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Tim Beveridge: Pulling funding for a Shakespeare festival is missing the point

Author
Tim Beveridge,
Publish Date
Sun, 16 Oct 2022, 12:58pm
(Photo / File)
(Photo / File)

Tim Beveridge: Pulling funding for a Shakespeare festival is missing the point

Author
Tim Beveridge,
Publish Date
Sun, 16 Oct 2022, 12:58pm

There are few stories which have raised my hackles more than a recent one which has now reached the international news media around聽our arts council, Creative New Zealand,聽and its decision to pull funding for a Shakespeare festival. This has been running in secondary schools around New Zealand for around three decades and has involved the participation of聽more than聽120,000 students.

Now in its wisdom,聽or should I say in its short-sighted聽political聽bigotry,聽Creative聽New Zealand has decided that this festival should no longer be funded,聽criticising Shakespeare鈥檚 work is paternalistic and representing a聽鈥渃anon of imperialism鈥.

Have you ever heard such nonsense in your life?聽聽

Now, we can argue all we like about whether or not you like Shakespeare, and often Shakespeare, if it鈥檚 poorly taught, is foisted on students who are left none the wiser about what his work represents.聽

But I think to discuss聽the merits of Shakespeare is missing the point.

Here is a festival which has involved the participation of聽tens聽of thousands of students over thirty years!聽

If聽participation in the arts is聽important, then surely,聽on this alone,聽this festival merits continued support from our Arts Council.

But instead,聽we get caught up in this political nonsense pushing back against notions of imperialism and colonisation as an excuse, or even a motivation,聽not to fund it.

Now Creative NZ is facing calls for an inquiry聽into the way聽it聽funds the arts.聽聽

I would wholeheartedly support聽such an inquiry.聽聽

A聽quick trawl through the funding rounds and the decisions that are made聽(and I have to offer a quick comment that there are some wonderful artists that have been funded by聽CNZ)聽but God they fund some crap.

聽I sometimes wonder whether some of the artists make their living by crafting applications for funding that will please the Arts Council without any consideration for whether there is in fact an audience for their work.聽

And you do wonder whether this聽becomes about聽social engineering and聽what聽Creative NZ聽think the arts聽should聽look like with no regard whatsoever聽whether those arts have the聽remotest聽prospect of reaching聽an audience.聽

And聽ultimately,聽surely art聽needs an聽audience.

Sure, questions聽around how to fund the arts are聽difficult to answer.聽聽

Because when聽it comes to how the arts should be funded as soon as you put the control into a Government funded Arts Council聽it likely becomes聽politicized.

And聽as soon as you put the decisions in the hands of a committee聽you leave it to a handful of individuals to decide which聽artistic聽flower gets watered and which flower is left to wither and die because it doesn鈥檛 tick the boxes聽of the whims of the individuals聽within聽our聽arts council.聽聽

And this is the current problem the arts and the funding in New Zealand.聽聽

They seem to have forgotten their audience and are more concerned with what their vision of the聽arts in NZ聽should look like,聽rather than聽what audiences are going to respond聽to.聽

Creative Artists throughout the centuries have always had to find an audience but it seems these days in New Zealand聽the only audience you need to please is the handful of聽woke scolds聽at Creative NZ.聽

Beyond that,聽it seems 鈥 little else matters.

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