The Future of the Arts with a Conservative Government

February 22nd, 2010 - 

Jeremy and Ed have launched our arts proposals today, as they publish a policy paper on our plans for the sector. Our approach is to provide coherent and sustained support for the arts base centred on the following key principles:

  1. To secure long term funding for the arts; based on the mixed economy and the arm’s length principle which ensures they have the resources to carry them through the good times and the bad.
  2. To promote excellence in the arts through greater trust and independence for our arts organisations.
  3. To use technology and a more coherent approach to arts funding in schools to enable access – we believe as many people as possible should enjoy the arts in all their varied forms in this country.

Ed said:

“Under Labour the arts have not been give the priority they deserve. We cannot go on like this. The arts need coherent and sustained support in order to consolidate and build on their achievements… Conservatives are passionate about the arts and if we are lucky enough to form the next Government, I look forward to working with the sector to create funding stability and promote excellence and access.”

Jeremy has discussed our plans with Charlotte Higgins in the Guardian – you can read the full intervew HERE, and Charlotte’s discussion of it HERE. The Guardian are also running a ‘have your say’ HERE, which you could join in, although we would rather you told us what you think here on our blog, by signing in and posting in our comments section below.

You can download the full paper here: The Future of the Arts

News Summary: 16th November 2009

November 16th, 2009 - 
Tags:
, ,

Jeremy talks about the future of the BBC, including salaries and bureaucratic waste HERE . This follows the revelations last week that 37 BBC managers receive salaries higher than that of the Prime Minister.

Jeremy completely dismisses the suggestion that any “deal” has been done with Rupert Murdoch, reminding Lord Mandelson that Labour had the support of the Sun at the last 3 general elections HERE

New research suggests that the online advertising market could be set to grow this year HERE

Jeremy outlines the Conservative vision for the future of the National Lottery in a speech in Leeds today.  Full details will be available HERE later in the day

Finally, it seems that the lure of British television, and perhaps the terrible weather,  had most of the country staying glued to the box this weekend HERE

£19.8m of treasures boost public collections

November 6th, 2009 - 

Modern British paintings and old masters crown year of achievement for government’s Acceptance in Lieu scheme. Paintings by three giants of current British art, David Hockney, Frank Auerbach and Sir Howard Hodgkin are some of the many exceptional cultural treasures that have come into public ownership this year through the Acceptance in Lieu Scheme.

The Acceptance in Lieu (AIL) report for 2008/09, which is published today, records a year of outstanding achievement despite the economic turbulence of the later months with transfers to the nation to the value of £19.8 million, writing off £10.8 million of tax.

The government scheme, administered by the Museums, Libraries and Archives Council (MLA), allows those liable to Inheritance Tax to pay their tax bill by offering important heritage objects to the nation.  In 2008/09 thirty-six cases were completed, the highest number for three years and a wide range of important paintings and archives have been brought into public ownership for the enjoyment of everyone.

The items saved for the nation comprised works by Titian and Van Dyck, Guardi and Millet, Reynolds and Gainsborough, as well as, for the first time, a number of works by living artists and some that have never been seen by the public before. Other historic treasures include Roman antiquities and archive correspondence of an early 19th-century prime minister with letters from Lord Nelson and the papers of a Nobel Prize winner.

We think the Acceptance in Lieu scheme is excellent and we are considering ways to build on its success.

Weekly Email: 22 October 2009

October 22nd, 2009 - 

Here is this week’s news:

Tory Stuff

Media Policy

Jeremy has set out our media proposals in an interview with the FT this week. He said that we want to replace the BBC Trust and that we are looking at reopening the BBC Charter. He also said that we would scrap the Government’s proposed 50p a month tax on all telephone lines to fund superfast broadband and reverse Government plans to force the BBC to share the licence fee, more HERE.

Culture Policy

Ed spoke at the Culture is Right conference yesterday and set out our plans for the National Lottery and philanthropy, confirmed our commitment to free museums, set out our views on the Arts Council, heritage, the MLA, culture in education, highlighted significant proposals at a local level that have implications for the arts, and set out his vision for the cultural Olympiad. Read his full speech HERE and download the green paper on localism HERE the relevant proposals are in the executive summary and in detail on page 25.

Last night we held another Conservative Arts and Creative Industries Network event, thank you to the Creative Coalition for hosting us. The turnout was fantastic, the view, phenomenal and apparently we’re now ‘in danger of becoming trendy’ according to the Standard, HERE.

Ed has posed a question on Linked In: What is the best way for an incoming government to address the issue of online piracy? You can join our network HERE, and respond to his question HERE.

