So, as we dust ourselves down after the election and take
stock of where we are, the reality for most involved in culture and arts work
is that it will be more competitive to find funds and for many that will mean
really struggling to provide public service through arts activity.
But, for our communities, especially for those that CAP
serve, the impact of the second term of Tory austerity may well see the
advances that have been made, undone, with our local devolved political institutions
powerless to resist, as valiantly as some may advocate.
We also see the Tory austerity determination to isolate
Britain from the rest of Europe. That might be fine if you live in London, or
trade transnationally with finance centres globally. But to those that have a
land border with the European Economic Area and who have enjoyed billions of
public investment that has made a real and lasting difference to life, it is
totally different. And that’s us, here.
Then there are the constitutional arrangements. Seceding
from the European Union will mean we will no longer be protected by working
time directives, or have our rural agricultural services supported by the
Common Agricultural Policy or Human Rights legislation. On this point, as the
campaign for the administration of justice has pointed out in their open letter
to the Tories, any retreat from the full expression of the current Human Rights
Act may leave the Good Friday Agreement in an ultra vires position – ie illegal.
For those of us who dedicate our working life in the support
of the ambition and development of others, it is deeply worrying to contemplate
the destructive effect that such huge changes to life and living standards and conditions
will have. For the well-spring of
creativity, the arts, to be made so vulnerable by successive
years of cuts, as demanded by these waves of austerity from Westminster, speaks
volumes about what costs are attached to things and what their actual value is;
as Oscar Wilde put it, ‘knowing the price of everything and the value of
nothing’. This was his, or rather his character Lord Darlington’s answer to the
question ‘what is a cynic?’ It is utterly cynical, within this facet of its
meaning, to reduce the social, educational, economic, developmental, and the health-related
impact of the arts down to just how much do they cost. Rather, those that see
beyond the cynicism, would ask how much impact do the arts have and how could
we improve their benefits?
That would be a breath of fresh air, a nugget. Imagine politicians promoting
how something is valued and recognising an intrinsic worth and all the indirectly
beneficial impacts. We have heard a few over the years try to articulate this. But
in times of austerity, especially when utterly ideologically driven, one doesn’t
look for value or benefit. Except of course, when it comes to those favoured as
creating wealth – not health, or public benefit, or social cohesion, or joy, or
wonder, or beauty, or breath-taking performances, or moments of sheer rapture,
or peace.
No, just wealth.
It is a short-sighted cynic who believes in the alchemy of
wealth creation and attributes it to only the so-called 'creators', not the actual
producers or the users or customers. And of course, we all recall the saying
“Your health is your wealth”, not Oscar Wilde, but Virgil I believe.
For those more
far-sighted,
there is a realisation that there are fundamental requirements for people and
society. The ability to express and receive ideas and enhance one’s life
chances through creativity, has been central to the evolution of our species over
the millennia. Indeed, as a species, we declared in 1948 in the United Nations
Declaration of Human Rights, a whole range of “red lines”, inalienable rights
that we agreed were the bedrock of civilisation.
For many lucky folk, who are energetic and healthy, they
indeed are wealthy, relative to this view. But starved of actual opportunity,
as so many who share these attributes are, by austerity and its consequent poverty, what happens?. And if avenues to alternative ways to well-being, and
feeling valued are also choked off, where next?
So, as we hear of further reduced support for the most
vulnerable in our society and a determination by government to widen the
already gaping chasm between rich and poor, well and unwell, educated and
failed, optimistic and despairing, we must redouble our determination to celebrate
the best of ourselves and the good things in life. We must challenge those with
a narrow view of life, to broaden their horizons and embrace the freedom that
creativity can offer and the incredibly transforming and sustaining power that
the arts hold, for all of us. And we should demand an equal right to
participate in this society, and make our mark.
Stick on your favourite record and ask yourself what that songwriter
would have made of austerity. And ask yourself what that album is worth to you.
Or that painting. Or that film.
The ArtsMatterNI.
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