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23% Cuts in the arts budget in Northern Ireland

Marie-Louise Muir | 17:22 UK time, Tuesday, 8 February 2011

I hosted an Arts Extra Cuts Special last week. 24 minutes of passionate debate, which didn't stop after we went off air. Another 30 minutes in the studio of whatÌý23% public spending cuts to the arts budget is going to mean to artists working here.ÌýTheir plans, ambitions, staff, productions.ÌýA slow erosion of output over 4 years. A proposed £4.2 million reduction.

Before we went on air, I used the to askÌýwhat valueÌýwe put on arts and culture here?ÌýAlan McKee a Belfast based writer and performer posted this onÌýour page :-"We have to rid ourselves of the idea that arts funding is some sort of begging bowl. Every pound invested in the arts generates three pounds in the wider economy. Only in Northern Ireland do we have to continually rehearse this argument, this is accepted in the rest of Europe".

Consultation on the NI executive's draft budget for 2011-2015 closes tomorrow, the 9th February. Then there isÌýa weekÌýto respond.ÌýÌýThe Arts Council of Northern Ireland is spearheading a high profile "Fair Deal for the Arts"ÌýcampaignÌý:- by letter, petition and Facebook.Ìý

They say a week is a long time in politics as we wait for the NI Executive's decisions on the 16th February. A week isÌýalso a long time for the people who work in the creative industries here to find out what their future holds. As we head into the Cultural Olympiad 2012 and the UK City of Culture in Derry in 2013, some might say how can reputations be maintained in the face of the most swingeing cuts in a generation?

Comments

  • Comment number 1.

    I listened with interest on Thurs to the rather empty discussion - with Marie Louise herself trying to keep it going - on the adaptation of Ibsen's A Doll's House - renamed and repackaged A Doll. I went to see it to night and sate through 45 minutes of utter boredom. I think the author talked about getting it down to the bare bones - and removing it from any context - making it European ? What was achieved was a piece that was mind numbingly badly written with lumps of Ibsen awkwardly stitched together and then soliloquies used as fillers to keep us informed as to where it was supposed to be going. It was visually boring - the actual direction and movement on stage was limited - although perhaps we should give 5/10 for the dance being used as a metephor - the acting was painful but brave - the dress non existent - Non of this minimalism focused the audience on the marriage but more how lacking in imagination and creative interpretation and directing the whole sorry event actually was. I was very disappointed indeed and felt this ground breaking and still vitally relevent drama was reduced to 45 mimutes of non stop stitched up dialogue which eventually lost its dynamic and just became boring. Pity - to misuse the work of a great dramatist in such a way which neither illuminated nor broke new ground.

  • Comment number 2.

    I'm a living in British Columbia, Canada. As such, I'm very much aware of the importance of funding for the arts...

    Over the past few years of our current government administration, we British Columbians have experienced the worst cuts to arts funding in decades. Although it's been a hotly debated issue here for quite a while, the platitudes and justifications for our now almost non-existent arts funding, were that the money was being diverted to fund the Olympic Games, the long-term positive effects from which the collective 'we' would all benefit.

    Only those not aware that we even have an arts community, or those dropped on their heads as infants, actually believed the justifications to be true.

    As of course - they aren't. In point of fact, the local festivals, arts and entertainment venues, public arts-related events, etc. have all decreased to near invisibility over the past few years.

    This directly affects the tourism industry which we rely upon quite heavily. Tourists come to Vancouver and find very little to do in terms of entertainment or culture.

    In part because we've actually been referred to for some time as the 'No Fun City'. It's an accurate description. Trying to find something interesting and fun to do in this city (that doesn't involve communing with nature) is pretty near impossible. Which is why many of our visitors, never return.

    My long-winded point is that funding for the arts is not just beneficial for those directly involved in arts communities. An artistic and culturally rich city (or town) is one that will flourish economically as well.

    Arts are the reason that London, Paris, Rome, Florence and New York have been the most visited cities in the world for centuries.

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