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2025-03-31-accounts

Report of the Trustees and Financial Statements for the financial year ending 31 March 2025

The trustees are pleased to present their annual directors’ report. The financial statements comply with the Charities Act 2011, the Companies Act 2006, the Memorandum and Articles of Association, and Accounting and Reporting by Charities: Statement of Recommended Practice applicable to charities preparing their accounts in accordance with the Financial Reporting Standard applicable in the UK and Republic of Ireland (FRS 102) (effective 1 January 2019).

Independent Dance Company limited by guarantee Charity number 1180239 Company number 05096892 Registered office 85 St George’s Road, London, SE1 6ER

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CONTENTS

Reference and administrative information 3

Trustees’ Report 4 - 12

Independent Examiners Report 13 Statement of Financial Activities 14 Balance Sheet 15 Notes to Financial Statements 16 - 22

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Company information at 31 March 2025

Trustees Iris Yi Po Chan (Co-Chair) Kimberley Harvey (Co-Chair) Nicky Childs Fernanda Muñoz-Newsome Christopher Mitchell (resigned 15 January 2025) Mita Pujara (resigned 28 February 2025) Sara Reed (resigned 12 February 2025) Julia Evans (appointed 23 May 2025) Christopher Hutchings (appointed 23 May 2025) Michael Kitchin (appointed 23 May 2025) Company number 05096892 Charity number 1180239 Registered office Siobhan Davies Studios 85 St George’s Road, London SE1 6ER Senior management Nikki Tomlinson, resigned August 2024 Nathaniel Parchment, Co-Director Nicky Napier Co-Director (interim), in post from September 2024 Governing documents Memorandum and Articles of Association Independent Examiner Rowlands Webster Limited Austin House 43 Poole Road Bournemouth BH4 9DN

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PURPOSE AND PUBLIC BENEFIT

The Trustees of Independent Dance, also known as ID, confirms that they have complied with the duty in Section 4 of the Charities Act 2006 to have due regard to the Charity Commission’s general guidance on public benefit, “Charities and Public Benefit”.

The charitable objects of Independent Dance are:

VISION

Our support for radical enquiry in diverse dance and movement practices empowers artists and engages publics locally, nationally and internationally.

MISSION

Independent Dance (ID) is a leading dance development organisation. We support the development of dance through radical enquiry, learning, community-building and audience engagement.

Based at Siobhan Davies Studios in London, ID is a research engine and home organisation for a growing community of practitioners in the UK and around the world. Artist-led since 1984, ID is currently staffed by a team of four part-timers, all of whom sustain freelance practices alongside their role with the organisation.

Our public programme supports a wide range of accessible and interdisciplinary approaches to dance, somatic practices, improvisation and choreography. Co-designed with UK/ international artists and partner organisations, this far-reaching programme includes classes, talks, workshops, research, digital initiatives and small-scale festivals. ID also bridges higher education and professional spheres, leading on MA/MFA Creative Practice: Dance Professional in partnership with Trinity Laban and Siobhan Davies Studios. Our aim is to generate a diverse and dynamic ‘community of practice’ which is not limited to one place or location and to agitate for positive change and justice within ID, the arts and society.

Over the past six years we have been working to diversify and broaden our programme offer and expand our reach, supporting a wide range of artists and practices through a live and online programme. We have undergone significant organisational change and revised our policies, including making commitments to anti-racist and anti-ableist working practices and to reducing barriers to engaging with our programme and organisation at all levels. This ongoing work is critical to our future development.

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ID is a thinktank, a hub for research, a meeting and learning ground, and a base for artists across generations. It is considered a reference point by a wide community across the UK and internationally.

While Independent Dance and Siobhan Davies Studios (SDS) are different organisations and charities, they are proud to be partners in an ongoing National Portfolio Organisation consortium, currently receiving regular funding from Arts Council England, with SDS as the lead partner. ID’s funding has remained at standstill since 2006, at £71,000 per year.