Creative Industries

Broadband Tax

Government advisor Professor Cave agrees with us on there being no need for a broadband tax. Professor Cave, an economist, expressed his support for our proposal and called for more emphasis to be placed on drawing private investment into next-generation network development. More HERE.

BBC

The BBC Trust has rejected plans to open up the iPlayer to ITV and Channel 4 programmes, saying that the idea was ‘too complex’ to be allowed because it would mix programmes that carried advertising with the BBC’s advert-free shows – and it was not clear if the corporation would benefit as a result, more HERE. We think this is a backwards step, which demonstrates that the BBC Trust has once again mis-understood its role – the purpose of this plan was not to benefit the BBC but rather to share the benefits of public investment in the iPlayer with the commercial sector.

Philip Stephens of the FT has outlined a five set programme to save the BBC, HERE. First, show some humility, second, reduce the pay and benefits of top managers, and cut the number of those managers, and publish earnings of its talent; third, rebuild the quality of its journalism, fourth, think strategically about the space a publicly funded broadcaster should be occupying 10 years hence; finally and most importantly, rediscover the difference between ends and means.

Mark Thompson has defended the appearance Nick Griffin, leader of the BNP on Question Time this evening on the grounds of BBC impartiality, and argues that it would be up to Parliament to stop it, more HERE.

Music Piracy

70% of those surveyed in a YouGov poll on internet piracy said that someone suspected of illegal downloading should have a right to a trial in court before restrictions on internet use were imposed, with only 16% in favour of automatic curbs based on accusations by copyright holders such as musicians, more HERE.

In other old model / new model news this week, party chairman Eric Pickles is leading the Conservative party onto Spotify. Cheese and Pickles anyone? More HERE.

Licensing

Ed is at the licensing debate in Westminster Hall at this very moment. We think there should be a review which as we are sympathetic to the suggestion of exemptions for Venues with a capacity of 200 or less – it would support artists without undermining the power of local authorities to control noise levels and promote safety in their area. The Government has just announced a very similar sounding U-turn, more HERE and watch the debate live or recorded, HERE.

Creative Industries

Northwest Vision and Media, which works on behalf of the creative and digital industries in the region, has put together the ‘Fast Company Programme’ to help the industry’s leaders to realise the value of their business and access the private equity funding available to them, more HERE. It launches with a panel discussion at the start of November, more information and registration HERE.

Advertising

Tim Lefroy, Chief Executive of the Advertising Association has announced plans to create a foundation to rebuild trust in advertising. He warned: “Less than 15% of adults ‘generally trust advertising’ today. If current trends continue, for the first time ever, people who are against advertising, who want it more controlled and regulated will, in a few years outnumber those who are ‘for it’, who feel that our freedoms are well placed.” More HERE. We think the foundation is a great idea.

Design

The winner of the Prince Philip Designers Prize for 2009 is Andrew Ritchie’s Brompton bike, based on the ingenuity of its folding mechanism, its balance of functionality, durability and comfort, and a consistent 30-year commitment to refining the product and its 1,200 parts – many of which are unique to Brompton. The bike is wholly manufactured at the company’s factory in Brentford, sells in more than 30 countries, driving a successful business that has grown by 25% for the last three years.  The business still dedicates 50% of management resource to design and development to keep itself ahead of growing competition in the fast-evolving folding bicycle market. More HERE.

Watch a design documentary of 50 years of British innovation, HERE.

The Design Council has launched a national design challenge called ‘Design for Patient Dignity’, inviting designers to join forces with manufacturers, service providers and specialist contractors to help eliminate mixed sex accommodation and increase patient privacy and dignity in hospitals. One of the briefs includes redesigning the patient gown! More HERE.

Architecture

CABE and eight regional design review panels have joined together to create a national network of design review panels. This will provide all local planning authorities with access to independent practical design advice, which is great news, more HERE

Congratulations to Richard Rogers who won this year’s Stirling Prize for his Maggie’s Centre in London, more HERE.

Arts and Heritage

Money Money Money

The Government appears to have found some money to fill the DCMS funding hole that came to light in the summer, HERE as last Friday they confirmed funding for the BFI National Film Centre, Stonehenge, the Tate Modern Extension and the British Museum’s conservation and exhibitions centre and the British Library’s newspaper archive, more HERE and HERE. It’s not at all clear to us where they have found this extra money. Nevertheless, if it is there, it is very welcome.

