Tag Archives: funding

Guardian’s Lyn Gardner calls on regionals to buck up

7 Jan

Lyn Gardner, of The Guardian‘s Theatre Blog, put out a post this week calling on regional theatres to do more to keep themselves in local people’s consciousness, writing:

“If these buildings are to survive it will be because local communities decide that they really cannot live without them any more than they can live without recycling services or streetlamps.”

We’re talking regional theatres here, the kind that are going to be suffering as local authorities as forced to slash their budgets this year. Gardner diagnoses the problem as being one of communication; theatres and companies have simply failed to embed themselves in communities’ consciousness in the way that other indispensable drivers of community cohesion do. And she makes no bones about laying the blame where it’s due:

“however good the work a theatre is doing, if most people in the local community never step through the door, the fault lies with the theatre.”

In Gardner’s view, a lot of the “outreach” work that theatres have been doing in recent years has been focused around box-ticking rather than driving audiences into the theatres to see productions:

“Too often outreach, community and education have been about accessing funding and the work done in those departments is entirely divorced from what happens on main stages and the rest of the artistic life of the building.”

Gardner’s points all segue nicely into those put by Anthony Alderson of the Pleasance theatre when A&C interviewed him in November, who told us that:

“There’s a balance to be struck between money spent on art and money spent on marketing… without marketing, you might as well not do the art.”

Alderson was confident that there was a lot of great theatre being produced in regionals all around the country. For him, the way it has been organised and funded in the past, notably removing support for touring, have dampened publicity and audience-building. Gardner notes that the Birmingham Rep is being forced into a sort of extended tour due to building work, and wonders if their coming to audiences rather than expecting audiences to come to them will build enduring audience numbers. A resurgent interest in the theatre after two years of touring would be good evidence than what funding there is might need more thoughtful redirection.

In the meantime, Alderson also pointed out that there is a lot local authorities could do to support theatres that needn’t cost them a penny. There’s a lot of potential to use council property to raise theatres’ profiles and put them back at the centre of communities. Alderson and Gardner would probably point out that theatregoing is a great stimulus to the local economy and nightlife, too. A worthwhile investment for councils to consider?

“What if we allowed artistic communities free space to advertise – for example on lampposts? This would bring greater exposure and it would pay for itself in ticket sales and less money spent on fly-posting and flyering.”

Saving money, boosting the economy and getting people into the theatre at the same time – as we keep saying, it’s easier than it looks!

Colin Firth on UKFC and BFI

20 Dec

Colin Firth attended the Dubai International Film Festival last week for the Middle East premiere of his latest film, The King’s Speech. The Oscar-nominated actor also received Variety’s ‘International Star of the Year’ award, presented by Carey Mulligan, and candidly answered questions during a public Q&A session.

Arts & Cuts was at the event and asked the British A-lister whether he was worried about the closure of the UK Film Council and the BFI’s recently expanded role.

“I don’t understand how it’s going to work well enough to be worried or not worried at the moment. I just need to see where it’s going. Yes of course I was alarmed when the UK Film Council announced it would be closed. They were critical in the financing of The King’s Speech, which I think makes a rather good case for the existence of a body like that. It was clear that something would have to replace it…and the BFI may have the people to do that.

I think that…the individuals who work within the BFI…I think they’re fiercely bright people who care deeply about film. And so I am glad that the government has decided to connect itself to a body which does understand cinema. But I also don’t know where it’s going, I don’t know where the money is going to come from, but as I said, you know, I hope imaginative resources are as powerful as financial ones.”

The spirit of resistance

9 Dec

As thousands of students descend on Parliament Square today to protest against tuition fee rises, many have also been staging sit-ins at universities and organising flash mobs across the city.

Last weekend, students at Goldsmiths College and UCL’s Slade School of Fine Art occupied campus buildings to demonstrate their anger at proposals they say will threaten the future of arts education in the UK. Colourful banners and flags were hung outside while lively debates continued indoors.

Perhaps the most visible activity to date was the picketing at the Tate Britain Gallery during the Turner Prize ceremony, where hundreds assembled to vent their frustration with the government’s attitude towards the arts funding.

On Tuesday, Arts & Cuts went to Royal College of Art’s Long Night to talk to students and teachers about their feelings and plans. Throughout the evening, people squeezed into the common room to participate in discussions and sign a petition addressed to Nick Clegg.

Conceptual artist Mark McGowan spoke first and offered his support. “This level of culture bashing is equivalent to book burning,” he said. An RCA lecturer agreed, “[This is] the most vicious ideological attack. It’s a system where you’re artistic only if you can afford it”.

Despite the sombre mood, people were hopeful that there would be strength in numbers. Organisers of the Slade Occupation shared advice (“students are the first wave, not the last”) and the duo behind Space Hijackers humorously recounted their adventures, including driving a tank into central London for the G20 summit.

Three students from Chelsea College of Art & Design explained how the movement was gaining momentum. They felt that art schools in the capital were quite fragmented, especially within the University of Arts London, but were noticing a growing sense of unity.

Noel Douglas, a professional graphic designer and programme leader at the University of Bedfordshire, gave a presentation on the history of grass-roots campaigns and encouraged students to be optimistic about the future. He told us why he believes art and design are fundamental to society:

At 11pm, students of the Royal College of Art voted in favour of occupation.

RCA – The Long Night

8 Dec

Students, lecturers and artists gathered at the Royal College of Art on Tuesday 7th Dec to vote on a sit-in: