Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben
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Arts Council Funding Cuts
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Originally posted by RichardB View PostFrom the companies' point of view, yes. I was talking about how the criteria next to the tick boxes are decided.
It was the bane of my life towards the end of my time as a high school governor that policies had to enumerate all the current categories of what I believe are now called protected characteristics. Apart from the need for constant updating and the risk that someone could say "but I'm not mentioned on that list", it meant that focus inevitable moved away from pupils as individuals and towards them becoming entries in pigeonholes "for data purposes".
Such an approach will never see the whole picture and will miss links that benefit groups other than the target. For instance physical access isn't just about whether a wheelchair can get in and access facilities; enabling that to happen will also benefit all the others who might need and appreciate wider doors, level access etc but don't fall into the "right" tick box. You don't need to be autistic to struggle with too many sensory assaults, or to have registered hearing or sight impairments to find poorly designed audio material or lighting difficult.
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Originally posted by RichardB View PostIf only it were a question of someone asking: what kinds of cultural activity are going on? how much will it cost to keep them going and foster further interest in them?It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostExactly the question we were asking about Radio 3 - not "what sort of listener do we want to attract to the station, who should we be 'catering for'?" But what do we want Radio 3 to be broadcasting? Looking at orchestral music in Bristol, the vast majority seems to be local amateur orchestras and schools ensembles. Excellent (especially the latter), but where are the professional musicians, orchestras, ensembles? Spurred on by the ENO debate, I looked for opera in Bristol: WNO seems to be bringing one opera (The Magice Flute) and some sort of 'opera' performed by the WNO chorus. "Not much demand for opera in Bristol". Why?
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I was looking for the ENO thread, but this probably a better place
It is painful to see our top companies starved of funds and strangled by politics, while our best artists head abroad, says the Guardian’s chief culture writer, Charlotte Higgins
Just as depressing as the subject itself is the ignorance and prejudice displayed in the comments. An ignorant (as in uninformed, not in the perjoritive sense) population is a vulnerable population.
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Originally posted by oddoneout View PostI was looking for the ENO thread, but this probably a better place
It is painful to see our top companies starved of funds and strangled by politics, while our best artists head abroad, says the Guardian’s chief culture writer, Charlotte Higgins
Just as depressing as the subject itself is the ignorance and prejudice displayed in the comments. An ignorant (as in uninformed, not in the perjoritive sense) population is a vulnerable population.
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Originally posted by oddoneout View PostI was looking for the ENO thread, but this probably a better place
It is painful to see our top companies starved of funds and strangled by politics, while our best artists head abroad, says the Guardian’s chief culture writer, Charlotte Higgins
Just as depressing as the subject itself is the ignorance and prejudice displayed in the comments. An ignorant (as in uninformed, not in the perjoritive sense) population is a vulnerable population.Annoyingly listening to and commenting on radio 3...
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Originally posted by JasonPalmer View PostInteresting article but I have seen eno and Covent Garden producions advertised on the tube.
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostA very good piece.
Mind you, having attended an opera production in Aix-en-Provence I can say there are things about the place that Manchester and Birmingham can't really offer...
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Originally posted by RichardB View PostYes it is. I would say that the world of opera needs to be brought up to date a little bit more than what's involved in the inclusion of conservative living composers such as George Benjamin, but of course the point here is that, in comparison to other European countries where opera is taken seriously, the UK is run by a combination of toffs and philistines for a combination of toffs and philistines (some of course are the same people!), which is a toxic mixture when it comes to connecting culture to its audience, actual and potential. "Opera on your tablet" - what the hell is that supposed to mean? Opera is an artform involving a live audience and a large number of coordinated participants from several different creative disciplines - and this is the other point, which Charlotte Higgins doesn't make in the article although I'm sure she would agree with: this involves the employment of hundreds of highly trained people, who are now going to be looking for jobs, when artistic production is actually one of the few professions not directly or indirectly threatened by automation, so that the cultural sector should be growing rather than shrinking. And not just for this reason but for reasons of inclusivity: the answer to the problem of some artform being perceived as elitist is not to remove funding from it in favour of some box-ticking exercise or other, but to add funding overall so that everything that deserves to be included is included. But obviously the shareholders in privatised energy companies are much more deserving.
Mind you, having attended an opera production in Aix-en-Provence I can say there are things about the place that Manchester and Birmingham can't really offer...
Your point about all the associated "trades" involved with getting an opera production to an audience is something that far too many people(including not a few who should know better) either choose to ignore or are just ignorant of. It's OK to prop up businesses with government grants - steel, car manufacturers - or subsidise inadequate wages through state benefits so that company bosses and shareholders can get paid - but not OK to provide some grant funding to support opera companies and the many jobs they provide.
Until recently the arts sector was a multi-billion pound part of the economy (probably still is but likely less so, but I don't have recent figures), but because either the whole concept of "the arts", or certain parts of it, are anathema to both those who control the purse strings and those who pull the puppet strings that fact is never mentioned.
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Originally posted by JasonPalmer View PostLondon productions often geared towards tourists in the capital hence London advertising.
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Originally posted by oddoneout View Postbecause either the whole concept of "the arts", or certain parts of it, are anathema to both those who control the purse strings and those who pull the puppet strings that fact is never mentioned.
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