ACE

Speaking of money, Arts Council England chief executive Alan Davey has argued: ‘The arts ought to be a key part of any civilised government’s mission,’ also speaking at Culture is Right, this week. He added: ‘I hope any government would not return to a Mills-ian view of the most efficient creation of wealth being the sole aim of any society. [Money for the arts] has an ultimate end that Ruskin knew was important to any society – the creation of beauty, and something that goes beyond the material and straight to who we are.’ HERE. We agree.

Cultural Olympiad

The Arts Council have announced the 12 winning projects for their Artists taking the lead programme, part of the London 2012 Cultural Olympiad. Congratulations to the winners, full details HERE.

Heritage

English Heritage has launched the Heritage Counts 2009 website, HERE. This annual report on the state of the historic environment shows that heritage can have an impact on wider social issues such as people’s sense of well-being and community cohesion, and reveals that England’s heritage has had a bumper year with visitor numbers far higher than expected, more HERE.

Libraries

Tim Godfray at the Booksellers Association has written a: ‘blistering private reply to Hodge’s proposal, and in public he talks about a “growing sense of concern” and regards libraries selling books as “unfair competition”—not least because bookshops pay taxes that support libraries… Rather than flying ill-conceived and frankly preposterous suggestions, Margaret Hodge would be better off speeding up the publication of the Charteris Report into the library service in the Wirral, and on speeding the publication of her own long-delayed Department for Culture, Media & Sport library review.’ Ouch! More HERE.

Meanwhile CILIP has weighed in with the biting headline: ‘Hot news! Absolutely nothing is happening!’ more HERE.

Effects of the recession

The Art Fund has carried out its second nationwide survey of museums and galleries which shows that more people are visiting museums across the UK and that they are spending more in the shops and cafes – a positive sign. But income from other sources, especially public funding, investments and corporate sponsorship, is falling, more HERE.

In Parliament

Parliamentary Questions

Falling Lottery funding for the arts, sports and heritage HERE

But steady lottery sales over the past few years HERE

The increasing cost of visiting English Heritage properties HERE

Buildings added, buildings removed from the English Heritage ‘Buildings At Risk’ register HERE

Estimates of the financial contribution of the heritage sector HERE

The impact of digital switchover on provision of ITV 3 and 4 in Wales HERE

The proposal for top-slicing the license fee and the impact on ITV HERE

And Finally

To mark the end of its popular P G Wodehouse exhibition, Heywood Hill the bookshop has come up with a mouth-watering free competition for anyone with an appetite for Wilton’s, Berry Bros, Heywood Hill and/ or Nicholas Soames! Watch Plum Idol HERE featuring among others Stephen Fry, Santa Montefiore and Henry Blofeld (and including Debo Devonshire’s first official appearance on You Tube) and then vote for your favourite – there is a corker of a prize for one lucky winner:

Where we’ve been and who we’ve seen

TIGA, London Film Festival screenings of Bright Star and An Education, CBI Tourism Alliance Breakfast, the Roundhouse, Culture is Right, ITV, Conservative Arts and Creative Industries Network at the Paramount, Editorial Intelligence on the future of the arts, more HERE, Alan Davey, CBI London Annual Dinner, Cartoon Museum, Moctezuma exhibition at the British Museum, Churches Conservation Trust, Channel 4, Enron at the Royal Court Theatre, TimeWarner, Connect.

Ed Vaizey

Shadow Arts Minister

Jeremy Hunt

Shadow Culture Secretary

Culture is Right

October 21st, 2009 - 

Ed spoke at the Culture is Right conference today, and set out our plans for the National Lottery and philanthropy, confirmed our commitment to free museums, set out our views on the Arts Council, heritage, the MLA, culture in education, highlighted significant proposals at a local level that have implications for the arts, and set out his vision for the cultural Olympiad. Read his full speech HERE and Download the relevant green paper on localism HERE the relevant proposals are in the executive summary and in detail on page 22 and 25.

Culture is Right October 2009

Introduction

Delighted to be here.

I have been in the job for almost three years. I think I am only now beginning to make an impact. I would like to think that is because of my perseverance, charisma and charm, but I suspect it is because of David Cameron, and the possibility that there might be a Conservative Government in less than a year’s time.

I asked David Cameron for this job. I thoroughly enjoy it, and I hope I will keep it if we win the next election, and more than that, hold on to it for a considerable period of time, at least long enough to make a difference.

I believe strongly in the importance of culture. It permeates every aspect of our life, it is the hallmark of a civilised society. We’re actually pretty good at it, and our culture has thrived in the last fifteen years, thanks to the huge injection of cash provided by the National Lottery, set up by the Conservatives.

