Labour: Collapse in music education 'a disgrace'

Clockwise (left to right): BSL Interpreter Ezekwisiri Ani, Hustings Chair Baroness Deborah Bull, and Shadow Creative Industries Minister Chris Bryant
26 Jun 2024

Shadow Creative Industries Minister criticises lack of access to arts education in schools and stresses need for a full review of Arts Council England.

Starmer visits Lyric Hammersmith on campaign trail

Keir Starmer visiting the Lyric Hammersmith Theatre
25 Jun 2024

Labour leader says his party will ‘stand squarely behind’ organisations like the theatre in west London.

Frazer faces challenge to retain seat

Culture Secretary Lucy Frazer
25 Jun 2024

Polling analysis suggests current Culture Secretary, who has been an MP since 2015, may struggle to win parliamentary seat of Ely and East Cambridgeshire.

Scottish arts leaders urge earlier funding decisions

24 Jun 2024

Scotland's First Minister John Swinney has been warned not to leave decisions over allocating culture funding until December, as planned, because of the knock-on effect this will have on the nation's arts funding body, Creative Scotland.

Creative Scotland is due to determine which organisations it will invest in for its next three-year funding cycle in October. But Holyrood has said it will not issue cultural budgets until December. 

Last year Holyrood committed an additional £100 million in new funding for the cultural sector, which Swinney repledged again last week, however no details on how it will be distributed have been released.  

Speaking to The Scotsman, arts leaders describe the funding environment as “extremely precarious,” leading to potentially “devastating” decisions due in October unless the additional funding is “brought forward at both the levels and pace that are needed”.

Labour labels Frazer 'disingenuous' over culture funding claims

Composite image showing Chris Bryant, Lucy Frazer, Peter Bazalgette  and Jack Lenox
20 Jun 2024

In a hustings held by Creative UK, Labour said it would review arts and culture funding and seek to encourage philanthropic giving.

Sector finances revelations pose big questions

image from Coventry City of Culture
19 Jun 2024

Following extensive research into the finances of arts organisations, Sarah Thelwall of MyCake reflects on the serious implications for the sector.

Culture and place: Why we need to look beyond cities

People sitting on the grass in the grounds of Pontefract Castle
19 Jun 2024

Arts and culture are integral to shaping the places we live. We now need to understand the effects cultural placemaking practices have on our towns, provinces and rural areas, argues John Wright.

Holyrood rejects inquiry into Glasgow School of Art fires 

17 Jun 2024

The Scottish government will not support calls for a public inquiry into two fires that caused extensive damage to Glasgow School of Art (GSA) because the required resources would be “extensive” and “difficult to justify”.

The Grade A-listed Charles Rennie Mackintosh building was extensively damaged in a blaze on 23 May 2014. Following a £35m restoration project that was close to completion, the school suffered a second, even more destructive fire four years later on 18 June 2018. 

A report by fire investigators in 2022 said the cause of the second fire was undetermined. The Scottish parliament’s Culture Committee had recommended a public inquiry with judicial powers to examine the risks posed by fire in historic buildings.

Addressing the committee last week, Culture Secretary Angus Robertson said a review had been considered but the government did not support the recommendation in part because most Grade A-listed buildings - including GSA - are privately owned.

Robertson said neither the Scottish government nor Historic Environment Scotland had the "necessary frameworks or regulations currently in place to implement such a comprehensive review".

In a letter to MSPs, Robertson said that the "resources required, not just financially but in terms of expertise and personnel, would be extensive".

"Given the current financial landscape, it is difficult to identify a way that this could be funded, or justified, given the protections already given to historic buildings in fire safety and construction legislation, and the progress already made since the 2018 fire."

Ireland unveils €6m funding for artists' studios

17 Jun 2024

The Irish government has announced a pilot scheme to increase the number of workspaces for artists and musicians, with a €6m fund for local authorities.

