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Down and Nowt in Darlington – But Not Out

Rufus T. Firefly: And now, members of the cabinet…
[pounds gavel]
Rufus T. Firefly: we’ll take up old business.
Cabinet Member: I wish to discuss the tariff.
Rufus T. Firefly: Sit down, that’s new business. No old business? Very well…
[pounds gavel]
Rufus T. Firefly: we’ll take up new business.
Cabinet Member: Now, about that tariff…
Rufus T. Firefly: Too late, that’s old business already. Sit down.

- Duck Soup, The Marx Brothers (1933)

As this post goes out, Darlington Borough Council’s Cabinet is assembling to rubber stamp a decision to end all funding for Darlington Media Group after 30 years of service to the town. Never mind that the decision has been delivered just weeks before it is due (on March 31st) to take effect, and that precious little notice is being given. DMG has become accustomed over the years to “plans” suddenly becoming “old business”. In a previous post about the council cuts, I explained how in the past, measures of our performance were simply forgotten about. I also expressed doubts about the likelihood of a Third Sector-led resurgence of the arts, given the local authority’s history of working towards a corporatist-inspired enabling council. Today’s decision confirms these doubts.

Darlington Media Group is now being asked to deliver an arts offer to the town without any financial support and without a roof over its head. Last year we recorded over 25,000 unique visits to a workshop designed for participation in the arts. We established a strong core of skilled volunteer support for an unprecedented programme of media and visual arts education, production and exhibition. Regular users of the workshop observed that it has never before been so busy. With such deep and active involvement from members of the community, and plans for a new Arts Vision aimed at strategically involving DMG, we submitted our plans for the next three years, confident that they resonated with the new reality. Apparently not. Hmm..

How has this come about? One glance at the list of organisations that have been offered funding, and how they have scored against the funding criteria, reveals the thinking behind the “third sector strategic grant” fund. Top of the score list is First Stop, the drop-in centre on Tubwell Row for anyone in need, mainly homeless people and young people. A close second is the local Citizen’s Advice Bureau, the service that helps people resolve their legal, money and other problems. These and the other organisations that received funding do sterling work in the town. But their role is primarily problem solving, helping victims of our grossly and increasingly unequal society. This hardly chimes with the kinds of aims against which applications were supposedly judged; helping people in Darlington become healthy, educated, skilled and financially secure, building more resilient and self-sufficient communities, making Darlington an ambitious and entrepreneurial place, and so on.

Much of this sort of language is of course spin. Accentuating the positives was always going to be a key role for an aspirational document like One Darlington, Perfectly Placed. But its use as a measure for this particular funding stream was misplaced. Clearly, there is vital work to be done in the town supporting those who are most vulnerable to the cruel economic policies of neo-liberalism as delivered in the UK today, work which DMG is involved with on a daily basis. By default, the Third Sector Strategic Grant Fund, the grand title for the fund that has supported our work these thirty years, has become a crisis fund. Hmm….

So the question still remains. Can the local authority really engage creatively with a willing independent arts sector to deliver the Vision for the Arts? DMG set out its vision of how this could work in our submission to the Arts Enquiry process. If there are to be cuts in public spending, and money has to be saved, facilities should be handed over to independent arts and community organisations with the capacity to renew and improve infrastructure through sweat equity as well as direct finance.  In return, the town should expect an arts offer that proves popular and inspiring in equal measure. The model is, after all, widely practiced around the world. Berlin renewed many of its old tenements in the 1980s by giving squatters tenancy rights.  More recently, Czech photography gallery Galerie 4, who led us to the author of our current photography exhibition, has been handed an old monastery building for a peppercorn rent by their local authority.

Darlington has the old building – Darlington Arts Centre. And it has the strong and willing independent arts movement in Darlington for Culture. DfC’s recent work in attracting enthusiastic crowds to the Arts Centre should surely give the local authority pause for thought when they decide on the wider fate of the arts. If DMG is to have its grant cut, we could still make a go of it in a DfC-run Arts Centre.

But the signs are not good. The official response to DfC’s plans has been lukewarm to say the least, with doubts about viability, concern about risks, and the lack of DfC “professionalism”. Instead, DBC are currently putting their faith in their grand plans for a new arts hub, to be built with the expected proceeds of the sale of the Arts Centre. A low risk strategy? No chance of the Arts Centre building remaining unsold?  Or of further new cuts to council spending as a double-dip recession blows the bottom out of the government’s plans? Are these perhaps the kinds of risks that should be better addressed?

