Archive for Arts Council of Wales

WAPA responds to ACW cuts

Chris Ryde | August 23, 2010 | 0 Comments

WAPA has made a detailed response to the Arts Council’s Investment Review as it affects just undera third of the WAPA membership. This was followed up last week with a face to face meeting with Nick Capaldi. Despite all the arts organisations in Wales knowing full well the possible implications of taking part in the Review there is still dismay at some of the decisions and the decision making process. The Arts Council is an a public body and must at all times be accountable for its decisions.

Arts Professional 5th October

Chris Ryde | October 5, 2009 | 0 Comments

Arts Professional have asked Chris Ryde, WAPA Chair, to comment on the ACW Investment Review. His comments are as follows:

The Arts Council of Wales has set itself a daunting task in its Investment Review. Not only is it, over a period of three months, assessing and evaluating its large portfolio of revenue clients, but it also reviewing larger project and other “priority organisations”. This exercise raises challenging questions about its internal capabilities to undertake such a review. Can its cohort of committed, but numerically small, staff together with a moderately sized group of National Advisers really examine, evaluate and assess the one hundred and fifty business plans they are soliciting with sufficient depth and understanding to satisfy the arts community? Will the decisions that follow, some of which may well have huge implications, be well informed, fair and properly considered? The inadequacies of the similar exercise in England, which led to the huge backlash at the end of 2007 and beginning of 2008, is still raw in the minds of many, and puts added pressure on ACW to get its own review right.

The word “investment” is somewhat tendentious in itself. Let’s be clear – there is no new money. What this exercise is intended to do is re-prioritise existing funds. The ACW Chair, Dai Smith, supported enthusiastically in the Assembly by Culture Ministers past and present, has stated for some time that there are “too many” revenue clients and he sees a need to “rationalise”. His recent re-appointment for another three years confirms that the political order believe his premise to be a sound one. Meanwhile, Ministers have weighed in with comments about arts organisations having no right to expect funding in perpetuity. These seem easily supportable statements in theoretical form, unless of course your organisation is the one suddenly identified as failing – against a set of criteria you were barely aware of, and in the face of positive critical assessments.

From the companies point of view these are very unnerving times indeed. While having to meet the demands of ACW in providing a range of well costed and well argued future plans, they still have to continue to produce high quality work and plan for the short to medium term. It is not an easy circle to square particularly when you when you bear in mind that the vast majority have a core staff in single figures.

And where are the artists in all this? Surely they need to be a source of investment too? Research done by my own organisation, Equity, shows the gap between the income of producing companies from all sources and the amount spent on the creative personnel who make the work is widening. The gap is greater now than at any period in the last eight years. Therefore surely this review is an opportunity for ACW to re-assert the importance of investing in core artistic personnel. Let us see both an increase in work and a recognition of professional (properly paid) status as clear criteria in the assessment process.

Indeed, let us hope that ACW bring as much creative thinking to their review, as their clients do to their art. There may not have been a full scale renaissance in the arts in Wales over the last ten years, but something pretty significant has been going on. There has been a huge growth in the sense of identity and purpose. There is a confident forward motion. If ACW do not manage their review with requisite diligence, we will be once again locked in the politics and not the practice, the campaigning and not the creating, and it will be a very retrograde step

WAPA responds to the Investment Review process

Chris Ryde | September 3, 2009 | 0 Comments

WAPA has submitted a collective response to the timetable suggested by ACW for their Investment Review. WAPA members are concerned that there will be a very small window between the announcement of the details of what is needed and the proposed deadline of November 2nd, so we have asked for two clear months to prepare submissions. We are also concerned about the subsequent evaluation process in the light of what happened in England and we want transparent criteria in place. This also applies to any appeals process which may follow.

Special One Day Conference

Chris Ryde | January 13, 2009 | 0 Comments

WAPA is hosting a special One Day Conference on Februray 25th at the Elan Valley Lodge. The two guest speakers will be John McGrath, the new AD of the National Theatre of Wales, and Nick Capaldi, the Chief Executive of the Arts Council. Neither speaker has had the opportunity of meeting the WAPA membership since they took up office and therefore it will give all parties the opportunity to meet and discuss important policy matters in an informal atmosphere.