MEDIA RELEASE Wednesday, 10 March 2020
Currency House, Sydney. Media enquiries to Martin Portus on mportus2@tpg.com.au or +61 (0)401 360 806
Posted by Frank McKone
LESSONS OF HISTORY FOR THE ARTS
As artists and companies emerge from the COVID crisis, veteran theatre critic and publisher Katharine Brisbane AM
delivers a landmark new Platform Paper defining the major issues and
disruptions facing Australian arts and culture this century.
On the Lessons of History
reviews the challenges raised by the leading artists and cultural
experts who authored 62 diverse Platform Papers published by Brisbane
and Currency House since 2004.
Her provocative response will be
launched by departing Sydney Festival director Wesley Enoch at the Chau
Chak Wing Museum, University of Sydney at 5.30pm on Wednesday, 24
March.
These writers have raised concerns and given insights
into work practices, censorship, copyright, public policy, export,
finance, environmental sustainability, welfare, indigenous work,
diversity and all genres of the performing arts including film,
television and ever-expanding digital media. All express the need for
change.
“Currency House was conceived out of a conviction that
the arts are fundamental to a civil society; that a society that does
not value its own arts is a nation alienated from its own culture,” says
Brisbane, aged 89.
“But the survival of our artists – and many
of our public institutions – is now more precarious. This exploration
left me with a major question. Why, when the Government set up a system
to support the creative arts, was funding directed at the product rather
than the creator?”
Diversity, she says, has been weakened by
hyper-division into art forms, major and minor arts organisations and by
a new entrepreneurialism which encourages competition over
collaboration.
Brisbane reflects on Papers by Robyn Archer,
Andrew Bovell, Alison Croggon, Kim Dalton, Wesley Enoch, Jane Harrison,
Lindy Hume, Lee Lewis, Lex Marinos, Chris Mead, Leigh Tabrett, Lyndon
Terracini, David Throsby and others.
The March 24 launch will introduce the new Director of Currency House, Dr Harriet Parsons,
who succeeds her mother, Katharine, who has retired as its founding
Chair. Julian Meyrick, theatre director and Professor of Creative Arts
at Griffith University, will also speak as its new general editor.
Following On the Lessons of History,
a two-day convention in July is inviting all authors to debate how to
create a paradigm shift in Australia’s view of the arts. It will be
hosted by the School of Literature, Arts and Media at the University of
Sydney, a proud sponsor of Platform Papers.
The next Paper No.64, Changing Tack, by arts consultant Dr Jo Caust will chart this new direction in November.
Platform Paper No.63 is for sale on currency.com.au Enquiries 02 9319 4953
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