I like to say that culture is the most efficient public service in the country. It’s a slightly clunky phrase, but I use it to highlight the fact that the arts, far from being subsidy junkies, provide a huge bang for their subsidy buck. In fact, on the whole subsidy only represents something like a third of the income of most subsidised arts organisations, with the rest made up by sponsorship and ticket sales.

For this modest investment, we get back some of the best arts to be found anywhere in the world. Along with heritage, which receives even less subsidy, we have the main driver for tourism, our fifth biggest industry. And we have a sector that plays a crucial role in employment, civic pride, urban regeneration, education, health… I could go on, but I hope you see why I like my job.

Having started on what I hope is an optimistic note, let me also sound a word of caution. Our ideas are set out against the backdrop of ongoing concern about the state of the economy, and of course this translates into concern about funding. We believe that the real solution to worries about funding is to work as hard as possible to get the economy and Government finances back on track – a strong, healthy economy is the best solution to any future worries over funding. But there will be short-term pain. I hope that we can protect the front-line arts as much as possible, and work smartly and quickly to reduce bureaucracy which soaks up unnecessary costs.

National Lottery and philanthropy

Having sounded that note of caution, let me now look to the future. Our flagship policy is to return the National Lottery to its four good causes. The amount of National Lottery funding going to arts and heritage has fallen by more than half from £906m in 1997 to £444 million ten years later, a fall of more than 50%. This is an absolute scandal, with money being siphoned off to pay for the Government’s pet projects. Just think what a difference that money could have made in the last few years.

So we will redistribute money that the Big Lottery Fund is currently giving to Ministerial pet projects back to the good causes of the arts, heritage and sport. On today’s figures, that represents an annual increase of £53 million for each of the good causes. The proportion of the Lottery that they will receive will rise from the current 16.6% to 20%.

We will also reform the regulations surrounding giving. A key priority is to enable people to give works of are to the nation during their lifetime. In addition, we will simplify Gift Aid will be simplified to make it much easier to sell its attractions to potential donors. We would also like to free up museums and other arts NDPBs so that they are able to acknowledge and celebrate their significant donors much more easily.

The Mixed Economy

Central to our approach to the arts will be a continued commitment to the mixed economy of arts funding, a mix of public subsidy private philanthropy and commercial ventures. We have no hidden agenda to wean the arts off public subsidy, and we recognise that public subsidy plays a vital role in pump priming arts organisations.

We are absolutely committed to maintaining free admission to national museums – I know free admission has significantly increased attendance, and that it gives real meaning to the idea that these museums’ collections are owned for the nation.

Since the publication of our arts task force report in 2007, we have considered, consulted and widely discussed one of its most controversial recommendations: that national RFOs be transferred from the Arts Council to the Department of Culture, Media and Sport. Between them these organisations, the National Theatre, South Bank Centre, RSC, Royal Opera House and ENO, account for a quarter of the grants given by the Arts Council.

I have decided, despite its attractions, to reject this recommendation. I feel that too much time would be wasted on re-organisation. Instead, I would like to discuss with the Arts Council the possibility of putting in place long-term funding agreements with these organisations, accompanied by a light-touch supervisory regime. If this new structure is successful, I would seek to extend it to the additional 45 semi-national organisations which account for a further quarter of ACE spending.

The Arts Council was established in circumstances very different from today – there was no Department responsible for culture, it was not until the 1960s that there was even a minister responsible for the arts. There is now a department of state responsible for cultural policy but there has never been a debate about its relationship with the arts council.

I think this has created a problematic relationship – James Purnell, a Secretary of State long gone, commissioned the McMaster report knowing it would fundamentally change the direction of arts policy away from instrumentalism and towards excellence, yet the Arts Council had no involvement.

Under Labour, sometimes the Arts Council is independent and makes its own decisions – for example, the 2007 funding cuts debacle, but sometimes it implements policies imposed by DCMS – for example the £2.5 million scheme to give free theatre tickets to those under 26.

From where I’m sitting, it seems that successive Secretaries of State say that ideas that are badly received were taken by the independent arts council, while ideas that are well received have come from their Department. This is not only confusing to Arts Council clients, but unfair on the many talented people that work there.

So there needs to be a fundamental debate about the relationship between the Arts Council and its sponsoring Department. Of course Alan Davey and Jeremy and I are discussing this; I would welcome all your thoughts on the matter too.

