New Hampshire State Council on the Arts

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Preceding agency
  • State Arts Council (1965)
JurisdictionNew Hampshire
Headquarters172 Pembroke Road
Concord, New Hampshire
Annual budget$150,000 (FY 2026)
New Hampshire State Council on the Arts
Agency overview
Preceding agency
  • State Arts Council (1965)
JurisdictionNew Hampshire
Headquarters172 Pembroke Road
Concord, New Hampshire
Annual budget$150,000 (FY 2026)
Agency executive
  • Adele Sicilia, Director
Parent agencyNew Hampshire Department of Natural and Cultural Resources
Websitewww.nharts.dncr.nh.gov

The New Hampshire State Council on the Arts is a government agency of the U.S. state of New Hampshire. Adele Sicilia is the agency's director, while Adam J. Crepeau is interim commissioner of the parent agency, the New Hampshire Department of Natural and Cultural Resources. The main office of the agency is located in Concord.

New Hampshire formed a State Arts Council, the state's first arts agency, on June 28, 1965.[1][2] The council is authorized via RSA 19-A, "to insure that the role of the arts in the life of our communities will continue to grow and will play an ever more significant part in the welfare and educational experience of our citizens."[3]

In March, 2025, Rep. Joseph Sweeney proposed an amendment to the state's budget bill that would eliminate funding for the Arts Council, as well as for the New Hampshire State Library.[4] The FY 2026 budget for the New Hampshire State Council on the Arts was significantly reduced from $1.4 million to $150,000 to meet revenue constraints. As a part of this reduction, the Granite Patron of the Arts Fund was established, allowing businesses to make donations in exchange for a 50% tax credit against the Business Profits Tax and the Business Enterprise Tax. [5][6]

Function

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