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Partnerships & Programming
Creative Partnerships is an experimental and collaborative cross-School department, which facilitates and enhances our engagement outside of the School. This includes programming for public events and festivals, collaborations with cultural and third sector partners, and industry focused events and forums. They also manage the School’s participation in Culture Mile and funding for new concepts and ideas through incubation and seed funding.

Creative Partnerships
Check out some of the commissioning opportunities and projects that the Partnerships & Programming team have worked on below.
If you’d like to collaborate, get in touch with our Creative Partnerships & Programme Manager Jo Chard.
DISRUPT was a new online digital arts festival that was launched in July 2021, made in partnership with the Barbican Centre; Culture, Health and Wellbeing Alliance; Culture Mile; Lived Experience Network; Maya Productions; Slung Low; and Sylvan Baker. Created in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, the event explored how the performing arts have supported communities during this time, and how a year of uncertainty encouraged new and radical ways of working. With a programme created entirely from open submissions and selected by a panel of 14 community artists, the festival successfully brought together creatives, artists, communities, cultural and community organisations, researchers, charities and schools and was attended virtually by 616 participants from 34 countries worldwide. It enabled people to share important lessons from an arduous year, with a view to reimagining the role of the arts in society.
In 2022, the School is co-creating a toolkit focused on equitable collaboration and community decision-making models. This will be in partnership with Barbican, Slung Low and a number of other organisations who are specialists in the field of artistic democracy. The toolkit will be aimed at the performing arts industry and freelance practitioners as a guide to developing best practice models in their own work.
Culture Mile is a new home for contemporary culture in the heart of London’s working capital, running from Farringdon through to Moorgate. The City of London Corporation together with the Barbican, Guildhall School of Music & Drama, London Symphony Orchestra and the Museum of London, are bringing the area to life with imaginative collaborations and exciting events.
Each year Culture Mile delivers a wide range of live events, festivals, community projects, research and consultation in the local area. Culture Mile has developed, and continues to develop, an extensive network of organisations in and around the area which will play a critical role in realising the ambitions of the project, alongside the five core partners. These organisations represent the changing face of the City of London and share a deep-rooted commitment to transform the area.
Music Bank launched during the pandemic, in partnership with Age UK, to support people living with dementia and experience isolation. The project acted as a musical befriending service, enabling a group of 12 students, staff and alumni to play musical requests to befriendees down the phone. Each Music Bank artist received training and peer coaching on how to work with people living with dementia, what to expect and how to support their befriendee.
In the summer of 2021, the project moved to an in person model, featuring juke box sessions to memory groups, where people could request songs on the spot and musicians would play and sing to them. There were also home visits, where Music Bank artists played repertoire requested by their befriendee live and in person. In total, the project has supported over 50 people to access our musical offering and we’re now working with three Age UKs, and a number of their partners.
In Summer 2022, the Partnerships and Programming team partnered with the Bishopsgate Institute to deliver a series of events created in response to the Bishopsate Archive.
Two alumni artists received a commission to carry out this work, exploring themes around sex work in the city and London's drag-ball scene. Each commission culminated in a final performance in Bishopsgate Institute's Great Hall to rave reviews.
Guildhall will be working with Bishopsgate Institute in Summer 2023 to deliver another two events. If you're interested in being one of our commissioned artists, get in touch.


R&D and Funding
The School has a number of funding opportunities for staff, students and alumni which seek to encourage innovation and entrepreneurialism.
Our Lightbulb Fund supports staff to create projects that drive innovation and exchange for the School with external partners - exploring new ways of working and developing prototypes or products which engage with industry, communities and audiences.
Over the last year and a half, the world has changed dramatically. As the industry begins to rebuild itself from the ground up, many artists face more challenges than ever before. Guildhall Futures is a brand new funding scheme, created with the purpose of providing professional support to our alumni community in order to address issues raised during this time of turmoil.