Herein lies the nub. Self-management, as a means of making financial savings, involves cutting waste at the top, by reducing management overheads. But this also means less paperwork, less hierarchy, less league tables, less point scoring, less lines of accountability. Self-managed groups are handed the tools for the job and given a set time to deliver. If they don’t deliver, the tools are taken away. That’s it. DBC’s ability to work this way has been consistently eroded over the last 20 years. With a combination of New Labour corporatism and Conservative lack of imagination, giving power to the community has become a risk too far. We now face the appalling prospect of faith being put in the very systems of governance that delivered this financial crisis in the first place, rather than a genuine alternative that can harness the energies and abilities of community.

Perhaps it is ironic then, that One Darlington, Perfectly Placed has at least given the town one national gong - the PRIMO (Public Risk Management) Europe Strategic Risk Management Award 2009. But then we are now living in a Never Never Land, where the government’s privatised job-seekers service believes that unemployment is primarily due to individual failure rather than a lack of jobs. Why not also argue, as PRIMO  do, that risk management reduces crime and increases cycling in Darlington.

Darlington Arts Centre to Close – Official

Today Darlington Borough Council announced it’s intention to close Darlington Arts Centre, the home of Darlington Media Group for 30 years. The buildings are to be sold to a developer, who is likely to want to demolish them and exploit the high value West End residential land. However, as part of the West End Conservation Area, this may prove difficult. The Arts Centre will continue in operation until July 2012, when it will close for good.

In an email to users the council said:

Recent information suggests that there is serious interest from companies who would buy the Arts Centre building..All the models for continuing with the existing Arts Centre building still required subsidy at a level the Council could not afford and work to the building for which no funding source had been identified, and also had other unsolved practical problems.

However, the council plans to reinvest any proceeds from the sale in a new arts hub:

There is ..an opportunity to create a new arts hub in the town centre, more accessible to all sections of the community than the existing Arts Centre, broadening participation in the arts, with lower operating costs and so a more sustainable long-term future.

Meanwhile, DMG, along with a number of other arts organisations, will need to find a new home in the town. The 6th Form College, a major user of the site, is said to be developing new facilities on it’s own land to replace space rented from the arts centre. But others like the Open Arts Studio and DMG itself, will need to find an alternative venue until any new arts venue has been built.

What Future? We Are Very Small Fish

The Media Group has, by any standards, had a pretty successful few years. In that time, we have more than doubled the number of people engaged in Media Group activities, both in the Media Workshop and in community projects around the town. To achieve this, we have more than doubled our turnover, on a reduced grant from the local authority. As we deliver such things as exhibition programmes, courses, and productions in which local people can take part and learn, we have always argued that this small annual grant of £15,000 represents excellent value for money for the council, not least because the programme is delivered by enthusiastic practictioners, professional and amateur together.

The Media Group is run by its users. A voluntary association since 1983, we voted at our 2010 Annual General Meeting to become a full legal entity, a multi-stakeholder cooperative. In future the Group will be run by its users AND its workers.

But all of this is just candy floss when it comes to the crisis now facing the arts in Darlington. After a funding agreement that was supposedly going to “measure our performance” against these user and finance targets, the debate has simply moved on to the world of drastic spending cuts. Just as decisions are about to be made about the future of the arts in Darlington, it is worth standing back for a few moments to consider why we have come to the situation we are in.

A little remembered speech by David Laws during his brief tenure of the post of Chief Secretary of the Treasury in May included the following:

“Unless we send out this sort of shock wave through Government departments to say ‘You can’t spend on all these areas’, that they are not actually priorities, we won’t get the step change in behaviour we expect.”

Shock is a well-worn tactic for those who would like to see less state activity and more privatisation. It is eloquently detailed by Naomi Klein in her book The Shock Doctrine. The idea is to shock local decision makers and people alike into accepting drastic changes, “step changes” in their lives. This doctrine was handed down to local authorities like Darlington with the news of a whopping 28% cut in their central government funding. The message was clear – the state will play a much-reduced role in future. But crucially, the debate about the alternative has been going on in government circles, local and national, for a number of years. Officers at the Town Hall have been quietly working on the so-called “enabling council” model for some time, with reorganisation already well down the road.