AIMS

We do this by:

VALUES

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STRATEGIC OVERVIEW and KEY OBJECTIVES 2024/2025

STRATEGIC OVERVIEW

ID is currently a non-lead partner in an ACE NPO consortium with Siobhan Davies Studios. ID’s core NPO funding has remained at standstill since 2006, at £71,000 per year. As such, ID operates on a lean income-generating model, using staffing time partially afforded by core funding from Arts Council England to produce the public programme and therefore lever income; more than 60% of our turnover has been earned income in recent years. A recent shift in circumstances was the opportunity to apply (as non-lead NPO consortium partner) for ACE project funds, which we have aimed to do most years. However, there were no successful bids in this financial year. Organisational priorities include a review of how our programme is resourced and extension of our fundraising capacity. Being creative with limited resources and mindful of sustainability is also key.

In 2024/25, we continued the delivery of our 2022-2026 Business Plan whilst welcoming new leadership to ID. A key piece of work, which will continue into next year and which will require additional funding, has been for ID to review how our organization and programme remains financially and organisationally sustainable and appropriately resourced going forward. The review and implementation of our communications strategy have been progressing very well this year, with the appointment of a new Communications Assistant and increased engagement from our communities via our bi-monthly e-newsletter (over 4,500 users) and our social media channels.

HOW WE SUPPORT ARITSTS AND PROFESSIONAL PRACTICES

We co-design, deliver and evaluate our public programme with artists at all career stages and in response to their interests and needs, as well as wide artistic, social, and cultural developments. Key to this is how ID values and nurtures artistic leadership; employing 100+ freelance artists annually and with all four of ID's staff maintaining freelance practices, we are in constant dynamic exchange with the sector. Through listening, exchange, and data-gathering, we build a multistranded public programme which is a porous combination of responding to approaches and suggestions from artists, audiences and organisations and our own curatorial propositions which fit ID’s public benefit remit.

As an organisation which specialises in supporting artists and artform development, working directly with 6000+ practitioners a year through an open access learning programme, ID’s primary role is in creating opportunities for practitioners to develop and sustain skills and careers. ID is a training and learning ground which supports critical, experimental, and innovative enquiry in a range of dance forms, somatic practices and improvisation as well as interdisciplinary approaches. We are interested in deep-rooted research, connections, and community-building. We note a shift away from individual authorship and self-development towards relational practices and activity which is more outward-facing and socially engaged. How the artistic community values ID comes through strongly in feedback. Practitioners supported by our programme work and apply their

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skills - as performers, makers, facilitators, teachers, researchers in a wide range of other contexts both within and beyond dance. We also note that while ID is based in South London, our programme employs and reaches significant numbers of practitioners based in other parts of England and internationally, as well as London itself.

ID’s programme continued to evolve in response to artistic, social and cultural developments, with aims to be future thinking and to model good practice with a focus on equity, fairness, rigour and well-being. Key to this is how ID values and nurtures leadership by artists. A strong collaborative and responsive approach to working with artists and other freelancers, based on porosity, listening and exchange, has been essential to ID’s approach throughout our near-40-year history.

EQUITY, DIVERSITY AND INCLUSION

We continued to take an intersectional approach, aiming to offer a genuinely inclusive programme and foregrounding anti-racist, anti-ableist and anti-genderist issues through the programme itself. This is illustrated by the intensive work which has been happening over recent years, and we are seeing the positive impact this has had on the demographic of freelance artists and practices we now work with, or who engage with our programme.

In 2024/25 we continued to further increase marginalized voices across the programme, artistic workforce, staff and Board and to expand the range of dance and movement forms and practices we are supporting. Historically ID's roots are found in dance forms and practices that are somatic based but over many years now ID has also supported research and learning in embodied approaches to a wider range of dance forms and practices including social dance diasporas such as House dance, Hip Hop, Bharatanatyam, Street Dance, Butoh and those forms that focus on ancestral wisdom and heritage. Throughout our programming there has also been a concerted and ongoing strategic effort to engage with individual practitioners, whose artistic practices may have previously not been foregrounded in our sector.