Here, I will set out my own view:

This debate should be held in the context of the Conservative approach to quangos, set out recently by David Cameron. Our concern is that quangos shouldn’t be doing jobs that Government departments should be doing. So following David’s speech, we are carrying out a review of DCMS quangos and looking at moving policy making functions back to the Department.

Decisions on creative arts funding need to be impartial and free from Government interference. For this reason I am committed to the arm’s length principle – that the Arts Council is free to determine which bodies and projects it funds subject to new relationships being established with national and semi national organisations.

I would like to see it stretch itself further, to become a centre of excellence, able to give high-quality advice in key areas such as fund raising and technology, and areas where it seems not to have a voice such as rural arts and tourism. This advice should go far beyond the organisations it funds, to organizations which receive no public money across the whole arts sector. As part of this, I would like to see the staffing of the Arts Council itself open up, so that there is a revolving door, between the council and the entire arts sector, both subsidized and commercial. For example, senior arts practitioners should serve on the Arts Council, either in full-time or in an advisory capacity for short periods of time.

Heritage

Another of my responsibilities is heritage. The government still has not brought forward its Heritage Protection bill. It is dithering when the sector most needs leadership and clarity.

I am very concerned that important British sites such as Hadrian’s wall, the site of 1066 Battle, and the ancestral home of Lord Byron are at risk. Our report on heritage, published at the end of last year, revealed that the Government is failing to keep on top of the 37,000 heritage sites in need of repair.

In 2007/08 the number of British Heritage sites threatened by decay and neglect outnumbered those being repaired and removed from the ‘At Risk’ register for the first time in almost a decade.

With falling budgets English Heritage has been forced to halve the value of its ‘At Risk’ grants from £8m in 1999 to £4.1m last year. The cuts have meant some of the country’s best loved sites have been left to rot and decay for years.

Our lottery proposals will benefit the heritage sector and help restore some of these wonderful sites to their full glory.

We are conducting a review of the sector at the moment, and will share our results later in the year.

MLA

The role of the Museums and Libraries Authority is another one that I would like to reconsider. In terms of libraries, I would like the agency responsible for libraries to bring much needed strong leadership and advocacy to this disparate sector. This may require an adjustment of the role, function and funding of the MLA.

Turning to a different area of its responsibilities, the MLA is currently plans to relocate the Acquisitions, Exports and Loans Unit to Birmingham, and I will review the changes to the AELU if we win the election.

Cultural Education

Arts education is another area where reform is urgently needed. While there have been many well-meaning initiatives in recent years, I feel that there have been too many, which has lead to confusion. Proper teacher, training, for example, is something that urgently needs to be looked at. Dance is the second most popular PE activity after football, but when teaches training for a PGCE in PE select their specialism, only 62 places out of over a thousand offer dance.

Over 2000 teachers were supposed to benefit from the £2million music teacher training programme announced in 2006 to support professional development. Two years on, just 304 teachers had completed the course.

Meanwhile, it is still the case that 40% of primary school pupils would like to learn a musical instrument, but do not. Only one in five secondary school pupils has played a musical instrument in front of an audience, and nearly half do not visit any museum or gallery. So there is a lot of room for improvement.

There is also a great deal of money spent on these initiatives which could be spent much more effectively if there were fewer programmes with more straightforward ambitions. We would also like to introduce events such as a National Music Week, to act as a focal point for cultural, in this case music education programmes, and would be complementary to them.

As Conservatives, we are committed to giving parents more choice in education. That approach will be extended to the arts, and ways will be found to empower parents and pupils to make their own decisions about the specialist education they receive and where they get it from, be it music, dance, drama or visual art.

Localism

Turning now to localism, our Communities and Local Government team have put forward proposals which will have significant implications for the cultural community, both cultural centres and arts organisations that operate mainly locally and regionally, and for nationally funded projects.

I would encourage anyone who runs a local or regional arts organisation to look at our Green Paper on the subject, it’s titled: Control Shift, Returning Power to Local Communities, and you can find it on the Conservatives website.

There are two proposals there which have implications for the arts:

First, we will bring in a power to allow local people to trigger referendums, by legislating to ensure that referendum will be held in a Local Authority area if 5% of local citizens sign a petition in favour of within a six month period.

There are both opportunities and threats for the cultural organisations funded by local authorities in this measure. The opportunity will be for an arts centre that has a strong relationship with its community to campaign for a referendum to protect their funding, if it were under threat.

For example, Swindon Dance, which was recently having discussions with its local council about funding could petition for referendum to require the council to protect its funding.

However, there is also a threat here – an arts centre which does not have strong links with its local community could be vulnerable to local residents triggering a referendum asking for its funding to be spent elsewhere.