So when the 28% cut in local government grant was announced, the underlying message was clear – speed up the moves towards an enabling council. Darlington’s Labour councillors are indeed genuinely shocked, and it is understandable that they feel the need for urgency in resolving the problem. So the decision to drop nearly all arts spend was indeed done in a state of panic. A Labour council has stated its priorities – to defend the weakest in our town – and “luxuries” like the arts need to go. Fortunately for the council, Darlington for Culture has stepped in, and is now busy trying to put together a plan to save the Arts Centre. And a key aspect of that plan is the Cultural Parliament, which offers a democratic way of involving local people and local artists in running the programme at the Arts Centre. Sound familiar? Yes, the Media Group model. And DMG has been approached to be involved. But we openly wonder whether this is really the model that local councillors will support, after years of rubbing shoulders with the “enabling council” people. Is the Cultural Parliament a democratic idea too far? Watch this space.

Here Comes Everybody’s Art?

For the last hundred years the big organisational question has been whether any given task was best taken on by the state, directing the effort in a planned way, or by businesses competing in a market. This debate was based on the universal and unspoken supposition that people couldn’t simply self-assemble; the choice between markets and managed effort assumed there was simply no third alternative. Now there is.

- Clay Shirky. Here Comes Everybody 2008

An intriguing convergence of circumstances is taking place in Darlington. After 30 years of council-managed arts, our local authority, in the face of devastating cuts to its central government grant, has been forced to consider new ways for the town’s arts programme to be delivered.

Under typical circumstances, this might have meant privatisation of the service. But the cuts are so deep that it is likely that the council will no longer be delivering any arts service of its own. The usual private sector strategy of cutting wages and working hours to reduce costs won’t wash when there are no wages to cut in the first place.

In the face of such a devastating scenario, the local community’s response has been to set up  Darlington for Culture, which is now coordinating its first programme of art in the Arts Centre (and of which DMG is part). In parallel, the Darlington Arts Enquiry has discovered, amongst other things that, beyond the council’s offer, there is a rich vein of arts programming going on in the town. In fact, DMG has been arguing for a number of years that this multiplicity of arts organisations is a positive asset that should be recognised and championed. Resistance to this idea is not difficult to explain. Arts funding is competitive. Employment within the arts sector – including within the council – is strictly in the interests of the employing organisation.

We’ve experienced this first hand for years, of course. The arts centre’s programmes of exhibitions, including in our own Decisive Moment Gallery, has still not be coherently presented to the Darlington public, whether in published programme material or at the Arts Centre reception. Rather, good personal relations with particular staff has enabled cooperation to emerge from time to time, despite contrary institutional demands. But if the arts are to have any future in Darlington, cooperation amongst arts organisations will now have to replace this structural tendency towards competition.

There are many problems now facing the arts in Darlington. But with one at least, DMG is perhaps in a good position to help develop a solution. Marketing the arts in Darlington has so far been a matter of individual organisations marketing themselves. Even worthy, and well-funded, attempts at umbrella marketing like Visit Tees Valley fail to capture even a sliver of the breadth of arts activity in the town. Here is where the next converging circumstance is pushing for change in the way we do things.

Clay Shirky’s book Here Comes Everybody explains how social media is enabling, at little or no cost, information sharing, and how with the minimum of effort this can be developed into cooperation. With these ideas in mind, DMG has put together a proposal for a mobile app called Around Town, designed to pull together the broad range of arts activity in the town and deliver information about it on a single platform. Around Town is a work in progress – it is currently the focus of an application to the Arts Council’s Digital R&D Fund (along with over 1,000 other applicants, it should be said).

Social media is still in its early stages. Examples already exist in the town of information sharing using social media, but there is still a way to go. Perhaps most importantly, content needs to be available to be shared in the first place. For this reason, DMG is placing an emphasis on our role as content creators in this pilot project. But as more people produce more content in the town, the idea of “art” in Darlington could soon be transformed.  But for now, here is our Around Town proposal.

 

100,000 Upload Views and Counting

Darlington Media Group’s recent documentary project Beauty and the Bike has received its 100,000th view this week on the project’s YouTube Channel. Less than two years after the launch of the project online, the 8 minute online version has been viewed around 78,000 times, whilst other shorts relating to the development of the project have been viewed over 22,000 times.

The 8 minute film is now available on YouTube with Czech, Portuguese, Spanish, English and German subtitles, and the geographical spread of viewers is growing as a result. Around 22% of viewings have taken place in the UK, 15% in North America, and 12% in Australasia. The remaining 50% of viewings are spread across a wide range of countries, with Germany leading on 6%, but others such as the Czech Republic, Lithuania and Singapore each registering thousands of hits.

Meanwhile, the full film, available on DVD from the project website, continues to be publicly screened in venues from Vancouver in Canada to Perth in Australia to Newcastle here in the UK. A recent screening in Prague was followed by a Critical Mass Ride in which numerous participants spoke of Darlington and its cult film.