In 2024/2025 we continued to build on the work undertaken in 2023 and in previous years, which had centered around the delivery of a programme called ‘Dance it, Dance it, artistic approaches to access and inclusive leadership’. This was a programme foregrounding leadership among disabled, d/Deaf and neurodivergent dance artists via a year-long focus on artistic approaches to access and inclusion. In 2024/25 we built on this commitment and prioritized work to increase leadership and participation of disabled, d/Deaf and neurodivergent artists and those with long-term health conditions across our programme and staff team. We also joined forces with a similar organisation to ID, The Work Room based in Glasgow, as well as HZT, the Inter-University Centre for Dance Berlin. This was for a programme of work to run across 2024 and 2025, called ‘Disrupting Leadership: anti-ableist approaches to artistry and access in dance’. This work focused closely on anti-ableist approaches in our organisational working and delivery of our public programmes, as well as engaging directly with disabled leaders as artist companions to each organisation.

ID continues to acknowledge the barriers to access of our programmes for those that are marginalised. We have therefore continued to offer our programme at low cost to artists and audiences in recognition of these socio-economic barriers and widespread precarity among artistic communities. Bursary places were offered to practitioners to attend our public learning programme free of charge; and we also continued to invest, from reserves, to support bursary awards for practitioners from underprivileged socio-economic backgrounds to undertake MA Creative Practice: Dance Professional. ID is a very small organisation and our ongoing

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standstill funding from Arts Council England over many years does not make it easy for us to keep costs to end user low. However, our commitment to an excellent and affordable provision for independent artists remains a core aim for ID.

ACTIVITIES and ACHIEVEMENTS in the year 2024/2025

DANCE AND MOVEMENT CLASSES

ID delivered 30 weeks of public daily morning classes intended for experienced dancers and 30 evenings of improvisation sessions open to all. Each week is with a different teaching artist who brings their own practice and approach, offering a space to build and hone skills, work with other artists and be part of a growing community. We aim to make classes accessible for all physicalities and ID’s programme is not based on a normative view of the human body, with an ethos of questioning and extending notions of what dance can be and for whom. This year’s class programme included artists who were new to teaching with ID and the teaching pool was further diversified.

Morning Class was enriched by a broad range of somatic approaches to dance, in conversation with other forms, such as social dance, hip-hop and African dance practices, that attracted new participants and sparked innovative dialogues. Morning class - 30 weeks at 5 classes per week, therefore 150 sessions. Average attendance for the year was 77%.

Our program saw a notably high demand for Monday Night Improvisation, continuing its trend of being oversubscribed, further cementing its role as a cornerstone of our program. The team reviewed attendance patterns and explored how this popular strand integrates with other program elements. This period laid the groundwork for optimizing class schedules and enhancing participant engagement. Evening class - 30 weeks at 1 class per week, therefore 30 sessions. Average attendance for the year was 104%.

WORKSHOPS AND RESEARCH LABS

ID's workshop and research labs are in part subject to additional funding and strategic partnerships. Workshops and research labs can be both public and non-public facing and aim to support the professional development of a wide range of independent artists and their practices. Research labs can also focus on specific concerns within our sector, as ID seeks to actively engage in debate around current topics.

This year we welcomed Gustavo Ciriaco from Brazil. Ciriaco's workshops explored the realms of curiosity and knowledge perception in the world, drawing inspiration from the educational philosophers Friedrich Fröbel and Paula Freire. Sonia Lindfors (Cameroon/Finland) workshops invited participants to gather around the urgent and share tools and strategies to navigate in dark times. Kirstie Simpson (US/Wales) workshops offered participants practices that promote well-being and resilience in challenging times. Amy Voris (UK) workshops invited movers to delve deeper into their solo movement practice through guided explorations, prompts for improvisation and open frameworks for returning to movement.

