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Monday 16 August 2010

Arts Funding - Should We Worry?


The Conservative/Liberal Democrat coalition’s decision to cut all, except essential services, public funding by 10%, within the first 4 weeks of their parliamentary term has caused many changes to take place across the nation’s landscape. This is very apparent in the arts and culture sector. The Find Your Talent programme was cancelled with immediate affect. Thereby cancelling the whole of all of the 10 pathfinder’s 3rd year programmes. This meant that thousands of young people would now not be able to partake in cultural activities planned for that third year. Interaction with leading arts organisations was stopped suddenly. Smaller organisations lost a large percentage of their revenue, resulting in staff being laid off and the cultural landscape in these pathfinder regions becoming a barren land that was four weeks before a hive of the future cultural leaders of our country and outstanding community examples to other young people.

With the announcement that Arts Council England will be forced to make a further 10% cut of all regularly funded organisations this will see those organisations already badly affected by the Find your Talent cancellation, going out of business. Early estimates suggest across England 20% of Arts Organisations will no longer be able to function and will go to the wall by the end of 2011. This will undoubtedly affect not just financially the country, (According to DCMS 2009 figures for every £1 spent on the arts this brings £2 back into the English economy), but also intrinsically the people of the country will be undoubtedly affected by the lack of a strong, diverse and participatory arts scene.

Is this a time to worry though? The Arts will go through a tough time in the next 4 years and we may see some of our favourite organisations cease to exist. But we have been here before. In the 1980’s the arts landscape had it’s heart ripped from it’s cultural centre and a whole generation of audience was lost to TV, video games, anti-social behaviour and drugs and drinking.


Over the last 15 years we have been investing in the next generation and the trying to convince the current generation to come and experience culture in its many different forms. One can only hop that arts organisations and those large organisations certainly, have been building for a situation like this to arise. It was inevitable that the apparent land of milk and honey funding that we have had since 1997 wouldn’t last, and it would be sad to think people were blinkered and had not planned for change.

My fear is this hasn’t happened across the board and some organisations have had the philosophy that it is a given right they should be funded by the state. Whoever that state is. But I believe it isn’t a given right. You have to have a purpose and matter to your community and your practitioners to be entitled to funding. If you are having a positive impact on them then you should be funded. If you are carrying on expecting funding and not advancing your art or work then you don’t deserve to be kept like a French mistress.

One can only hope the coalition, once it deconstructs our systems, starts to rebuild with legacy and independence, realistic independence, at its heart. Lets hope our Arts Organisations understands that change is a good thing and works positively to make our Arts Landscape carry on being one of the best in world.

Monday 2 August 2010

Men Crying at Films


It has been talked about quite alot over the last couple of weeks about Men crying at films. Why do we shed a tear, why are we ashamed to admit it? It tends to be linked to family or loss why men cry, or the passion of losing a sports game. I think when one is a teenager coming home from school and viewing Neighbours/Biker Grove/Home and Away, when one was tired and an emotional scene appeared the occasional tear would pour down my cheek. I'm sure this was the same of many others. But of course it was not something you would discuss the next day, not even to your girlfriend.



However as I got into my 20's films discussing relationships with father and son always used to make me clear my throat and take deep breaths, just to stop an outbreak of hysterical tears. I remember watching Big Fish at my local cineplex on a first date. By the end of the film I was so upset and looking somewhat pathetic with tears and tissues my date looked somewhat appalled to be with me. We did carry on going out a few more dates but she dumped me after a month or two saying I was too sensitive, I always think that first date was the death knell in that relationship.

I went to the pictures this weekend to watch Inception and ended up in tears again, this wasn't anything to do with the film however. I tripped down the cinema steps in the dark and nearly knocked myself out, after about an hour of the film I was in so much pain I shed a few tears. Turns out I'd broken my arm. So yes men cry at movies but not always because of the subject on the big screen, Excuse me while I go and take a few more painkillers.