So Who Decides What Excellence in the Arts Means?

Byker Revisited

Byker Revisited by Sirkka-Liisa Konttinen. Axed by the Arts Council, but now inscribed in the UNESCO UK Memory of the World Register. Good art? Bad art? Who decides?

After the cuts, the Darlington Arts Enquiry process rumbles on. What are we going to do without the generous support of Darlington Borough Council in the future? The first wave of policy statements coming out of the process were effusive in their enthusiasm for the arts in the town. The presence of Darlington for Culture ensured that a sense of inclusion and cooperation was being urged upon the mix of officials, councillors, arts organisations and community activists that make up the various enquiry groups. Thus An Arts Vision for Darlington states:

Darlington will be a place where art happens, where the arts matter and where the arts and creativity are central to Darlington’s future identity and economic success.

It goes on to say:

We will seek excellence and inclusion in the arts in Darlington through a broad and diverse arts offer addressing the interests and aspirations of all our citizens, and a unique specialism  in a specific area of practice that will mark out Darlington as a place where excellence in the arts flourishes.

Quite rightly, in trying to define ‘excellence’, the enquiry process is looking both inward and outward. But ultimately, how can it be defined?

Critical acclaim? Today, the world of the art critic is much the same as the world of journalism generally – dominated by the world of the PR agency. Artists and arts organisations jostle for attention from a shrinking number of critics. Like the rest of their newspaper, there is an agenda to satisfy. Art is routinely ignored or bypassed on ideological grounds. In England, there is the geography of art criticism. If the art is based in London, it is of interest. The very same art, when exhibited in say, Newcastle, is more likely to be off the radar. I know this from very direct personal experience. And of course some art is not even seeking critical acclaim. As one found item of graffiti explained:

Since writing on toilet walls is done neither for critical acclaim, nor financial rewards, it is the purest form of art. Discuss.

So what about financial rewards. Commercial art seeks success through audience numbers. Audiences are important, but popularity alone does not make excellent art. Indeed many would argue that, because of the need to make good art challenging to the mainstream, popularity can be taken as a sign of cultural poverty. The best art avoids crude commercial measures of value, and instead creates an audience better defined as a community of interest that is engaged in the content of the art. This is best illustrated in our own field of film, where crude formulaic scripting is the norm for the majority of commercially successful films. Despite this, because of their huge marketing budgets, big money films always get the attention of critics. Yet many critics will admit that, in creative terms, such films are dross.

What then about arts funding. Does the best art get the funding? Arts funding has seen radical changes in its structure and outlook in the thirty years of DMG’s existence. In the early 1980’s, John Bradshaw, the film and photography officer based at Northern Arts in Newcastle, saw his job as getting out and around the region to find out where serious and challenging film and photography were being produced and exhibited. John encouraged artists to think in terms of engaging audiences, whilst focussing primarily on their creative production. Policy was straight forward. The best work was supported financially. The more good work there was, the more the limited pot of funding had to be spread. In those days, directories of artists, facilities and venues were constantly being produced to keep abreast of the changing landscape on the ground. This approach was reflected across Europe, where the Directory of European Photography Galleries required an annual reprint.

Then in the 90‘s funding structures began to change. The Arts Council began to define its own priorities, strategies, policies. Over the course of the next 20 years, artists and arts organisations were judged not for what they were doing, but against a set of policy goals. Then in 2003, what were originally autonomous Regional Arts Boards were subsumed into Arts Council England. These policy and structural changes have increasingly distanced funders from unique initiatives on the ground, until today we are told that London-based Arts Council England is only going to fund “big” ideas, presumably also requiring “big” marketing budgets in order to achieve some kind of attention from down south.

Marketing is an important issue to consider in a small town like Darlington. Drawing attention to art requires energy and time and these, unless enough artists and their supporters are willing to do the leg work unpaid, cost money. But the connections between art and audience is changing. Communities of interest around art – particularly in our digitally connected world – now exist at numerous levels, across varied geographical matrixes, and within an enormous range of sub-cultural interests. In the world of film, where once there were simply commercial and independent film festivals, today there are underwater film festivals, bicycle film festivals, fly fishing film tours and a whole raft of celtic film festivals. Films can and do become global cult films within these sub-cultures. Yet mainstream media, particularly local media, typically misses out on this global impact.