Second we will give local people greater control over how central Government funds are spent in their area. We will use an act already in law, the Sustainable Communities Act 2007, to enable local governments to identify money spent in their area by central government agencies, which will include the arts council. If, after consultation with local people, there are recommendations of ways in which it could be better spent on a particular priority for the community, the money will be redirected towards fulfilling that priority wherever possible.

This will mean that a local authority could intervene in a project like The Public, and get it stopped, and the money redirected to priorities for the local community, rather than creating a wasteful white elephant.

It will also mean that new plans for arts and cultural centres that are hoping to get and keep central government funding through the arts council will only bring these projects fruition if they build support in the community it will be situated in, and plan their project with that community in mind, from the very outset.

This is a considerable shift in emphasis from the current Government’s top down approach, where once a project is signed off centrally it goes ahead whether it is what the local community want or not.

It will mean better arts and cultural centres, which are more closely tied to and respond and serve their communities better.

Cultural Olympiad

Finally I would like to turn to the Olympics.

2012 has the potential to bring the key strands of culture, creativity, tourism and sport together in the UK in an extraordinary way. As Conservatives we are aware of this, and we are thinking hard about how to capitalise on the multiple opportunities the Olympics bring.

First, we need a coherent, organised strategy to make the most the 15,000 journalists that will come to London for the Olympics. If we look at the example of the Sydney games, Australia managed to leverage those games to quadruple the number of tourists per year around the games. Nearly ten years on from their games, their annual visitor numbers are still double what they were prior to the games.

We would like to see a structured programme that ensures all visiting journalists have the opportunity to visit another part of the UK.

Where will we take them, and what will we show them? The obvious answer is our world class culture and heritage, from the Edinburgh Festival, to Stonehenge, to the Baltic.

We have concerns over plans for the Cultural Olympiad also – while we welcome the formation of the new committee and appointment of Tony Hall to the LOGOC board, I am worried that its make up is London-centric, and biased towards the subsidised arts. For a successful Cultural Olympiad which engages with as many people, we feel the full participation of the popular and commercial sector is vital. I would like to see free concerts in Hyde Park, or Buckingham Place – let’s remember 2012 will be the Queen’s Diamond jubilee - as well as up and down the country, with iconic musicians like Sir Paul McCartney, the Stones, and Led Zeppelin playing, as well as our exciting younger artists.

The irony of this is that it comes at a time when so much is going well. The Olympic Delivery Authority has made significant progress with the construction and The Organising Committee has done extraordinarily well to bank over £0.5bn in sponsorship. The BOA is reorganised and refocused and, with UK Sport, delivered a record medal haul in Beijing.

However, if in October 2012, the area around Stratford has been transformed and we are left with a host of happy memories but no more people enjoying the opportunities available through sport, our tourism numbers have not significantly increased, and no-one new excited by a amazing live gig, or new dance piece they have seen, it is difficult to avoid the conclusion that we will have missed a once in a lifetime opportunity.

Close

Both in the run up to the Olympics and the wider cultural agenda, we are committed to supporting, nurturing and encouraging the success we already see, and seek to set the direction of travel with the lightest of touches.

Under a future Conservative Government we will concentrate on creating a transparent, cost effective framework that allows the sector whole to thrive and not just survive.

Weekly Email: 1 October 2009

October 1st, 2009 - 

Here is this week’s news…

Creative Industries

Ben Bradshaw’s conference speech.

Ben Bradshaw made his speech to the Labour conference HERE. It’s pretty silly and we can’t be bothered to deconstruct it. As an example of a Labour wordsmith at his best, consider, if you will, a quote from the end of the speech: Labour’s mission is to ensure the best for all. That’s what Labour’s done. That’s what we’re doing and that’s what we’ll continue to do. The Tories never have; they never would. We must ensure they never will.’ So Labour’s mission is to ensure the Conservatives never deliver the best for all. Weird. Interestingly, all the press were briefed that it was a shot across the bows of the BBC, see for example HERE. Talking of which…

BBC

The BBC has launched its review of BBC TV services, including BBC One, Two, Four and the Red Button, HERE.

Meanwhile, the Corporation has been criticised by three of its most loyal servants, former chairman of the governors, Sir Christopher Bland; veteran newsreader Peter Sissons and former Newsnight presenter and head of the BBC World Service, Sir John Tusa. Bland, now chairman of the RSC said: ‘they have got to… cut their coat according to other people’s cloth, not according to their own… The BBC…. needs to begin to recognise that the world has changed pretty radically in the last 24 months’ Sissons said: ‘The BBC needs management of international calibre and instead they have got a gang of people who are not up to the job. The political answer is to break it up and sell off big chunks so it can be managed by other people’ More HERE.

