All we are saying: Save the Arts campaign
An 'IoS' debate at the Royal Academy last week saw leading arts practitioners telling the Goverment what was needed
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Your support makes all the difference.THE AMBIENCE could have soothed you into thinking this was going to be a night of shared dreams, of aesthetic agreement. The walls full of Victorian paintings in the Reynolds Room at the Royal Academy set the tone of elevated tranquillity. Then Jude Kelly of the West Yorkshire Playhouse shattered the mood. "The arts are like sewerage," she declared. "They are a right and a need for everyone."
Her Majesty's minister for the arts, Mark Fisher, was shocked. Flanked by the serenity of Landseer and Millais, he countered: "The arts change our imaginations. What they give to us is how we change inside and how we grow as people."
Peter Finch of Equity wondered why no one at all had remarked that the arts were also entertainment.
Some innocent souls had hoped for a united rallying call to emerge from the special debate on the funding of the arts organised by the Independent on Sunday, The Independent and the Royal Academy in the light of our Save The Arts Campaign. But when two or three arts practitioners are gathered together complete unity is unlikely. When 100 of the great, the good and the angry meet, it's downright impossible.
The multiplicity of perspectives was expressed with such a consistent and contradictory mixture of world-weariness with penny pinching allied to infectious enthusiasm for their individual art forms, that with every speech it seemed yet more sadistically unnecessary of the Treasury to keep the arts in crisis. And for want of such a small sum. As Finch said: "Eight million pounds would wipe out the deficits of every arts organisation in the country." That would not be a blip on a Treasury graph.
The campaign for better funding, for tax breaks and incentives, must now be aimed at backbenchers and peers as well as government, said David Barrie of the National Art Collections Fund. "They are not hearing our case."
But how to argue the case? Jude Kelly's sewerage analogy had a serious implication. The Eighties' argument that the arts were the fourth biggest revenue earner may have impressed the Thatcherites. A new argument was needed now. "We haven't yet found the language that will help the Government who themselves are stuttering and stumbling to understand the meaning of the arts in their own lives personally, never mind as policy makers... So I have disappointment about the current government situation, but I also believe that we were too gleeful about the fourth biggest revenue earner argument. There's a much, much deeper river of meaning that the arts bring to society."
Mark Fisher neither stuttered nor stumbled as he delivered a surprisingly stark warning to those present to put their own houses in order - or better still fill their houses - before expecting sympathy from the Chancellor. "We are wasting, we are bleeding money. We have inefficient structures ... It's difficult to argue for theatres which are playing to 35 per cent houses."
But he predicted that he and Chris Smith, Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport, would eventually win the argument, and that our arts campaigns had given more power to their elbows in the fiscal arm wrestling with the Treasury. "Judge us over the whole parliament. Work is in progress."
Another four years was too long to wait for veteran actress Miriam Karlin. "How many companies are going to go to the wall while we're waiting for the end of the Parliament?" she asked. Besides, she was unhappy that the little money there was had been squandered. "Fourteen million pounds has been spent by the Arts Council on consultancies. This is monstrous. How many companies could have stayed alive with that money?" More might stay alive, thought David Gordon, secretary of the Royal Academy, if we created a "climate of giving" as was found in America, where all donations to the arts are tax deductible. That is the thrust of the Independent on Sunday campaign, and David Oliver of Arthur Andersen, accountants, pointed out that Britain's laws regulating tax relief on individual donations were drawn up "when Shakespeare was writing Hamlet".
How different from the tax regime in America, said David Gordon: "American individuals gave $120bn [pounds 75bn] to charities in 1996. This is equivalent to pounds 280 for every man, woman and child. Individuals in Britain gave pounds 4.3bn, or about pounds 70 for every man, woman and child ... Simplifying giving will lead to much greater giving." With a schoolmasterly but fair rebuke to the battle-scarred campaigners present, he concluded: "The arts need to campaign with facts and analysis as well as with passion."
Philip Hedley of Theatre Royal, Stratford East, has long managed to combine all three. "It is a disgrace," he exclaimed, "that there are hardly any buildings in this country run by black or Asian companies." He could not resist a telling jibe about corporate sponsorship at Genista McIntosh, executive director of the National Theatre who had been passionate in defence of public subsidy. "The room named after the socialist actress Peggy Ashcroft at the National Theatre is a private members' room. That should be changed in her honour."
But the dichotomies involved in arts funding were best, if unintentionally, illustrated by Peter Jenkinson of the New Art Gallery, Walsall. He joked how the mayor of Walsall, opening the original gallery in 1992, said: "If the art gallery is successful in its purpose we will see that the manners of the people will become softer and less uncouth than they are at present, for they cannot see pictures and mix with others as they do in this room without being cheered and instructed and lifted to a higher level."
And one of the ways Mr Jenkinson is having to raise money in 1998? The art gallery has opened its own pub.
