Canada & BC Arts Cuts: Deep Insult, Shallow Thinking (Reposted)
Hello everyone, I am so new to Wordpress that I accidentally “cut” a blog post that was generating some interest: “Canada & BC Arts Cuts: Deep Insult, Shallow Thinking,” first posted on October 10th, 2009. I have to say there’s a strange lesson in cutting this blog — when you cut something that is a unique creation of an individual, you often can never get it back. You can’t unring a bell. Lesson learned for me. If only the Harper and Campbell governments would learn the same thing about cutting the arts. Their cuts have far more dire consequences than the mere deletion of a blog. Below is my attempt to recreate what I had written:
Whenever our economy goes into a slump, arts funding always seems to come under the knife. It’s like the arts are some kind of cancer to be extracted by the political scalpel.
These cuts have happened federally in Canada to the tune of $45 million (and no, Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s piano playing doesn’t make up for it). They have also happened in British Columbia. Our poorly named BC Ministry of Tourism, Culture and the Arts will apparently cut 50% this coming year from arts funding, 90% in 2011, and 91%-94% the following year. According to The Hook, the cuts pulled funding from the Association of Book Publishers of British Columbia ($45,000), BC BookWorld ($31,000) and the BC Association of Magazine Publishers ($20,000).
Some people have asked, “Why should I have to pay for arts funding? I don’t read much. I never go to the theatre.” My answer to that is that I haven’t been to provincial parks in a while but I still see the value in funding them. Whether we are discussing arts or the environment, it is vital to look beyond our own lives and realize the impact on the greater good.
I’ve heard people say, “In a capitalist society, shouldn’t the amount someone is willing to pay dictate the true value of a work?” Tell it to Vivaldi who died poor on the streets of Vienna after his patron, the Church, abandoned him. Tell that to Gwendolyn MacEwen, one of Canada’s greatest poets. This two-time Governor General’s Award winner died in poverty. Imagine a world without the legacy of Vivaldi or MacEwen. We would be lesser for it.
At one time, fortunate artists may have had patrons to help support their work. Certainly Beethoven did, as did Michelangelo who received funding from several popes as well as the House of Medici, Italy’s first family of Renaissance arts and architecture. In fact, the Medicis were responsible for the majority of Florentine art during their years in political power. True, Michelangelo often cursed them, but without their funding he would not have had the funds to purchase his precious marble. Imagine a world without the art of Michelangelo?
Today, government has largely assumed the role of the patron in Canada but it is clear that this patron does not see the value of arts to our culture. It does not see that support for the arts is essential to our evolution as a people. Arts nourish our ability to appreciate other people’s points of view and to stimulate intelligent thought and discussion. The arts also nourish our economies and boost tourism. Would Paris be as compelling to visit without the Louvre? Would New York be the same without Broadway? It always amazes me that Canadians will travel far and wide in search of great art and architecture, yet the arts are sadly not well supported here at home.
In terms of arts funding, I know of no artist in Canada who has become wealthy on this funding alone. Believe me, the starving artist is alive and well in our country. They create because they are born to create. Indeed, they are compelled to do so. They enrich us all through their work. In his speech to the Federal-Provincial Culture Ministers Conference in Halifax in 2004, Simon Brault, then-head of the Canada Council for the Arts, perfectly captured the role of the artist in our society.
“These artists do their work, often without worrying about its direct and indirect impacts. This work is of value in itself, and we cannot, nor should we, “instrumentalize” artists for economic or social purposes, however worthy they may be. But it is our job to place this work in context and to show how it contributes to the well-being of individuals and communities. Now more than ever, arts and culture appear as the key to three basic skills: learning to be, learning to know and learning to live together.
We must do more to support our artists, to fully recognize their status, to provide high quality training at the initial and professional development levels, to ensure they are fairly compensated and to protect and celebrate their creative freedom.”
That speech was five years ago. What a shame the government did not listen and has chosen a short sighted approach. William Gibson, author of Necromancer, wrote, “As a futurist, someone with some experience in long-range scenario-based corporate and municipal planning, I’ve seen my share of jaw-droppingly shortsighted proposals. But these proposed cuts to support for the arts in BC (almost 90% by 2011) really take the cake. This is governance guaranteed to rot the fabric of our province’s future…”
In 1956, John F. Kennedy spoke at Harvard University about the arts. I only wish I could find such inspiration from Prime Minister Stephen Harper or Premier Gordon Campbell. John F. Kennedy said:
“When power leads man towards arrogance, poetry reminds him of his limitations. When power narrows the area of man’s concern, poetry reminds him of the richness and diversity of his existence. When power corrupts, poetry cleanses. If more politicians knew poetry, and more poets knew politics, I am convinced the world would be a little better place in which to live.”
In defending the arts, perhaps the poets are learning politics. When will the politicians learn poetry?
January 25th, 2010 at 4:37 pm
I appreciate your collection of quotes promoting art productivity and its importance. I share the confounded dismay you have discussed, revealing the dismissive ignorance demonstrated through these funding cuts.
February 1st, 2010 at 11:48 am
Thanks Debora. I also despair that we cannot get the government to listen.