1940s
1940 Committee for Encouragement of Music and the Arts (CEMA) set up by Royal Charter
1941 John Maynard Keynes becomes Chair of CEMA
1945 46 arts organisations are funded by CEMA
1946 Keynes dies shortly before Arts Council charter drafted
1948 Local government authorises spending on the arts
1950s
1951 Festival of Britain
1955 Arts Council increases the amount of grant-receiving organisations to 92, including the Royal Opera House and Royal Court Theatre
1958 London County Council plans Hayward Gallery
1960s
1964 Jennie Lee appointed as first Arts Minister
1967 Arts Council Charter renewed
1968 Hayward Gallery opens
1970s
1975 Arts Council supports 262 organisations
1980s
1984 Glory Of the Garden report published by the Arts Council, claiming inequitable funding between London and the regions
1987 Norman Tebbitt campaigns for restructure of Arts Council funding system
1989 Wilding report published, claiming further underfunding in the regions
1990s
1992 Department of National Heritage formed
1993 National Lottery Act passed
1994 Arts Council of Great Britain replaced with National Arts Councils National Lottery
1997 Department for Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) created. Chris Smith becomes first Secretary of State for DCMS, a senior cabinet post
2000s
2002 The Arts Council of England and the 10 regional arts boards merge
2003 The new organisation is named Arts Council England
2008 McMaster report published
2010 Arts Council England publishes Achieving great art for everyone, our 10-year strategic framework for the arts










