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NEWS
Arts Council dismisses NCF criticism
POSTED 08 Jul 2009 . BY Tom Walker
Arts Council England (ACE) has responded angrily to a report from the New Culture Forum, which accused the ACE of being "wasteful and unpopular" and called for the funding body to be abolished.

The New Culture Forum (NCF), a right wing think tank formed in 2006, has published a report called The Arts Council: Managed to Death?, in which it directs a number of criticisms at how the ACE operates.

NCF accuses ACE of wasting taxpayers' money due to increasing administrative costs, being amateurish in its approach to arts and sponsoring art projects that have "no real merit".

The report, by NCF's research fellow Marc Sidwell, also claims that ACE is - as a result of restructurings in 2003 and 2006 that centralised operations - failing to reach its aims due to increased bureaucracy.

It states: "The changes imposed have poisoned the culture of the Arts Council. It has been managed to death. Central art funding in recent years has meant money and talent being wasted in the chase for instrumental goals that distorted priorities and downgraded the art itself, as well as a managerial culture that has put paperwork before artistic achievement."

In its conclusion, the report declares that the ACE has become a disaster and that a radical overhaul of arts funding should be undertaken.

"The national Arts Council should be abolished, but the nine regional councils should be retained," the report says. "The watching brief for national strategic oversight would pass to DCMS, while the Crafts Council and Arts & Business should be returned to direct DCMS funding, and Arts & Business should regain the £2m for matchfunding that was taken away by ACE."

ACE quickly rebutted the accusations by claiming that the report was littered with false statistics and misrepresentations.

In its response, ACE said: "NCF has spectacularly missed the point. It claims to want to reduce bureaucratic burdens on artists and then proposes massively increasing them.

"The report is hampered and its analysis called into question by some basic errors and highly misleading factual inaccuracies. For instance, the report attests that the Arts Council's administrative costs have increased, whereas the opposite is true.

"After the merger with regional arts boards, Arts Council running costs were reduced from 10 per cent to 7 per cent of total income. Current running costs stand at 6.6 per cent of income and following the organisational review are set to reduce to 5.5 per cent, saving an extra £6.5m a year."

The saving of the £6.5m, announced earlier this year, will be made mainly due to ACE axing 24 per cent of its staff and reduce its operations to nine regional offices.

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NEWS
Arts Council dismisses NCF criticism
POSTED 08 Jul 2009 . BY Tom Walker
Arts Council England (ACE) has responded angrily to a report from the New Culture Forum, which accused the ACE of being "wasteful and unpopular" and called for the funding body to be abolished.

The New Culture Forum (NCF), a right wing think tank formed in 2006, has published a report called The Arts Council: Managed to Death?, in which it directs a number of criticisms at how the ACE operates.

NCF accuses ACE of wasting taxpayers' money due to increasing administrative costs, being amateurish in its approach to arts and sponsoring art projects that have "no real merit".

The report, by NCF's research fellow Marc Sidwell, also claims that ACE is - as a result of restructurings in 2003 and 2006 that centralised operations - failing to reach its aims due to increased bureaucracy.

It states: "The changes imposed have poisoned the culture of the Arts Council. It has been managed to death. Central art funding in recent years has meant money and talent being wasted in the chase for instrumental goals that distorted priorities and downgraded the art itself, as well as a managerial culture that has put paperwork before artistic achievement."

In its conclusion, the report declares that the ACE has become a disaster and that a radical overhaul of arts funding should be undertaken.

"The national Arts Council should be abolished, but the nine regional councils should be retained," the report says. "The watching brief for national strategic oversight would pass to DCMS, while the Crafts Council and Arts & Business should be returned to direct DCMS funding, and Arts & Business should regain the £2m for matchfunding that was taken away by ACE."

ACE quickly rebutted the accusations by claiming that the report was littered with false statistics and misrepresentations.

In its response, ACE said: "NCF has spectacularly missed the point. It claims to want to reduce bureaucratic burdens on artists and then proposes massively increasing them.

"The report is hampered and its analysis called into question by some basic errors and highly misleading factual inaccuracies. For instance, the report attests that the Arts Council's administrative costs have increased, whereas the opposite is true.

"After the merger with regional arts boards, Arts Council running costs were reduced from 10 per cent to 7 per cent of total income. Current running costs stand at 6.6 per cent of income and following the organisational review are set to reduce to 5.5 per cent, saving an extra £6.5m a year."

The saving of the £6.5m, announced earlier this year, will be made mainly due to ACE axing 24 per cent of its staff and reduce its operations to nine regional offices.

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Hotel de France, located on the British Isle of Jersey, has created a wellness retreat package that includes a hot yoga session that will take place in Jersey Zoo’s butterfly sanctuary.
Warner Bros Discovery collaborates on upcoming Pompeii attraction
A new immersive attraction designed to transport visitors into the final hours of ancient Pompeii is preparing to open near the world-famous archaeological site in southern Italy.
Bob Rogers hands BRC to long-serving leadership team
Experience design company, BRC Imagination Arts, has completed a transition that sees founder Bob Rogers pass ownership of the business to four long-serving senior executives, while remaining actively involved with the company.
Rainer Maelzer joins Therme Group as chief entertainment officer
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ProSlide Technology, Inc.

A former national ski team racer, ProSlide® CEO Rick Hunter’s goal has been to integrate the smoot [more...]
Polin Waterparks

Polin was founded in Istanbul in 1976. Polin has since grown into a leading company in the waterpa [more...]
Simworx Ltd

The company was initially established in 1997. Terry Monkton and Andrew Roberts are the key stakeh [more...]
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Holovis is a privately owned company established in 2004 by CEO Stuart Hetherington. [more...]
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Iconic Liverpool attraction opens door to new operators
An opportunity to reimagine one of the UK’s most recognisable towers has been formally opened by Rivington Hark, as St Johns Beacon invites operators and partners to shape its next phase. [more...]
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+ More catalogues  
DIRECTORY
+ More directory  
DIARY

 

23-26 Aug 2026

Elevate Spa Riviera Maya Edition

The Riviera Maya Edition Kanai, Playa del Carmen, Mexico
29 Sep - 02 Oct 2026

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ADVERTISE . CONTACT US

Leisure Media
Tel: +44 (0)1462 431385

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