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Through delivering two modules of the MA/MFA Creative Practice: Dance Professional, in partnership with Trinity Laban, we engaged with an international cohort of practitioners as part of the cohort. The two modules were delivered by the following artists: Florence Peake, Gaby Agis, Amy Voris, Funmi Adewole, Nathaniel Parchment, Thomas Kampe, and Caroline Scott.

The research lab - ‘Disrupting Leadership: anti-ableist approaches to artistry and access in dance’ was a partnership with The Work Room (Glasgow) and Inter-University Centre for Dance (Berlin) and which took place in this year and will continue into the next financial year. The project was made possible via the Four Nations fund and aimed to centre inclusivity, ecological thinking and sustainability. Artist companions included: Kat Hawkins, Kimberley Harvey, Laura Fisher, Sarah Hopfinger, Luke Pell and Claire Cunningham.

DIGITAL, TALKS and ARTIST GATHERINGS

A key element of ID's digital and international offer is the restored and refreshed Digital Library created out of ID’s 20-year archive. This collection is freely available on our website with enhanced accessibility, referencing and branding. New documentation will be added to the library from future programming; at 150+ items, it has become a significant resource for practitioners and researchers in and beyond academic spheres, helping to realise our strategy to evolve as an internationally renowned and sustainable research engine for dance.

Commissioned and disseminated by ID recently was Gaby Agis’10 digital audio dances in public spaces around London – parks, estates, cemeteries, wasteland - accompanied by interviews with collaborators, intended for participants to engage with in their own time and space. ID's CoDirector Nathaniel Parchment also took part in the Artist Archive programme delivered by SDS, which explored who gets to have an archive and why archive, amongst other questions.

A talk by Christopher Matthews about his work ‘Act 3’, the final instalment in a trilogy of works considering queer masculinity in dance, desire, body image and working-class dance histories also took place. This work continued Matthews studies of intimacy between two figures, Act 3 is an exploration of queer desire in later life. Presented by Sadler’s Wells in their Elixir Festival 2024

PARTNERSHIP AND COLLABORATIVE WORKING

Independent artists are invited to directly influence developments to ID by proposing research projects, by taking on freelance roles within the programme, and by becoming Artist-Ambassadors and Trustees. We support artists across places and generations and have become a home organisation and reference point for a growing community of independent dance artists. This longitudinal support and involvement are key to the community of practice which ID has evolved over the past 40 years.

ID also operates in the capacity of supporting projects at first stages, with collaborations and projects spiralling out of initiatives we innovate or support through mentoring and advice. Advocacy and discussion at national sector level focuses on conditions, equity, access, and systemic change and aims to feed artists’ voices into key networks which ID is an active member of, including One Dance UK, and the UK Dance Network.

Partnerships with other organisations are integral to ID’s whole ethos and programme delivery and our approach to engaging with partners and working collaboratively is aligned with our commitment to

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resource-sharing and knowledge-exchange. We partner with project-funded organisations, artist-led initiatives, larger-scale NPOs, and academic institutions to extend our reach and impact nationally and internationally and to deliver our vision on a larger scale than is possible as a small organization alone.

ID forms a rare bridge between professional and academic spheres by leading MA/MFA Creative Practice: Dance Professional with Trinity Laban and Siobhan Davies Studios; this is a key strength and enables a flow between higher education contexts and professional practice.

In 2024/2025 we were also pleased to partner with University of the Arts, Central St Martins, People Dancing and the University of Leeds on a successful bid to the AHRC (Arts, Humanities Research Council) entitled Choreography of Consent: Experiments in Dance/Law research. The network will run a series of events that support researchers and practitioners to test out new ways of working that bring dance and law together and will explore these new dance/law methods focusing on the issue of consent across the fields of dance, law, sexuality and health. The first event was held at ID's base in London during this financial year.

