Dunedin Consort
Collapse
X
-
‘other organisations more fully met the strategic needs of the sector’.
I wonder if they also assessed the outcomes and impact of the Dunedin's work. How awful to see this deadening corporate language and, of course, weasel words, being applied to the Arts. Ah, patronage! Ah, humanity!It loved to happen. -- Marcus Aurelius
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Thropplenoggin View Post‘other organisations more fully met the strategic needs of the sector’.
I wonder if they also assessed the outcomes and impact of the Dunedin's work. How awful to see this deadening corporate language and, of course, weasel words, being applied to the Arts. Ah, patronage! Ah, humanity![FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by DracoM View PostCan someone who has contacts in the Dunedin tell them the reactions on this thread?
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Thropplenoggin View Post‘other organisations more fully met the strategic needs of the sector’.
I wonder if they also assessed the outcomes and impact of the Dunedin's work. How awful to see this deadening corporate language and, of course, weasel words, being applied to the Arts. Ah, patronage! Ah, humanity!
Comment
-
-
There's an article by Brian Ferguson at The Scotland on this situation with multiple other Scottish arts groups:
I obviously operate in ignorance of the public funding or the arts situation of Scotland (and England, Wales and NI), so I don't really have a dog in this fight, so to speak. Obviously arts organizations operate, by their non-profit nature, under great financial stresses when it comes to chasing down funds. (FWIW, here, our idiot and borderline clinically insane Preznit wanted to eliminate totally the National Endowments for the Arts and for the Humanities, but that didn't go over so well even with our dysfunctional, Republican-controlled Congress - for now.)
Can the Dunedin Consort try to pursue other options like private foundation funding, or crowd-funding, to some degree? Obviously £300,000 is a huge hit, where, to do back-of-the-envelope math, in the context of this part of the DC's statement that PJPJ linked to:
"Its funding currently accounts for 20% of our annual turnover...."
Comment
-
-
The Dunedin Consort just had their £300K from Creative Scotland restored:
It's good news for them, but obviously still leaves some other groups (e.g. Hebrides Ensemble) dry. I wonder if it might have been better, or at least marginally more equitable, to give £150K each to the Dunedin Consort and to the Hebrides Ensemble.
Comment
-
-
And the Sound festival ?
This smacks of incompetence to me on behalf of CS
Not good though when some groups get decisions reversed due to "special pleading", shades of the Wilding report fiasco in England
NOT that they shouldn't have got the money in the first place
BUT, if one only gets bad funding decisions reversed if one gets enough support from the public where does that leave small and newly formed organisations?
Comment
-
Comment