[Af_list] international funding for the arts

Damian Stewart damian at frey.co.nz
Fri Jul 20 04:07:21 PDT 2007


(reposted from
http://window.org.nz/2007/06/on-funding-for-arts-international.html
by request)

I'm currently in the UK on a sonic arts residency, and I'm noticing some 
interesting trends around funding.

First of all, there's an enormous amount of money floating around: £500 
million was available last year through Arts Council of England grants, 
which works out to about £10 per person living in the UK. By comparison, in 
2004 Creative New Zealand gave out, in total, $18 million 
(http://www.mch.govt.nz/publications/grants-review/index.html), or about 
$4.50 per person living in New Zealand, or at today's exchange rates, 
£1.72. To be fair that doesn't include money paid out through the PACE 
scheme or through the plain unemployment benefit, which has long been a 
pillar of support for the New Zealand artist.

It's also worth noting that money is just given out, with no need for a 
project to present itself as 'self-sustaining'. Artists expect to be paid a 
living wage out of grant money - a minimum of £175 
(http://www.artquest.org.uk/create/materials/suggested-rates-of-pay.htm) a 
day, or a suggested wage of £23,000-£33,000 p/a, which is a decent wage - 
enough to support a reasonable standard of living or a partner. Artists 
also expect to fund and purchase all of their materials through grant money 
- there isn't the expectation that arts projects will be funded by sponsorship.

This ought to do wonders for the art itself. With an artist free to rely on 
grant money for everything, and without having to worry about any 
'practical' issues, they can get fully stuck down into the process of 
creating art. I have certainly seen some very good art in the few months I 
have been here, and this is in Birmingham, hardly somewhere well-known for 
its art scene.

Interestingly, however, artistic culture as a whole can suffer. Living in 
New Zealand I found artists were often willing to cooperate, to work 
together to make a project happen, for the love of it more than anything 
else. My time spent with the Jeff Henderson, Warwick Donald and the rest of 
the folks who help to keep Happy running in Wellington showed me an 
organisation surviving (but only just) on enormous amounts of dedication 
and willpower, all the while keeping a fantastically open policy of 
accepting pretty much any kind of music- or sound-related artform you could 
imagine. My research over here in the UK has drawn me to the rather 
surprising conclusion that there is no equivalent in the UK. Even in 
London, supposedly a hub of experimental music, I could not find a 
dedicated venue: there are a few weekly events, in a couple of pubs here 
and there, but there's nothing like Happy.

Perhaps this is because of the funding situation. With money apparently so 
readily available, funding coming all from one source, the first question 
considered when I have discussed any new project with another artist 
funding. Artists here seem to be implicitly taught to rely on outside 
sources of funding for projects, and because there are always more artists 
than funding sources, competition is inevitable. Of course, competition and 
cooperation don't really go hand-in-hand, so what this essentially means is 
that no 'serious' artist seems to be willing to consider working with me 
unless it is at least vaguely going to end up with them receiving money.

This is a little bit foreign to my approach to art-making. I tend to work 
with what I've got, experimenting with the tools on hand until I have 
something approaching what I want, and only then start looking for 
potential funding avenues. This obviously lends itself to casual 
collaboration, where I ask other people for help without the expectation of 
pay, with the understanding that they will reciprocate at some stage. 
Looking at it from another angle, it also pushes networking as an important 
skill; my cultural capital, as someone who has skills and is willing to 
share them, becomes my most important asset, being the dominant factor in 
making my contact details shared amongst other people.

 From my experience, many other artists in New Zealand operate along 
similar lines. The Wellington music scene, of which Happy is a part, is 
infamously incestuous in this regard: skilled musicians who like to play 
with different bands end up forming excellent bands full of skillful 
musicians, who are largely shared with other bands; and the scene as a 
whole benefits from having many more good bands than would be possible if 
the musicians did not collaborate in this way.

By contrast the situation here is largely one of guarded ideas, closed 
creative groups, and active competition. The collective who is hosting my 
visit, Modulate (http://www.modulate.org.uk/), operate under the assumption 
that they are filling a niche in the Birmingham art scene (with sonic art), 
and are currently running a series of free Sonic Culture Salons, the 
purpose of which is to bring artists who are interested in or work with 
sound together on a monthly basis to meet, discuss, present, perform, and 
exhibit sound- and new media-related project. Despite their clear open 
policy of providing a service the broader arts community, they have been 
actively denied assistance in funding applications by some of the other 
arts groups in Birmingham, with the stated reason being that they are 
competing for the same pot of money.

So. On the one hand you've got enormous amounts of money, artists being 
able to spend a long time developing their craft, a financial support 
system that lasts after for the love of it has run out, and an official 
endorsement of the idea that art and commercial interests are and should be 
separate. On the other hand, competition means that artist groups are more 
closed to one another, leading to stronger, if implicit, hierarchies, which 
are never that good for a creative culture; and collaboration and 
collaborative art projects are more difficult to bring about. In short, 
it's a more traditionally competitive capitalist environment.

To conclude, I'm not really sure whether this is a good thing. My youthful 
*-ist idealist sides tell me that it isn't, that art should be one of those 
places where collaboration, mutual support, and cooperation are always the 
Right Way To Do It; but my more sensible grownup sides are saying, no, it's 
much better to get paid, and if the broader community suffers well then 
tough, because that's the kind of world we live in these days.

-- 
damian stewart | +44 7854 493 796 | damian at frey.co.nz
frey | live art with machines | http://www.frey.co.nz


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