Open Eye Gallery is one of the 29 funded organisations to keep culture thriving across Liverpool


Liverpool City Council is extending its Culture & Arts Investment Programme for another 12 months. As one of 29 funded organisations, this continued support helps us carry on our work and keep culture thriving across the city.

Hero image Image by Rob Battersby

Liverpool City Council is to extend its flagship Culture and Arts Investment Programme (CAIP) for a further 12 months, ensuring continued support for the city’s vibrant cultural sector through to March 2027.

A report to last night’s Cabinet (16 September) outlines the need to extend the current three-year cycle for an additional year, requiring one-off funding of £2.245million. Following engagement with the 29 arts organisations it funds, the Council recognises the financial pressures many are facing, including rising costs and reduced reserves, and the extension will help safeguard the sector while a more strategic and inclusive approach to future funding is developed.

Adding another 12 months to the funding agreement will bring it in line with timescales for Arts Council England’s funding cycle, making it easier for the city’s cultural sector to plan strategically. The decision is now subject to final budget approval in March 2026.

The additional time will also allow for the development of a refreshed CAIP process – which will be informed by the Arts Council England review, the UK Government’s Spending Review, and proposed devolution changes. It will also align with the brand new Liverpool Culture Strategy which is set to be unveiled later this year.

Since its launch in 2023, CAIP has delivered significant impact:

  • Generating around £33 million in economic value to the local economy
  • Supporting over 4,000 jobs
  • Attracting over 4 million attendances in 2023/24 alone.

Projections for 2025/26 suggest the 29 funded organisations will generate nearly £41 million in turnover and deliver more than 12,000 events citywide.

The funded organisations are:

20 STORIES HIGHAfrica OyéBlackFest LtdThe BluecoatCollective EncountersThe Comedy TrustDaDa FestFACT LiverpoolFirst TakeThe Florence Institute Trust (The Florrie)HomotopiaLiverpool Arab Arts FestivalLiverpool Biennial of Contemporary ArtLiverpool Irish FestivalLMTT Everyman and PlayhouseOne Latin Culture Ltd – trading as Luma CreationsMetal CultureMilapOpen Eye GalleryPagoda ArtsRoyal Court Liverpool Trust LtdRoyal Liverpool Philharmonic SocietySquash Liverpool CICTate LiverpoolTmesis TheatreUnity TheatreWriting on the WallMeltSole Rebel.

Liverpool City Council’s Cabinet Member for Health, Wellbeing & Culture, Councillor Harry Doyle, said:

“Liverpool’s cultural sector is one of our greatest assets – economically, socially and creatively. It plays a vital role in shaping our city’s identity, bringing communities together, and driving innovation and opportunity.

“Extending CAIP for another year is a sensible and necessary step to protect jobs, sustain community engagement, and give our cultural organisations the certainty they need to plan ahead. It reflects our commitment to supporting the sector through challenging times – something we are incredibly proud of – and by aligning it with other potential pots of national funding, we’re creating a more strategic and joined-up approach to investment which can only benefit our wonderful arts organisations.

“We will continue to do everything we can to ensure our cultural sector thrives and continues to reflect the diversity and creativity of Liverpool.”

Find out more about Open Eye Gallery’s impact.

 

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