Art, Politics, Money: Revisiting Australia’s Cultural Policy by David Throsby. Currency House: Platform Papers No 55, May, 2018.
Commentary by Frank McKone
In 2006 David Throsby wrote Platform Papers No 7: Does Australia Need a Cultural Policy? After 12 years of a terrifying but fascinating political history, he concludes we should begin again.
He suggests our starting point should be the ‘definitional proposition’ from the Labour policy document Creative Australia
which came to nought in 2013 when the Liberal/Nationals Coalition under
Tony Abbott defeated Labour’s Kevin Rudd. The proposition reads:
Australian
culture is the embodiment of the distinctive values, traditions and
beliefs that make being Australian in the 21st Century unique –
democratic, diverse, adaptive and grounded in one of the world’s oldest
living civilisations.
Throsby believes that this ‘can be seen
to rise above Party politics’, and ‘is likely to be generally accepted,
regardless of political leaning.” He is concerned as probably we all
are that ‘a wide-ranging rumination on our culture and its values at
this present time is most unlikely to appeal to the Prime Minister or
his Cabinet, given the cultural conflicts that keep re-surfacing within
the Coalition’s own ranks, the Government’s apparent lack of interest in
the area, and its preoccupation with issues they would see as having
higher priority’.
But he does put up some practical suggestions
for immediate application by a Labour Minister for the Arts after the
next election, which must take place by May 2019. I suggest his ideas
should be taken up by The Arts Party, which has recently
established a new formal structure with the objective of sending at
least one member to the Senate next year. We need a voice in the
Parliament whichever party forms Government.
As Throsby puts it: The Minister for the Arts “will have his own ideas of
what
might be included, but here are some suggestions for components for a
new arts policy package, derived from discussion in this paper:
• A recalibration and expansion of the
artist-in-residence programs in schools;
• A forum or series of forums on arts funding,
perhaps including a broad discussion of the
role of peer assessment in evaluating grant
applications;
• In conjunction with the Cultural Ministers’
Statistics Working Group, persuade the ABS to
re-establish the National Centre for Culture and
Recreation Statistics;
• A program to increase funding for art centres
in remote communities to enable expansion in
their support for Aboriginal and Torres Strait
Islander arts in all areas of art practice;
• Re-establishment of the Cultural Industries
Innovation Centre;
• Set up a feasibility study to consider the
establishment of a Heritage Lottery Fund.”
A little explanation, in reverse order:
The
“Heritage Lottery Fund” is based on the UK National Lottery, funding to
which – as an example – the Royal Shakespeare Company has access
through Arts Council England. Throsby recalls, in support of this idea,
the success of the Opera House Lottery which helped fund the construction of the Sydney Opera House back in the day.
“The Australian Government’s Creative Industries Innovation Centre
(CIIC) was a wonderful organisation that worked with over 1,500
creative enterprises from 2009 to 2014. They provided one-on-one
support, and facilitated research reports including Valuing Australia’s Creative Industries,
which showed that the creative industries made a direct contribution to
GDP of $32.8 billion in 2011/12, more than the contribution made by
many traditional industries.” https://www.creativeplusbusiness.com/ciic-resources/
Aboriginal
and Torres Strait Islander arts centres are now a feature of many
communities across Australia. They are already supported to some extent
by the Federal Government but need more money and more security of
funding to develop fully. The rationale is that art is central to those communities’ social cohesion and ongoing stability, to the benefit of the whole Australian society.
Throsby
writes: “Progress in implementing any policy needs to be tracked over
time, and this requires data. In the cultural arena, the axing by the
Federal Government of the National Centre for Culture and Recreation Statistics
(NCCRS) of the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) in 2014 dealt a
blow to the steady supply of data about arts and culture from the Centre
that had contributed so strongly to supporting policy-making in the
field.” (Page 57)
Throsby notes that the Australia Council
has thankfully survived through all the political exigencies, including
some shenanigans, since its inception as an independent statutory
authority through the Australia Council Act 1975. There are
other models internationally for the evaluation of grant applications
which he believes we should examine, especially because of confusions
over the years about concepts like ‘quality’, ‘excellence’, ‘diversity’,
and issues like inclusion, small to medium organisations, heritage,
individual practitioners, ‘major’ performing companies.
An expansion of the artists-in-residence program in schools
is a straightforward action a new minister could take immediately, as
part of much broader policy development about the central role of arts
in education.
“There are many lessons to be drawn from the
sad meandering tale that represents the progress, if it can be called
that, of Australian cultural policy over the last ten years that we have
charted in these pages. Some of these lessons are encouraging – for
example, as Australians we have shown that we can indeed countenance a
coherent national cultural policy if the mood so takes us. Some of the
lessons are profoundly discouraging, such as the sense that good policy
is fragile, it can be replaced by bad policy, and in the end does anyone
really care?”, writes David Throsby.
Throsby’s paper is a
clarion call for political action, and maybe there are signs of hope.
The Arts Party did remarkably well in the last election while it was
still in a very early fledgling state. It is now ready for a major
campaign for 2019.
And equally remarkably, “Gonski’s radical review” was the front page Fairfax headline as I write (Canberra Times, Monday April 30, 2018).
“Prime
Minister Malcolm Turnbull will push for a radical overhaul of the
Australian curriculum after endorsing a blueprint by his businessman
friend David Gonski to fix the lagging school system. The Gonski 2.0
plan will transform the school system to assess and reward personal
progress, not just standard academic benchmarks. It challenges the
Commonwealth, states and territories to ditch their ‘industrial model of
schooling’ in favour of a more modern and individual approach.” (by Michael Koziol)
This raises the possibility of applying the very model of student centred learning and personal development which arose from Currency House’s Platform Papers No 54 Young People and the Arts: An Agenda for Change by Sue Giles, which I reviewed on this blog in March 2018, and developed with a detailed article on my blog at www.frankmckone2.blogspot.com .
It’s time to take action, I believe.
SYDNEY: Launch of Art, Politics, Money: Revisiting Australia’s Cultural Policy –
David Throsby in conversation with MUP publisher and commentator Louise Adler
When: 6pm – 8pm, Tuesday 1 May 2018
Where: Dentons Seminar Room
Level 16, 77 Castlereagh Street, Sydney (between King/Market Streets)
All welcome. Book https://www.trybooking.com/VDYN or info@currencyhouse.org.au
Currency House’s Platform Paper No.55 is available for media on request and for
purchase on https://currencyhouse.org.au/node/255.
Media enquiries to Martin Portus at mportus@optusnet.com.au or 0401 360 806.
© Frank McKone, Canberra
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