Funders and organisational partners in 2024/25 include:

COMMUICATIONS

ID continued to focus on implementing a house style with welcoming and plain language, strong imagery, and increased use of social media, incorporating image descriptions with the benefit of additional time invested in a Digital Communications role. A marketing campaign for MA/MFA recruitment started earlier to align with Trinity Laban’s objectives. Strong cross-marketing with Siobhan Davies Studios has also been of benefit.

Sign-up to e-mail newsletters continued to increase rapidly this year and built on the impetus started last year via a new website. Newsletter open rate average has risen from 25% average in 2016/17 to 52% av. in 2024/25. (average arts industry open rate is 26%) Strong international followings (email list, website, socials) in Europe (Netherlands, Germany, Italy), China, South America & USA. Total live attendance for the year: 6366

Total digital attendance for the year: 904

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FINANCE

Reserves policy

ID’s policy as a charity is to maintain reserves comprising of unrestricted and designated funds at a sufficient level to ensure the prudent day-to-day financial management of the charity, and cover the risks identified in the risk register. The policy also aims to ensure that designated funds are built to match six months of running costs, or £50,500. The charity regularly reviews the funds set aside as designated funds and general contingencies, and to ensure that strategies are in place to enable such funds to be able to meet their purpose on an on-going basis. The Trustees carry this out as an integral part of the charity’s risk management process.

Financial review

The net deficit for the year was £22,312. This is made up of a £26,380 deficit on unrestricted funds and a £4,068 surplus on restricted funds. As of 31 March 2025 General reserves (unrestricted and designated funds) stand at £133,301 and restricted reserves £4,068.

Going Concern

ID delivered a full public programme in 2024/25 in keeping with our mission and met our income targets. Fortunately, ID has built strong reserves and does not face imminent threat. The Trustees continue to review the charity’s resources and consider these adequate to continue the proposed activities of the organisation for the foreseeable future. The trustees confirm that the charity is a going concern.

Income Generation

Income generation forms a key part of ID's financial model, helping to ensure the organisation’s sustainability and underlining the value of its offer to the public. ID offers a mixture of free and ticketed activities to ensure we maintain a balance between widening participation and audiences, supporting our diversity policies to broaden access to groups who are either economically or socially vulnerable. This is coupled with a pricing policy to remove barriers to participation. ID senior staff and Trustees regularly review pricing strategy and take care to balance the need to generate income with the mission to provide a high-quality artist development programme at prices that lower barriers for those on a low income. Competitors and partners’ price levels are considered, as is information from evaluation forms and audience profiles.

Fundraising

The principal source of funding for the organisation is Arts Council England (ACE) through a revenue grant to ID and partner organisation Siobhan Davies Studios (reg. charity no. 1010786) as a consortium within Arts Council England (ACE) National Portfolio of Organisations, of which SDS is lead partner. Back in 2022/23, the consortium was successful in receiving an offer of continued investment from Arts Council England as a National Portfolio Organisation 2023-2026, for standstill funding. The total annual grant awarded was £582,018; ID usually receives £69,784 and the balance of £512,234 retained by SDD as part of the agreement. In 2022/3, due to an inflationary uplift from ACE, the amount paid to ID became £71,068. This grant is unrestricted but must be managed within the terms of the funding agreement with ACE.

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The Trustees take their responsibility under the Charities (Protection and Social Investment) Act 2016 seriously and have considered the implications of their activities. ID receives some donations from individuals and is subscribed to the Charities Aid Foundation. Donations received through individual giving totalled £314.

The charity does not work directly with commercial participators or professional fundraisers. The Trustees are not aware of any complaints made in respect of fundraising during the period.

Investment

The Trustees, having regard to the liquidity requirements of operating the charity, have kept available funds in an interest-bearing deposit account. The trustees seek to achieve a rate on deposit which matches or exceeds inflation as measured by the retail prices index.

Risk Management

The policy of the charity is to take a structured approach to risk management in pursuit of the organisation’s artistic objectives. This approach involves a regular process of risk assessment, whereby the potential impact of risks to the achievement of objectives are identified, quantified and mitigated as far as possible. The principal vehicle for risk management is a risk register which is reviewed regularly by The Trustees.

