Art festival marks half a century with half the program

Liz Hobday |

Sydney Town Hall will transform into a roller derby rink for the city’s major arts festival.
Sydney Town Hall will transform into a roller derby rink for the city’s major arts festival.

One of Australia’s biggest arts festivals marks its 50th anniversary with an offering roughly half the size of its previous program.

The first Sydney Festival under new artistic director Kris Nelson is launching a slate of 67 shows and events, with 16 world premieres and 10 free events to be held in January.

By comparison, 2025’s fourth and final festival under Olivia Ansell featured 130 shows and events, including 22 world premieres and 50 free arts attractions.

On the face of it, that’s half the size with one-fifth the number of free attractions.

Audience
Sydney Festival’s new director says arts events around the world are confronting cost pressures. (Paul Braven/AAP PHOTOS)

“I wouldn’t call it a reduced program, I mean, it’s certainly focused,” said Nelson ahead of the program launch on Thursday.

“As I understand it, budgets have maintained pretty similar patterns, with some usual ebb and flow.”

At the same time, rising production costs are making things precarious for subsidised arts events worldwide, said Nelson.

State funding has remained stable as has money from the City of Sydney, but there have been knock-on effects due to a lack of funding from the City of Parramatta, he explained.

Nelson did not directly answer questions about whether organisers had approached the NSW government for more money, given the festival’s rising costs.

Documents submitted to the charities regulator from the 2025 Sydney Festival show it in the red, with expenses of $20.4 million and revenue of $18.6 million, with just under half of that revenue coming from government funding.

Arts Minister John Graham
The festival creates colourful nights where anything feels possible, Arts Minister John Graham says. (Dan Himbrechts/AAP PHOTOS)

Long famed for Australia’s best-known arts attraction, the Sydney Opera House, NSW has a growing list of arts organisations struggling with both funding and rising costs.

The festival is not shy about its 50th birthday, NSW Arts Minister John Graham said in a statement released ahead of the launch.

“Right as Sydney hits the peak of summer, this amazing program will create big colourful nights, where anything feels possible,” he said.

The state government has been contacted for further comment regarding festival funding.

At any rate, the 2026 program features the world premiere of Mama Does Derby, a major new commission by Virginia Gay and Windmill’s Clare Watson that will see Sydney Town Hall converted into a full-scale roller derby track.

LACRIMA
Among the Sydney Festival shows is LACRIMA which tells the story of the making a princess’s dress. (PR IMAGE PHOTO)

There’s also the Australian premiere of LACRIMA, a three-hour cinematic contemporary theatre show telling the story of the production of the Princess of England’s wedding gown.

The festival’s opening weekend also features Live at Hickson Road: Effectos Especiales – a free outdoor event that’s part street performance and part live movie shoot.

Artist in residence Jacob Nash presents his final Blak Out program, featuring sculpture commission HELD by Yuwaalaraay Wirringgaa artist Lucy Simpson, to be installed on Barangaroo’s Stargazer’s Lawn.

Sydney Symphony Under the Stars will be held over the middle weekend of the festival at a new location in Tumbalong Park at Darling Harbour.

Sydney Festival runs January 8-25.

AAP