Campaign supporters
Pamela Harlech, English National Ballet, London Carole McPhee, executive director, English National Ballet
Lloyd Newson, artistic director, DV8 Physical Theatre
Nicholas Cleobury, musical director, Britten Sinfonia
Dafydd Wigley, MP
Michael Bryant, CBE, National Theatre
David Glass, David Glass ensemble
Siobhan Davies, choreographer
Christopher Bruce, artistic director, Rambert Dance co
Nick Rogers, artistic director, Bristol Old Vic
Serge Dorny, artistic director, London Philharmonic Orchestra
Marylane Barfield, president, Royal Birmingham Society of Artists
Mark C Hughes, London SE3
Duke Dobing, Sutton, Surrey
Nina and John Cowan, Erpingham, Norfolk
Brian and Claire Taylor, Salisbury, Wilts
Sarah Wragg, London W4
Anne S and J Evans, Bishopsteignton, Devon
Rev Caitlin, John and Emrys Matthews
Pat, Emily and David Walton, Knutsford
Janet and Denys Goose, Shrewsbury
E Reilly, Letchworth, Herts
Kenneth C B Wilkie, Ruth I Hope, Edinburgh
David Holland, London SE9
Catherine and D H Clarke, Ilkley, West Yorks
Deborah Nash, Hitchin
Mel Nash, Swandon Jordan, Bucks
Mr L and Ms K Williamson, Epsom, Surrey
R A and F West, Bournemouth
Miss E Bell, E Smith, Workington, Cumbria
M S Travis, London SW6
John Young, Barnet
Dr M Swallow OBE, John A Wright, Belfast
David S Browne, Hilleborough, Co. Down
Euan and Angela Petrie, Glasgow
L Crawford, Glasgow
Ms J Horsfall, David Price, Yolande Inglis, D Davis, P Jackson, M Bucklen, Trowbridge Orchestra, Trowbridge, Wilts
Z Bremer, London W14
Jennifer Ware, London SW5
Lianna Crystal, London SW18
Peter Featherstone, Staines
Patrick Kane Lennox and Annabel Jackson, London W5
Ian and Judith Marshall, London N2
K Pierce, London W5
A Rivoire, London W1
Peta Smyth, London SW1
Anna Blair, Antonia Williams, London SW11
J R C Harvey, Shaun McMackin, Cathy Turner, Exeter
Michael Fry, R Levene, London NW1
Minne Fry, London W2
Freya Sandford, M Apraharnian, Joan Marcus, Alan Stott, Stourbridge
Sebastian Poole, Whitby
Maureen Ripley, Jean McNeil, London N19
Gillian Withers, Smarden, Kent
Gillian and Laurie Marsh, London NW8
P A Potter, London, SW15
Maureen Bebb, London SW7
Lynn Hughes, Carmarthen
Charles Pick, London W1
Clemence Bettany, London SE5
George Greenfield, London NW3
Wendy Oberman, London N10
Paul Holmes, Glasgow
Judith Burnley, London W1H
C Balding, G Amherst, R J Verrall, N C Creed, N K Creed, M Duncan, S Watkinson, all Oxford
Jackie Warren, London W14
Tony Britten, artistic director, Music Theatre London
Andrew Taylor, Anthony Banks, Music Theatre, London
Tania Kindersley, Aberdeenshire
Adrian Ellis, Caroline Kay, Maddy Morton, London EC1
Clara Crockatt, Andrew Salmon, Chris Hann, all Norwich
Laura Hough, Kenilworth
Pauline Hackney, Dubai
David Hext, Manchester
Catherine and Sheila Eyre, London E11
Philippa and Dominic Coughlan, Battle, Sussex
Simon Jones, Brian Benjamin, London SE18
Mike and Karen Clark, London N19
Margery Hay, Brentwood, Essex
Naomi Russell, London E5
John and D M Basing, Pinner
R A and E F Stanner, Enfield
Zoe Hall, Edinburgh
Vivienne Packer, Don Williamson, Dunks Green
Catriona Macphee, Dorset
M P Ormerod, London SW14
Charles Scott, Haddington
Jacqueline, Ezra and Joshua Hewing, Ipswich
April and John Skinner, Alveston
Patricia Wroe and Alec Jones, Ipswich
Helen McQueen, Esher, Surrey
Stephen Tees, Kimpton, Herts
Tania Hussey, T Byrom, E M Morse, S M Aspinall, all Ecclesbourne School
J H Porteous, Holloway, Derby
Ronald Morgan, Castleford, Yorks
Courteney and Diane Willett, East Bergholt, Suffolk
R and P N Miller Yardley, Fradley, Staffs
Harry and Luela Palmer, Colchester
Anne Hale, Worcester
M J Phoenix, Droitwich, Worcs
Mrs E and Prof J Fletcher, Caythorpe, Notts
