The consequences of former federal arts minister Senator George Brandis’ ideologically driven raid on the Australia Council last year have finally been revealed today.
And, as predicted, it’s a blood bath. Sixty-two arts organisations have been cut from the Australia Council’s four-year funding program today as it was forced by the Turnbull government to accommodate the cuts Brandis made when he took $104 million of its money to fund his own ill-conceived National Program for Excellence in the Arts (now Catalyst).
While the new Arts Minister Mitch Fifield restored about a third of that funding to the Australia Council due to public outcry, he was still using the raided OzCo’s funds to shamelessly throw money at pet government art projects earlier this week, just as the government went into pre-election caretaker mode.
Among the many well-established and respected organisations cut from Australia Council funding today are Meanjin magazine, the Next Wave Festival, Red Stitch Theatre, Legs on the Wall, Kage Physical Theatre, Phillip Adams BalletLab, Arena Theatre, Force Majeure Theatre, Brink Productions and Vitalstatistix.
Perhaps the most alarming is the cutting of funds to the National Association of Visual Arts (NAVA) which has been the leader of only a handful of arts organisations in the past year to have stood up and criticised Brandis’ NPEA folly.
The Australia Council today announced the names of the 128 small-to-medium arts organisations that did receive a share of $112 million over four years — many of which will get OzCo funding for the first time, and are deserving of it.
It’s easy to use today’s funding decision into “winners” and “losers”. But all arts companies, all artists and all audiences are the losers today as each is dependent on the other to build a creative nation — and economy.
Many of the amputated organisations will survive by digging deeper into their stock in trade — hard work and ingenuity — but they are being forced to spread themselves thin as a direct result of Brandis’ agenda.
While many of the recipients of the money siphoned from OzCo to pay for the Catalyst program are worthy — some are less so. The $1 million the Turnbull government gave to preserve the Adelaide Hills home of the late Sir Hans Heysen should have come from another source and not robbed living artists of opportunities contribute to the culture now.
Today’s funding announcement reveals the Turnbull government’s “innovation” mantra to be a nonsense.
love the traditional Arts. The contemporary Art of today lacks audience appeal and is held in low regard by the masses. Lack of funding for them is simply a good message to them to lift their game and be more relevant and focus on quality use of the medium. lots of the works they promote today is simply rubbish
Starving in a garret always makes for better art.