Staffing

ID has a staff of five (3.5 FTE), all of whom are part-time and active freelancers as well. The year saw several staff changes:

Governance

ID has four trustees who meet quarterly. In addition, Co-Chairs meet regularly with Co-Directors outside of these meetings. In 2024/25 the Trustees dedicated time to supporting recruitment and retention processes in collaboration with the Co-Directors and 4 additional Trustees are due to join ID’s board in the next financial year.

This Trustees’ report was approved by the Board of Trustees on the 24 September 2025 and signed on its behalf by

Kimberley Harvey Iris Yi Po Chan (Co-Chairs)

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INDEPENDE￿ EXAMINER'S REPORT TO THE TRUSTELS OF INDEPENDENT DANCE I report to the Trustees on my examination ofthe financial statements of Independent Dance (the Chatiryl for the year ended 31 March 2025. Responslbllltles and basls of report As the Trustees of the Chariry (and also its dIreC￿Tr for the pllrp￿ ofcompany law) you are responsible for the preparation of the finaneial staternents in aeeordanee with the requirements ofthe Companies Act 2￿6 (the 2C(6 Act). Having satisfied myself that the financial statements of the Chariry are not required to be audited under Part 16 of the 2(K16 Act and are eli8ible for iDdeFekntexamination. l Tepon in respect ofmy examination of ¢he Chariry's financial stateDJen¢s carried out undeTsection 145 of the Chuities Act 2011 (the 2011 Act). In carrying out my WAamination I have followed all the applicable Directions given by the Charitycommission undersecuon 145FI(b) of the 2011 ACL Independent examlner's 8tatement I have cornpleted my examination. I confinn tha¢ no matteTr have come to my arrention In connertlon with the examinallon 8ivin8 me cause to believe thai in any material rtspec¢: . accounting recor& were not kept in respect of the charity as required by section 386 of the 2006 2. financial statement$ do not 4¢¢oYd with thc* records: or 3, the financial statements do not eornply with the aeeountin8requirements of section 396 of the 21)>5 Act o¢her than any requirement that the accounrs give 4 ¢rue and fair view whi¢h i5 not a mArrer con5ideTed as parr of an indeFer￿ent examination: or 4. the finanoal gra¢emen¢s have nc¢ kn prepared in accordance vjith the Jnethc45 and principle5 of the Statement of Reeomrnended Praetice ftsr ace¢)untin8 and reprrin8 by ch#ritie5 applicable to charities preparin8 their accounts in accordance with the Financial Reprtin8 Standard app]icabk In the UK and Republic of Ireland (FRS 1021. I have no eoncerni and have come acrc68 no other matters in Connection with the examination to which attention should be dnwn in this report in order to enable a proper understanding of the financial sthternents to be reached. MA Baigent Arr AAT Row]ands Web5¢er L¢d. Aus¢in HOUK 43 P(th Ro Bournemouth. BH4 9DN 13

Statement of Financial Activities
Notes
Income from:
Donations and legacies
2
Charitable activities
3
Other trading activities
Investment income
Total incoming resources:
Expenditure on:
Raising funds
5
Charitable activties
5
Total expenditure
Reconciliation of funds
Total funds carried forward 31st
March 2025
Net income/(expenditure) for the
year and net movements in funds
Total funds brought forward 1st April
2024
Unrestricted
Funds
£
71,382
62,925
-
3,411
137,718
(3,216 )
(160,882 )
(164,098 )
(26,380 )
159,681
133,301
Restricted
Funds
£
5,000
-
-
-
5,000
-
(932 )
(932 )
4,068
-
4,068
Total
Funds
2025
76,382
62,925
-
3,411
142,718
(3,216 )
(161,814 )
(165,030 )
(22,312 )
159,681
137,369
Total
Funds
2024
£
74,959
65,110
450
1,899
142,418
(4,943 )
(169,499 )
(174,442 )
(32,024 )
191,705
159,681

The statement of financial activities includes all gains and losses incurred in the year.