Una McLean, Russell Hunter, Eileen McCallum, Edinburgh
Deidre Davis, Alison Peebles, Hope Ross, Glasgow
Katherine Connolly, Edinburgh
Tariq Hussain, Leith
Suzie Normand, Perth
N Wallis, London SW19
E S Ayers, Watford, Herts
D Coombes, Barnes
M Badia-Marin, London W9
Jo Lewis, London SE5
Richard Lester, St Margaret's, Middlesex
John Bull, Christopher Bryant, Leonard Price, Chicken Shed Theatre, London N14
M J Bowtell, Walton-on-Thames
Peter Bloomfield, Petworth
C Turner, London NW5
Caroline Staunton, London W10
Peter and Rose Heath, London W5
C A Shadbolt, Chipping Norton
J Charles, London SW1
Geraldine Copley-Smith, Kew
Andrew Wade, Stratford-on-Avon
Steven Holland, London SW3
Kysa Johnson, Robb Mitchell, Rosine Bagnall, Glasgow
Timothy Alcock, Romford
Adele, Brian and Jessica Winston, Barnet
Kate Russell, Brian Peace, Leeds
James Dyson-Sykes, Kenneth Greenwood, F Tunbridge, Huddersfield
Maryse and David Jeffery, Cornwall
T J Russ and M Courts, St Dennis
David Bowen Lewis, Margaret Kennaugh, Gwynned
Christine Lewis, Cardiff
Christopher, Janet and Michael Sodring , London W4 Howard Lake, Fundraising UK Ltd, London SW19
Elizabeth Attree, Matthew Huntley, Todd Wodicka, Manchester
R F and Liliane Fredericks, London SW7
J E Wallis, Newbury, Berks
Stephen Lee Amor, London SW16
Brian and Sheila Barford, London N21
A D and R D Hanson, London N1
S Mullins and M I Tungay, London W14
Brenda Daly, London N19
Rebecca Williams, London SW9
N Hern, London SW2
Catherine and Juliette Young, London SW8
Roy Kendall, London SW18
M H and Terry Scott, Nottingham
J D Mitchell, London SE24
M A Winn, London SE5
J A Rose, London E1
Chris and Jake Green, London N6
Stefania Taviano, Loryn Green, Sarah Lehman, London N6
Diana Ambache, Jeremy Polmear, London N19
Heather Baxter, High Wycombe
Robert and Barbara A Jacobson, London N20
Michael, L H and B Wooding, Kent
Jenny Tozer, W J Chettleburgh, Salisbury
Gerald Nason, Wendy Thomas, Woodbridge, Suffolk
Sue and Don Prutton, Norwich
Alan and Inger Eade, Cambridge
Angela Hughes, Bury St Edmunds
K J Green, Strettington, Hants
Christine MacGregor, Chichester
P S and S A M Wilson, Powys
Patricia Greatorex, Woking, Surrey
A E Stewart, Weybridge
Dorothy Loveday, Woking, Surrey
S Perry, Bucks
Elinor Bennett, Caernarfon
Judith Coke, London SW14
Susan Dorey, London SW4
Dr Jane Taylor, Manchester
David Whiting, London W2
John Balance, Peter Christopherson and Otto Avery, London W4
Victoria Goodman, London, WC2
Mark Sainsbury, Kings College, London
Marcia Coburn, Hitchin
Stella, J R and Laura Briggs, Emsworth, Hants
John Acton, Brighton
Annabelle Mills, Sheffield
Mrs E B Guthrie, Dr J G Guthrie, Mrs C Kane, Norman & Margaret Longworth, Josephine Nendick, M Doguet, Janet & David Whitter, H Baylet, P J Hooper, Elizabeth Berthon, Audre & Aduard Brive, all 66500 France
Ann Monnington and Dr Nigel Kieser, Harpenden
J Nicholson, V Craddock, M Marchant, Y N Hiley, J E Spicer, V M O'Taney, J Gibbons, P Manwaring, all Woking
E M Pullen, D C G Whittle, J E Whittle, Anne Broadbent, Rosemary Hobbs, M G Green, Dr Angela Hobbs, Dr D J L Gibbins, M Nanney-Wynn, C G Mawdsley, Jack Mawdsley, all Bishops Castle
Mrs Susan McNaught, Ludlow
Nick Watts, Long Marston
E A Stanley, London SW14
Helen Jones, London SW2
David Ward, London SW18
Suzanne Green, Esher, Surrey
David Bell, Ashstead
C Whittle-Dale, Claygate
Richard Barrowclough, London SW15
Antonia Kendall, London N22
We have been inundated with responses to our campaign. Next week we will print another list of supporters so please keep writing. We regret taht because of the size of our postbag, we cannot reply to your lettters
Compiled by Mel Steel
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