arts funding
Wonderland: Boy Cheerleaders, BBC TwoWednesday, 13 October 2010Nowadays it’s not so easy to find a doc you can trust. Since talent shows started supplying back stories as part of an all-in-one narrative package, it’s as if everyone has learnt how to behave when there’s a camera crew around. Meanwhile, in the... Read more... |
The cuts are coming. So what now?Tuesday, 05 October 2010Members of the artistic communities have been campaigning for weeks now against the imminent cuts in the subsidies given to the arts (see David Shrigley’s clever video here). All arts organisations have been told, in the latest money-saving... Read more... |
Call You And Yours: Are arts nice-to-have or must-have?Tuesday, 10 August 2010Culture Minister Ed Vaizey joined BBC Radio 4 Call You and Yours to debate public arts funding, joining a panel and answering phonecalls and emails from the public. The government will be incorporating some of the public comments into its current... Read more... |
Arts Council spared - but UK Film Council is to goTuesday, 27 July 2010The Arts Council of England has escaped the government axe - unlike the UK Film Council. Reports over the past week or two paint a grim picture of diminishing arts budgets in Scotland, Wales and England while the Conservative-Lib Dem Government... Read more... |
Time Gentlemen Please, The Demon Barbers, Theatre Royal WakefieldThursday, 24 June 2010Yorkshire folkies The Demon Barbers have used English dance in their live shows for several years. Time Gentlemen Please takes the idea a step further, integrating contemporary dance stylings within a cast of more traditional types. Thus three... Read more... |
theartsdesk Q&A: Theatre Director Dominic DromgooleSaturday, 22 May 2010Dominic Dromgoole (b. Oct.1963) had directed professionally precisely one Shakespeare play - Troilus and Cressida for the Oxford Stage Company, with a then little-known Matt Lucas as Thersites - when he was appointed artistic director of Shakespeare... Read more... |
RPS Awards audience thumbs nose at new GovernmentWednesday, 12 May 2010The announcement by the Royal Philharmonic Society's keynote speaker Grayson Perry that the Queen had sent for David Cameron last night was met with audible groans from the great and the good of the classical music world at their Awards ceremony.... Read more... |
theartsdesk Q&A: Artist Douglas GordonSaturday, 10 April 2010Since winning the Turner Prize in 1996 with Confessions of a Justified Sinner, Douglas Gordon (b. 1966) has lived in Germany, France, New York and Germany again. But in accent and attitude, he remains a Glaswegian. Those roots are being reaffirmed... Read more... |
theartsdesk Q&A: Playwright David GreigSaturday, 06 February 2010A new play by David Greig opens at the Hampstead Theatre for the Royal Shakespeare Company next week. A theatre director as well as playwright, Greig (b. 1969) is one of the most prolific and artistically ambitious playwrights of his generation and... Read more... |
Is it too late to save the Cultural Olympiad?Friday, 05 February 2010We’d almost blown the so-called Cultural Olympiad, and if the appointment of Ruth Mackenzie as artistic director had come a moment later than the turn of this year, we would have done. Not my opinion: this from Tony Hall of the Royal Opera House,... Read more... |
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