All incoming resources and resources expended derive from continuing activities.

Movements in funds are disclosed in Note 13 to the financial statements.

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Balance Sheet

Notes
Fixed Assets
Current Assets
Debtors
10
Cash at bank and in hand
Current liabilities
Amounts falling due within one year
11
Net current assets
Total assets less current liabilities
Funds
Unrestricted
Designated
Restricted
Total funds
13
2025
2024
£
£
£
£
-
-
21,866
450
126,199
170,158
148,065
170,608
(10,696 )
(10,927 )
137,369
159,681
137,369
159,681
82,801
109,181
50,500
50,500
4,068
-
137,369
159,681

For the financial year in question the company was entitled to exemption under section 477 of the Companies Act 2006 relating to small compoanies.

No members have required the company to obtain an audit of its accounts for the year in question in accordance with section 476 of the Companies Act 2006.

The directors acknowledge their responsibility for complying with the requirements of the Act with respect to accounting records and for the preparation of accounts.

These accounts have been prepared in accordance with the provisions applicaable to copmanies subject to the small companies' regime.

The Financial Statements on pages 14 - 22 were approved by the board on 24 September 2025 and signed on its behalf by:

Kimberley Harvey Iris Yi Po Chan

(Co-Chairs)

Company Registration No. (England and Wales) 05096892

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2 Voluntary income

Grants, donations, legacies and similar incoming resources

Arts Council England, London:
National Portfolio Funding
Tramway
Total Arts Council England, London
Grants, donations and sponsorship:
Individual donations
Total grants, donations and sponsorship
Total voluntary income
Arts Council England, London:
National Portfolio Funding
ACE Centering Disability
Total Arts Council England, London
Grants, donations and sponsorship:
Individual donations
Total grants, donations and sponsorship
Unrestricted
£
71,068
-
71,068
314
314
71,382
Unrestricted
£
71,068
-
71,068
136
136
Restricted
£
-
5,000
5,000
-
-
5,000
Restricted
£
-
3,755
3,755
-
-
Total
2025
£
71,068
5,000
76,068
314
314
76,382
Total
2024
£
71,068
3,755
74,823
136
136

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3 Incoming resources from charitable activities
Unrestricted
Income received from:
ID Talks
150
Classes
23,540
Workshops & Intensives
5,360
Events & Exchanges
630
MA Creative Practice
33,245
Total
62,925
Unrestricted
Income received from:
ID Talks
120
Classes
19,900
Workshops & Intensives
4,980
Events & Exchanges
3,934
MA Creative Practice
33,901
Centering on Disability
2,275
Total
65,110
Restricted
-
-
-
-
-
-
Restricted
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
Total
2025
150
23,540
5,360
630
33,245
62,925
Total
2024
120
19,900
4,980
3,934
33,901
2,275
65,110

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4 Allocation of support and governance costs

The company allocates its support and governance costs as shown in the table below and then further apportions those costs between staff and other costs (see note 5). Support costs are allocated on a basis consistent with their use. Staff resources are allocated based on a % of time dedicated to each area, and other costs are allocated based upon invoice management by budget holders.

Management
IT & Finance
External Accounting
Human Resources
Legal and other fees
Total
Management
IT & Finance
External Accounting
Human Resources
Legal and other fees
Total
Charitable
activities
£
45,574
4,856
280
2,503
769
53,982
Charitable
activities
£
29,672
4,913
666
1,838
1,720
38,809
Governance
function
£
700
700
720
-
-
2,120
Governance
function
£
1,665
1,665
690
-
-
4,020
Total
2025
£
46,274
5,556
1,000
2,503
769
56,102
Total
2024
£
31,337
6,578
1,356
1,838
1,720
42,829

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5 Analysis of total expenditure

