Collaborate with us
Inspirate works with organisations and individuals who believe in culture as a force for change. If you share our values, there’s a way to work with us.
We have spent over 15 years building partnerships across the public, private and voluntary sectors — partnerships rooted in shared values, long-term thinking and a genuine commitment to cultural and social impact.
We have worked with Leicester City Council, BID Leicester, Curve Theatre, Attenborough Arts Centre, Without Walls, Philharmonia Orchestra, Youth Music, Arts Council England, National Lottery Heritage Fund, National Lottery Community Fund, De Montfort University, Loughborough University, Sony TV, State Bank of India and many others. Each of those relationships has shaped and strengthened our work.
Whether you are a business looking for meaningful cultural engagement, a public body wanting to deepen community connection or a creative organisation interested in co-producing bold new work — we want to hear from you.
Working with us
Partnership with Inspirate can take many forms. You might co-produce a festival event, co-commission a community engagement project, sponsor a flagship event or collaborate on research and cultural strategy.
Whatever the shape of the relationship, our approach is always the same: open, responsive and focused on creating positive social and cultural change. We work regularly with local authorities, arts venues, universities, corporate sponsors, community foundations and health and wellbeing organisations.
How we can help you
If you want to develop your cultural offer, engage South Asian communities, support emerging artists or contribute to a more inclusive sector, Inspirate can help.
We offer:
Festival, outdoor shows and live event partnerships
Cultural commissions and co-produced projects
Artist development and mentorship programme
Strategic consultancy and cultural development
Get in touch and let’s explore what we can build together.
Support the future of South Asian arts
Your support helps us to create opportunities, reach new audiences and ensure South Asian culture remains central to the UK’s cultural landscape.