Announcing the government’s commitment to provide capital funding for the provision of artist workspaces, Culture Minister Catherine Martin said she was “acutely aware” of the pressures on artists and creatives, including those in the electronic music sector, to find suitable workspaces.

The scheme will be run through local authorities, who can apply for funding grants, provided they deliver 40 per cent match funding.

Each local authority can apply for up to €150,000 or €300,000  - depending on location - with funding focused on “the delivery of infrastructure to increase availability and access to artist workspaces”. 

“Much of our cultural infrastructure is initiated by our local authorities, and they have been a crucial resource in the delivery of arts and culture interventions over many decades,” said Martin

The plan follows last year's €3m Space to Create project by Dublin City Council to develop 60 artist workspaces in the city.

Last month, the Irish government revealed that a year into its pilot scheme to provide a basic income for artists, creatives receiving a weekly stipend are spending more time on their practice per week, less time working in other sectors and suffering less from depression and anxiety.

Labour vows to improve arts accessibility

Labour Leader Keir Starmer
13 Jun 2024

Labour's general election manifesto says arts and music will 'no longer be the preserve of a privileged few', with the party pledging to boost creative education opportunities and introduce consumer protections on ticket resales.

Green Party proposes £5bn investment in culture and sport

13 Jun 2024

If elected to parliament Green MPs would push for government investment of £5bn in community sports, arts and culture, the party has said.

The party's general election manifesto, published today (12 June) says arts, culture and sports are "central to people’s mental and physical wellbeing, and to thriving communities". 

"They also make a huge contribution to the UK economy," the manifesto adds.

Alongside pushing for additional investment, the party says MPs would also seek to keep local sports facilities, museums, theatres, libraries and art galleries "open and thriving".

It also proposes an end to VAT on cultural activities with the aim of lowering prices and making them more accessible.

Teacher professionalism and the arts

Schoolchildren playing musical instruments
12 Jun 2024

Regardless of the setting, every school deserves a teacher who is afforded the space and professional trust to teach an inspiring arts curriculum, writes Steven Berryman.

Tories pledge to 'unleash philanthropy' for cultural institutions

Rishi Sunak launching the Conservative general election manifesto
11 Jun 2024

Conservative Party promises to leverage the power of philanthropy for cultural institutions in an election manifesto light on firm policies for the arts.

UK arts funding drops 16% since 2017

Olivia Colman pictured at Soccer Aid for Unicef, 2019
11 Jun 2024

Research commissioned by performers' union Equity has been used to create an Arts Investment Tracker, showing changing levels of arts funding across the UK.

Lib Dems pledge to protect arts funding

Liberal Democrat Leader Ed Davey
10 Jun 2024

Party's general election manifesto criticises Conservative government's lack of support for the culture sector, claiming that following the pandemic it has 'only inflicted more damage'.

Government must ensure children’s right to theatre

Actor on a thrust stage performing to young people
10 Jun 2024

Directors of Education and Learning from some of the country’s most high-profile theatres are calling on all political parties to commit to 'Theatre for Every Child'. Claire Walker of SOLT & UK Theatre shares highlights of the campaign.

Art organisations strike in support of Palestine

Palestinian flag waving
07 Jun 2024

As part of the cultural strike, the group Goldsmiths for Palestine 'pressured' the university's Centre for Contemporary Art to close. 

Arts Council England review shelved

Thangam Debboniare (left) and Dame Mary Archer (right)
06 Jun 2024

Commenting on the news Shadow Culture Secretary Thangam Debbonaire says Labour remains committed to a review of the public funding body.

Debbonaire faces battle to hold seat

Green Party co-Leader Carla Denyer
06 Jun 2024

Contesting the newly-created seat of Bristol Central, the Shadow Culture Secretary trails Green Party candidate by 14 points in early polls.

Are arts students a burden on the taxpayer?

Drama students
05 Jun 2024

The Higher Education sector is up in arms about proposed cuts to creative arts courses which, it says, will further damage the UK's creative industries. Carole-Anne Upton thinks the proposal is short-sighted and harmful.

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