Cost of raising funds
Management
Finance
Charitable activities
Support & Governance
Events & Exchanges
Classes
Marketing
Workshops & Intensives
MA Creative Practice
Disrupting Leadership
Total
Cost of raising funds
Management
Finance
Charitable activities
Support & Governance
Events & Exchanges
Classes
Marketing
Workshops & Intensives
MA Creative Practice
Festival of Learning & Digital Library
Centering Disability
Total
6
Net incoming resources for the year
Is stated after charging:
Depreciation
Independent examiner fee
Staff costs
£
2,516
700
3,216
21,083
4,199
7,293
10,017
11,346
19,907
12,643
86,488
89,704
Staff costs
£
3,278
1,665
4,943
26,757
6,318
6,485
10,067
10,709
19,122
11,981
1,668
93,107
98,050
Other costs
£
-
-
-
35,019
174
20,977
1,402
4,643
12,179
932
75,326
75,326
Other costs
£
-
-
-
16,072
3,180
18,674
2,055
7,910
5,726
-
22,775
76,392
76,392
2025
£
720
Total
2025
£
2,516
700
3,216
56,102
4,373
28,270
11,419
15,989
32,086
13,575
161,814
165,030
Total
2024
£
3,278
1,665
4,943
42,829
9,498
25,159
12,122
18,619
24,848
11,981
24,443
169,499
174,442
2024
£
690

19

7 Analysis of staff costs, numbers and renumeration of key management personnel

Salaries and wages
Social security costs
Pension costs
Total
2025
£
87,168
1,010
1,526
89,704
2024
£
93,939
2,069
2,072
98,080

No employee received emoluments of more than £60,000. The key management personnel of the charity are considered by the trustees to be the Co-Directors. The total employee benefits of the key personnel in the year were £49,689 (2024: £63,966).

There was no trustee remuneration for the year (2024: Nil).

The total employees for the year: 2025 2024
Number Number
Independent Dance 5 3

8 Pension

The charity operates a defined contribution scheme to which contributions of £1,526 (2024: £2,072) were paid during the year.

9 Taxation

The charitable company is exempt from corporation tax on its charitable activities.

20

10
Debtors
Trade debtors
Other debtors
Accrued income
Prepayments
Total
11
Creditors: Amounts falling due within one year
Trade creditors
Accruals
Other deferred income
Other taxation and social security
Other creditors
Total
2025
£
17,645
1,439
2,782
-
21,866
2025
£
4,021
1,140
3,000
1,314
1,221
10,696
2024
£
-
-
450
-
450
2024
£
6,114
1,978
-
1,798
1,037
10,927
12
Analysis of net assets between funds
Net current assets
Net assets at 31 March 2025
General
£
82,801
82,801
Designated
£
50,500
50,500
Restricted
£
4,068
4,068
Total
£
137,369
137,369

21

13 Funds

Restricted funds
Disrupting Leadership
Total restricted funds
Unrestricted funds
Designated funds
Total funds
Funds
Restricted funds
ACE: Centering Disability
Total restricted funds
Unrestricted funds
Designated funds
Total funds
At 1
April
2024
£
-
-
109,181
50,500
159,681
At 1
April
2023
£
28,977
28,977
112,228
50,500
191,705
Incoming
Resources
£
5,000
5,000
137,718
-
142,718
Incoming
Resources
£
3,755
3,755
138,663
-
142,418
Outgoing
Resources
£
(932 )
(932 )
(164,098 )
-
(165,030 )
Outgoing
Resources
£
(32,732 )
(32,732 )
(141,710 )
-
(174,442 )
Transfers
£
-
-
-
-
Transfers
£
-
-
-
-
As at
31
March
2025
£
4,068
4,068
82,801
50,500
137,369
As at
31
March
2024
£
-
-
109,181
50,500
159,681

14 Related Party Transactions

Kimberley Harvey was paid £80 for teaching Monday Night Improvisation and £200 for Disrupting Leadership.

22