Art attack: Australian artists should be properly funded, not forced to beg

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A hearing will be held at Parliament House today, looking at ways to attract more donations to the struggling arts sector, as part of a Parliamentary Inquiry into Arts and Cultural Philanthropy.

An Australia Institute submission to the inquiry has found that asking artists to beg for more money from donors ignores the much bigger issue of chronic underfunding of the arts.

The arts sector was devastated by the COVID pandemic and has never truly recovered. Once-iconic music festivals have been cancelled. Venues have closed. Artists are living in poverty.

The long-running cost-of-living crisis has left Australian consumers with very little money to spend on artistic pleasures like a trip to a gallery, buying a book, watching a movie or seeing a band.

The submission concludes that “this is a critical time for supporting Australian arts and culture”.

Key points:

  • In real terms, arts funding is at its lowest point since 2017/18
  • Australia has the 7th-lowest arts spending in the OECD
  • Despite the cost of living crisis, arts spending has been cut by more than half a billion dollars a year
  • While Australia-wide employment has grown by 13% since the end of the COVID pandemic, the arts sector has only just returned to pre-pandemic levels

“Artists, authors, musicians and other creatives have a huge impact on Australian culture, how Australians see themselves, and how the world sees Australians,” said Skye Predavec, Researcher at The Australia Institute.

“Australia’s arts and culture cannot be produced overseas, and cannot be moved offshore. It must be made here.

“The arts sector is in crisis, still recovering from COVID and the cost-of-living crisis. It needs support to survive.

“Australian governments have a duty to invest in the arts, but in real terms, their arts funding is at its lowest point since 2017. Philanthropy is too small to fill the gap left behind by hundreds of millions of dollars in underinvestment.”

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