivered community cultural development and professional development programs for Western Sydney artists. Engaging with historically disadvantaged communities, the organisation has specialised in art forms that have resonated with the region, including hip hop, digital storytelling, and filmmaking, and in the process has played a key role in re-imagining Western Sydney as a cutting edge, multicultural hub of creative vibrancy. 
 
 Keywords: Western Sydney, community arts, evaluation, social impact

Highlights

  • These negative images of Western Sydney are starting to shift, pushed along by attempts to boost cultural and artistic activity in the region

  • EVALUATION OF SOCIAL IMPACT: GETTING BEYOND MEASURING OUTPUTS In the last 25 years or so, evaluation has become the new mantra of funding bodies, community organisations, and it seems, any organisation providing any kind of service

  • The Information and Cultural Exchange (ICE) While Western Sydney has been the focus of much social research (Burchell 2003; Butcher 2003; Collins & Poynting 2000), few studies have focused on the social impact of community arts programs on the region

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Summary

Introduction

These negative images of Western Sydney are starting to shift, pushed along by attempts to boost cultural and artistic activity in the region. This article focuses on these longer-term ripple effects, and in particular, the impact of community arts programs on perceptions of Western Sydney. THE SOCIAL IMPACT OF COMMUNITY ARTS PROGRAMS IN WESTERN SYDNEY: A CASE STUDY

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