And Ben Bradshaw has accused Michael Lyons, chairman of the BBC Trust, of cosying up to us because he thinks we are going to win the next election HERE.

ITV

ITV has terminated its discussions with Tony Ball to become its new chief executive. They have begun their search again and say: ‘The first task of the new Chairman will be to appoint a new Chief Executive. Michael Grade has agreed to continue to lead the Company as Executive Chairman until the new non-Executive Chairman is appointed and in post.’ More HERE.

Digital Britain

The deadline for submissions to the Government’s Digital Britain consultation on funding options for national, regional and local news has passed, with the BBC continuing to oppose the Government’s top-slicing solution, suggesting instead: ‘harnessing the value of the broadcast spectrum freed up in 2014 for the benefit of commercial operators’ and reiterating its proposals to share know how and facilities with other media outlets. More HERE, and all non confidential submissions to the consultation published HERE. We have our own proposals to create sustainable local TV companies, requiring no public funding whatsoever, HERE

Consultation on file sharing ended this week as well. BT and the Carphone Warehouse oppose the Government’s plans to disconnect persistent illegal file downloaders. Charles Dunstone of the Carphone Warehouse said: ‘What is being proposed is wrong in principle and it won’t work in practice. The unintended consequence of Mandelson’s plan will be to encourage more wi-fi and PC hijacking and expose more innocent people to being penalised wrongfully.’ More HERE.

There’s detail on the outcome of last week’s Featured Artist Coalition meeting HERE. The statement said that the meeting ‘voted overwhelmingly to support a three-strike sanction on those who persistently download illegal files, sanctions to consist of a warning letter, a stronger warning letter and a final sanction of the restriction of the infringer’s bandwidth to a level which would render file-sharing of media files impractical while leaving basic email and web access functional’ More and a full list of signatories’ HERE It sounds like the music industry is moving towards some agreement with itself, which can only be a good thing.

Scottish Broadcasting

The Scottish Culture Minister Michael Russell has outlined a ‘mixed system’ which would mean Scottish viewers paying a higher licence fee of £145, and take advertising to pay for a Scottish Broadcasting Corporation. It would have a budget of £300 million, based on licence fee cash raised in Scotland, but it would have to raise extra money if it were to rival the BBC which has a £4.6billion income. Or Scotland could just stay part of the Union. More HERE.

Video Games

Yet more reason to love the sector: TNS technology research reveals that 40 per cent of people over 50 play games, and 40 per cent of them say they play games more than they read magazines. Research by Deutsche Bank shows the games industry will grow from 30 billion euros to 52 billion Euros by 2012.  More HERE As clever Rory Sutherland wrote in last week’s Spectator, ‘In fact there are several other technological areas where Britain enjoys similar supremacy, but you wouldn’t know it from the newspapers…the game Grand Theft Auto a more successful entertainment property than any Hollywood film, is almost entirely a Scottish creation.  A little more celebration of this wouldn’t hurt.’

Creative Funding

The first public venture capital fund for the creative industries, the Creative Advantage Fund has just announced a new round of investment in West Midlands small and medium enterprises HERE. They use risk capital to foster creative companies, recycling the public investment to help creative companies overcome the “equity gap”, more HERE.

Advertising

The internet has overtaken television to become the UK’s largest advertising medium, according to a report by PwC for the Internet Advertising Bureau. The UK is the first large media market to see such a shift. Spending on online advertising grew 4.6 per cent in the first half of 2009 compared with the same period last year to reach £1.75bn, driven largely by search engine advertising. By contrast, overall advertising spending fell 16.6 per cent. As a result, Online’s share of the total grew from 18.7 per cent in the first half of last year to 23.5 per cent, ahead of TV’s 21.9 per cent. Online overtook news-paper advertising sales income in 2006. More HERE.

Publishing

French publisher La Martiniere has become the first publisher worldwide to sue Google in court, demanding 15 million Euros in damages for copyrighted books digitised by the search engine without permission, HERE. With more discussion of what it all means, for writers and creative copyright in general, HERE.

The Lost Symbol has sold nearly a third of its 6.5m worldwide English language print run in its first week, according to figures from Nielsen BookScan. Total English language sales, excluding Canada, have reached 1.9m since the latest Dan Brown novel was released more HERE.

There’s a round up on the Booker Prize shortlist ahead of next week’s announcement, HERE.

