Notes from the arts world

Arts ire for canadian taxpayers federation

Members of B.C.'s arts community are reacting with incredulity to a public commentary released by the B.C. director of the Canadian Taxpayers Federation (CTF). Titled "Art is a business and should not be subsidized," the November 5 missive, penned by Maureen Bader, states that government subsidies to the arts should be abolished. "Yes, art and cultural events make our lives more enjoyable, but who should pay for them? Taxpayers or individuals who freely choose to spend their money on art," it reads in part.

"When a government gets involved in subsidies there are two problems," Bader told the Straight . "One is it can make the art sort of a function of the state, but the other too is that it forces taxpayers to pay for art that they might not otherwise freely purchase."

In a phone interview with the Straight , Vancouver Symphony Orchestra music director Bramwell Tovey stated that Bader's argument is "lacking in perception".

"I think what we're talking about here is not government subsidy. We're talking about investment," he said. "We can see that it makes a lot of sense for the government to invest in the arts, because they more than give back on GST and PST.”¦Certainly this particular area of Vancouver, right in the inner city where we operate, would be destitute for about 100 nights a year without the economic activity that's generated by the performances here [at the Orpheum Theatre] by the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra."

Gina Sufrin, executive director of the Assembly of BC Arts Councils, was also dismissive of Bader's commentary. "Reducing arts to a commodity is a notion that I think is really, really past its best-before date," she told the Straight. "Defining the arts solely as business activity is just so short sighted, in my opinion. It is often presented in marketplace terms, but I would think it would be more appropriate to compare government investment in the arts with government investment in things like parks and recreation. If we had to pay what it really costs, for example, to go swim at the aquatic centre, nobody would go. And yet nobody is saying the government shouldn't be subsidizing that activity."

Sufrin added that the government does not select artists to receive support; arm's-length organizations such as the Canada Council for the Arts and the BC Arts Council are responsible for decisions regarding government arts funding. "The process of funding is adjudicated by peer juries. The very reason for this is because it shouldn't be a political decision," said Sufrin.

The Assembly of BC Arts Councils is working with the Alliance for Arts and Culture and other organizations to campaign for an annual increase in BC Arts Council (BCAC) funding from $14 million to $32 million. According to a report prepared by the Alliance for Arts and Culture in support of the BC Arts Council funding increase, the $14 million currently invested in the BCAC "helps drive $4.2 billion in provincial domestic economic activity". The same report noted that the City of Vancouver has determined that every dollar it invests in the arts leverages $11.50 from other sources.

Bader's piece came just over two weeks after the Fraser Institute hosted a debate on government arts funding between Tovey and right-wing freelance journalist Elizabeth Nickson, whose work appears in the Women's Post and the Globe and Mail. (Nickson's regular National Post column was discontinued in 2004 after an allegation of plagiarism.) Last January, the Straight reported that the right-wing women's group REAL (Realistic, Equal, Active, for Life) Women of Canada was working with other organizations on a constitutional challenge to curtail the powers of the federal government to fund health care, education, and cultural activities. Bader said she is not involved with REAL Women of Canada and she is "not directly" involved with the Fraser Institute. "I go to their events," she said. Bader's biography on the CTF Web site ( www.taxpayer.com/ ) states that she worked at the Fraser Institute in 1991.

Bader claimed to be an artist herself. "I'm a painter. I have to work, just like most other artists," she said. "I have an easel in my office. I haven't been painting lately, anyway. I've been too busy working. It's very difficult to make a living from art."

 

Big Bucks for Bill Reid Gallery

The Bill Reid Gallery of Northwest Coast Art is halfway to its goal of raising $2.4 million after receiving $1 million from the Audain Foundation.

The gallery is set to open May 10, 2008, and will be located in the City of Vancouver cultural amenity space at 639 Hornby Street. In September, the gallery was announced as the successful applicant following a request for proposals by the city.

Mavis Dixon, development director of the Bill Reid Foundation, told the Straight the funds will be used to restore the site, which formerly housed the Canadian Craft Museum, to its intended use as a public art gallery.

"The space hasn't been functioning as a gallery for three years," she said. Since the gift from the Audain Foundation, Dixon said, another $200,000 has been received from seven other donors. She said the $2.4 million is needed to restore the gallery and ensure its operations for the first five years.

"The structure [of government arts funding] is such that you'll get funding as an operating organization after you've operated for a number of years. So we have to fund ourselves through those first few years before we switch into an organization that has enough of a track record that we can qualify for the type of public funding that goes toward the Vancouver Art Gallery or some of the more mainstream or established places," she said.

Comments

1 Comments

Myra

Nov 5, 2009 at 3:16pm

re government subsidizing the arts - the government could learn a lot of how effective and efficient use of resources can be by simply observing how the cultural sector does it...and, if subdizing the arts is an issue then all subsidies should be questioned - were will this end - taxpayer paying salaries for politicians - there is no economy in the world that exists without one form of subsidy or another ... many choose to use the term investments into the well being of society