The National Disability Arts Collection and Archive (NDACA) is a £1-million digital archive chronicling the history of disability arts in the UK, available to the public at www.the-ndaca.org.
NDACA, a Heritage Lottery Fund project delivered by Shape Arts, chronicles the unique history of the UK Disability Arts Movement in which a group of disabled people and their allies broke down barriers, helped change the law and made great art and culture while doing so. NDACA is the first archive in the world to offer a major retrospective of disabled people’s art and activism; www.the-ndaca.org is the home of a digital catalogue of 3,500 images, oral history film interviews, educational resources and animations, articles and much more, and as such the Disability Arts Movement can now stake its place within the diverse landscape of UK cultural heritage.
The Archive and Collection preserves the legacy of disability arts, allowing future generations of disabled people to celebrate the creative and political artefacts of disability. Researchers, heritage professionals and those interested in the UK’s cultural identity will be able to share and study a variety of ephemera about disability arts and analyse how the Disability Arts Movement impacted the campaign for disabled people’s civil rights.
As an open, free-to-use archive, www.the-ndaca.org is the central location to discover disability arts history. NDACA has digitised over 3,000 deposits to tell the heritage story of disability arts; this massive collection of disabled artists’ work from 1968 to the present day covers every aspect of their creative and political journeys: extensive photographs, ephemera, theatre stills and t-shirt collections relating to the seminal moments in the struggle for disabled people’s rights. The digitisation of thousands of unique deposits will allow new audiences to share and comment on disability arts heritage.
NDACA’s physical collection will be stored in the Archive’s Repository at Buckinghamshire New University, along with the newly built research facilities opening later this year. The NDACA Learning Wing will be the first ever study space dedicated to disability arts heritage in the UK.
Explore the digital National Disability Arts Collection and Archive now at www.the-ndaca.org. You can also read Shape's NDACA blogs below.
Find out what the recipients of NDACA's first ever R&D Award got up to over the course of the programme... Read more
NDACA's Georgia Macqueen Black gives us an update on the project's forthcoming workshop at Tate Exchange... Read more
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NDACA & UK Disability History Month team up to create animations around “Disability and Art' Read more
Shape's Georgia Macqueen Black spoke to artist Poppy Nash to find out how NDACA has helped her to express her Types 1 Diabetes through art Read more
We're delighted to announce the successful applicants for the first ever National Disability Arts Collection and Archive (NDACA) R&D Award! Read more
The National Disability Arts Collection & Archive introduce the Design Team who are working to provide a space for the public to engage with the archive Read more
Meet the four artist mentors for NDACA's new Research and Development grants programme! Read more
Shape’s Georgia Macqueen Black, NDACA’s Marketing Officer, tells us just how much the Archive has to offer and achieve. Read more
Nina Thomas shares her experiences working alongside the NDACA team at Bucks for the digitisation of Baroness Campbell's collection Read more
NDACA archivist Alex Cowan finds help (and hope) in history repeating itself Read more
Sarah Dormer, NDACA’s Learning Engagement Officer, talks us through the project's approach to access, with one request... Read more