This is important for Darlington. To imagine that Darlington is going to pursue hollywood production-values is elitist, irrelevant to most local film-making, and anyway absurd. Where we look to for our definitions of excellence are important. But as mentioned above, definitions of excellence require inward as well as outward reflection. This brings us to the next key word in the world of art, innovation. Truly innovative art is self-confident, self-defined, and demanding of an audience. Rather than play to the assumptions of the gallery, it challenges these assumptions. Such art can only really be produced by artists who are committed to constantly improving their own work, on their own terms. It is rarely bought by the latest Arts Council policy statement.

Quite rightly, local authority support for the arts has been on the basis of an insistence that it engage with local audiences. By taking this on board, on a modest, local level, we can now begin to define for ourselves what we mean by “good art”. We need artists who are passionate about their creative work, who are searching for innovative ways of working and expressing themselves. But they also need to be understood by audiences. On this point, it is worth quoting from an online article on good art/bad art:

What is the purpose of art? Some would say that the purpose of art is “anything”, “nothing’, or “impossible to define”, but that’s as foolish as claiming that chairs, hammers, or buckets can be used for anything or that they are impossible to define. Art exists in order to express ideas, and it does this through a specific means (means different from those used in journalism, temper tantrums, or exposition) which is to selectively recreate some aspect of reality in order to represent the idea. Some might call this “fictionalizing” or “stylizing”.- from goodart.org

If we are here to discuss the future Darlington Arts Offer, we need creative artists who are engaged with Darlington audiences. So The Forum is a key component, as it is primarily addressing Darlington audiences. But of the many bands that work and perform there, it is the composers of new material that hold a special interest for a Darlington Arts Offer. Such creativity needs to be cherished and nourished, not because it offers a road to London and commercial success (which may well be the way most successful Darlingtonians go anyway), but because of the creative content of the work.

In other words, the most important debate is about creative content. Relationships based on such debate are what makes creative collaborations, builds creative communities, and establishes lifelong networks that stretch across the globe. Creative and innovative artistic production, within the context of a relationship with local audiences, with a global creative reach. That, for Darlington, is excellence in the arts.

Beauty and the Bike Goes Multilingual

 

After more than a year on the road,  our documentary film Beauty and the Bike has now been released on DVD with a range of new language subtitles. And to celebrate the new release,  the Beauty and the Bike website has been completely revamped.

The new DVD features three versions of the film. As well as the original 8 minute short and 55 minute full-length, a 26 minute version has been added to enable public screenings where longer discussion about the issues raised is required. And thanks to the help of cycling advocacy groups in Valencia, Lisbon and Prague, the three versions are now subtitled in English, German, Spanish, Portuguese and Czech. Also added to the new DVD is the follow-up short produced in 2010, What Happened Next.

Beauty and the Bike has now had numerous public screenings worldwide, from Australia to Europe to North America. In the next few weeks, it is being shown in Bochum (June 19th) and Berlin (July 14th) in Germany. The project’s YouTube channel has now had over 93,000 views.

The new DVD is available in both PAL and NTSC, and together with the accompanying book can be ordered online here.

The Dying Art of the Darkroom

Mysterious, even magical – there are few spaces quite like the photographer’s darkroom, not least because, with the march of digital technology, it is rapidly becoming part of photographic history. Artist Richard Nicholson has set out to capture these fast-disappearing spaces, photographing darkrooms – and the memories they hold – across London.

Here at the Media Workshop, we still have a public-access darkroom in regular use, quite possibly the only such darkroom in the north east. It is interesting to see the facility now being celebrated in a new exhibition. Hire of the darkroom starts at just £5. You can check the full rate card here. Richard Nicholson’s series feature in the exhibition Analog: Trends in Sound and Picture, at the Riflemaker Gallery, London WC1 (020-7439 0000), until 5 March.

Beauty and the Bike Short Online

Beauty and the Bike UK Premiere

Bike New Flyer_web

We are pleased to announce that Helga Trüpel, the MEP for Bremen, will be our special guest at the the UK premiere of the DMG-produced film “Beauty and the Bike”. (The project brought girls from Darlington and Bremen together). This will take place at Darlington Arts Centre on Wednesday 9th December, starting from 5.30pm in the Media Workshop, where the exhibition of the same name will open. Free food and drinks for those coming straight from work. The film proper starts at 7pm in the main theatre. Tickets are available through the Arts Centre Box Office.

The project is attracting international attention, even before the release of the film. The Sustainable Energy Europe Campaign has nominated Beauty and the Bike to become an Official Partner of the Sustainable Energy Europe Campaign. This would give the project official recognition as best practice from the European Commission.

And with the 8 minute short version now posted on our YouTube channel, messages are already coming in from around the world requesting screenings.