Architecture

Ed spoke at the Architect’s Journal 100 breakfast this week, reiterating our support for CABE, and our intention to abolish the ARB, more HERE.

MOBOs

The MOBOs were held in Scotland for the first time ever last night, congratulations to all winners in particular JLS and N-Dubz who won two awards each, more HERE.

Design

This year’s London Design Festival was the best yet reflecting the widest possible range of design disciplines and working with key venues and spaces including Trafalgar Square, Southbank Centre, the V&A and Somerset House. More HERE.

Conservatives Technology Forum

If you are finding our Creative Industries and Arts Network just too much fun, you might like to start to attending the Conservative Technology Forum, full details on their jazzy website, HERE.

Arts and Heritage

Libraries

Big news: Labour in the Wirral have u-turned on their plans to close 11 libraries. Jeremy and Ed went up to campaign against the closures earlier this year, and we are delighted by the news. More HERE.

UK Libraries are uniting in a huge lending network which will enables book lovers to borrow items from a public library regardless of where they live. More than 4,000 libraries in England, Wales and Northern Ireland and in the Society of Chief Librarians initiative. HERE and HERE

Ed proposed similar plans in March of this year, so we welcome this innovation from the sector itself. On a similar note, we hear that the APPG Libraries report will be published tonight and might bear an uncanny resemblance to our proposals.

Our Lottery Plans will Benefit Arts and Heritage

We’ve banged on for ages about how our plans to reduce Lottery bureaucracy and increase the share of the Lottery pot for arts and heritage will lead to significant additional money for the arts and heritage if we win the election.  A hilarious article in The Observer has given our plans some much needed publicity. HERE Why hilarious?  Because they argue that by giving more money to heritage we will cut “avant garde” arts, ignoring the fact that (a) we will be giving more money to the arts (b) there’s something called the arms length principle and (c) we like avant garde art.  The Times covers the issue much better and more accurately HERE.

Dance

A window on dance, the Arts Council’s dance mapping project has been published. Written by consultants Susanne Burns and Sue Harrison the report tells us that Dance RFOs currently constitute 10.78% of overall ACE spend, down from 12.44% in 1997/98, that ACE funding makes up 32% of the total income of dance agencies, venues and festivals and that total ACE and local authority investment in dance buildings from 2004-08 totals £297million. Download the full-report and executive summary HERE.

Sustain

Arts Council England are closing Sustain, their programme to help arts organisations continue to maintain artistic excellence during the recession, to new applications on 9th October 2009. ACE will then undertake ‘a swift and thorough review of Sustain before deciding if further action is needed to support artistic excellence through the recession and what form it might take.’ More HERE.

Battle of Ideas

The programme for the Battle of Ideas 2009, organised by the Royal College of Art, is available HERE. Ed is on the Can the arts save the economy panel on Sunday 1st November, HERE.

Interesting pieces from across the pond

Do arts service organisations need to be consolidated? HERE This piece looks at the USA, although we think the arts sector could learn much from the strength, success and influence of the Youth Sports Trust and UK Sport.

Michelle Obama tells an international audience why the arts matter at the G20 in Pittsburgh HERE

And finally

David Cameron has said that he wants to be painted by Tracey Emin in this week’s Spectator HERE.

Where we’ve been and who we’ve seen

The BFI Archive, Architects Journal Top 100 breakfast, Ofcom, Pinewood exhibition at The British Movieum, The Communications Store, Anish Kapoor at the Royal Academy, a day in Brussels with PPL meeting top Euro honchos, the Cheltenham Festival.

Conference Next Week

We’re not sure how many of our 3,000 subscribers will be going to conference, but if you are this is what we are doing:

Monday 5th October

Ed: ACE / PAN event at the Lowry, the All Party Writers Group, People’s History Museum / Heritage Lottery Fund, Policy Exchange: Digital Britain, Conservative Arts and Creative Industries network event.

Jeremy: BBC World Service, Conservative Arts and Creative Industries Event.

Tuesday 6th October

Ed: CPS / broadcasting policy

Jeremy: Reform / BBC, NESTA.

Wednesday 7th October

Ed: Society of Chief Librarians Libraries Inspire Breakfast, Bell Pottinger lunch, North West Tourist Board Drinks

Jeremy: Speech to Conference, UK Music.

Ed Vaizey

Shadow Arts Minister

Jeremy Hunt

Shadow Culture Secretary

Weekly Email: 23 July 2009

July 23rd, 2009 - 

Sorry, but you do not have permission to view this content.