Wednesday 13 May 2020

Arts in Collapse - How Government intervention must save the cultural sector









Another Covid-19 morning, another slew of warnings from the cultural sector that it is about to collapse. 92% of UK festivals face ruinous cancellation costs, The Old Vic is on the brink, Southampton’s respected Nuffield Theatre has already gone. The cultural wasteland is on the horizon.

We are in danger of losing the entire UK cultural sector. This is no exaggeration, warning signals are being beamed daily from music, theatre and arts organisations. Why should this matter? Culture isn’t food, housing, power. It’s not essential.

Now think what has got you through lockdown to this point. The TV shows, the Spotify playlists, the deep dive into videos on Youtube of your favouite comedy clips, old TV shows, music TV from your childhood, National Theatre live, Radio 4 comedy, BBC 3 comedy. Check on your kids. What are they doing online? Streaming music, sharing Tik Toks, spreading culture in its widest sense.

Culture is more than entertainment. Culture is how a nation, how people, explain themselves, define themselves, create the future and understand the past. It is the expression of ourselves. It can be done through song, through dance, through storytelling or visual art but it must be done. Without culture we are nothing.

The UK cultural sector has always been starved of investment and exploited for its soft power by government. Even the Blair govt, which pretty much rode on the Cool Britannia wave, didn't invest properly or thoughtfully in the sector, merely invited it to Number 10 for a photocall.

Partly this is down to a Government focus on ‘proper’ industry, from traditional Labour’s obsession with outmoded industries that continue to contribute to our carbon emissions problem or Conservative adoration of finance, who invest in the industries abroad that continue to contribute to….you know the rest.

Sure, the Minister for Culture (and media and sport, we are so far down the pecking order we don’t warrant a dedicated Minister despite collectively contributing over £100 billion in 2019) will show up at The BRITS  to have their picture taken with the glitterati of our world but you don’t hear them talk about the importance of Southampton Joiners to the cultural ecosystem.  Such lip service applies across the entire spectrum. Yes to visits to the Royal Opera House, no to focus on regional opera, yes to talking about the RSC, no mention of local and regional theatre groups and so on. Through The Arts Councils and lottery grants the wolf is kept from the door but charity is not centrality. And culture deserves more prominence and recognition.

As with much UK govt thinking, short termism reigns. If UK music is posting huge profits, if Tate Modern visitor numbers are up, if the West End sells out most of its show months in advance, where’s the problem?
Here’s the problem that is about to hit.

Losing the bottom end of any structure that relies on talent coming through from the grass roots withers the potential power of that structure. We got away with it in the 80s because unemployment and housing benefit, those 60s relics, covered the gap and allowed that whole generation of UK musicians, comedians and actors to prosper globally, delivering political and economic benefit for the country alongside The Young Ones, The Smiths, Phil Redmond;’s TV work and a huge list of now cultural icons that determine what the UK is to an extent.

We don't have any safety nets left this time, so we won't get a repeat. The venues and spaces will go, likely to become more flats for more foreign investors in high profile locations, more boarded up wastelands in the new Tory heartlands in the North. More young people will be denied the opportunity to learn music, to develop acting skills. to practice and exhibit their art, to use their imaginations to create something meaningful, beautiful and worthwhile that speaks to how they, and we, are. No more heroes, just workers for Mike Ashley as they are forced into zero hours contracts by Universal Credit,  We will all be the poorer for it, both economically and culturally. The UK will be the poorer for it on the world stage. Whilst Germany pours funding into their arts sector, we stand by and watch ours collapse.

The UK needs a proper investment plan for culture, backed by real people (not the usual intelligensia with their dislike of 'low' culture and picked for their political ties), tied to local regeneration and sustainable economic practice. The cultural sector can deliver both a new narrative for the UK post Covid and lead an economic regeneration by continuing to produce content that has, for decades, allowed us to punch way above our weight globally, but also, through conditions of that investment, lead the green revolution that is needed to avoid the greater crisis around the corner.

That means genuine investment capital administered at a local and regional level to regenerate grassroots arts.

That means genuine cross sector representation on the bodies awarding the funding.

That means defined and quantified sustainability targets attached to funding.

That means grants for UK produced and exhibited work, not money to fly artists around the world to spurious industry showcases.

That means a cross sector and cross-party commitment to placing arts, the expression of the UK in all its forms, at the centre of regeneration.

That means a change of heart from those in power, starting now.  

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