Dear Juliana

Thank you for the request / invitation -- I've forwarded it on to others
who might be interested.

In fear of repeating myself:

I'm not at all clear what forms of �networking� you're advocating and to
what ends, or why this is actually relevant especially in the current climate?
Is this not a distraction from the important issues facing artists in Scotland?
Is this -- yet another -- �consultation� being funded by the SAC?

(Would someone please, please work out for me just how much money is
being spent on SAC consultancies and the costs of outsourcing at the
expense of funding actual artists projects!)

When it comes to public funding bodies, a myth of �networking� is that
it is open, universally accessible, that there is a process in motion
that we have equal access to and are able to influence, clearly they
don't behave that way -- we're only just finding out the vague rudiments of
instigating an �IT Scottish Arts Infrastructure� -- whatever it may be.

Many forms of relationships (which include physical projects) currently
exist that DO NOT require additional �networking� (whatever that may
be), what they DO NEED is simply support to function, to grow (i.e.
money, no strings attached).  My concern is: what exists organically, on
the ground, within the arts communities in Scotland (which by their very
nature are, en masse, pluralistic, disparate, polyphonic) is being
dismissed, as they do not match an overarching bureaucratic structure
and its momentary agendas.

We simply do not need yet another administrative agency, another training
body, more managerial clap-trap!  And in Scotland, we certainly don't
need any more research / consultations (enough already) -- the
purloining of funding away
from actual activity, especially when the funders� official line is that
funding is �oversubscribed� (lets apply that term to "consultations", it
doesn't happen!).  It truly appears that there's a fear in
actually putting support into genuine projects in Scotland, rather than
yet more paper trails.

There's the Scottish Artists Union which is supposed to provide a
platform, I'm unaware that they are doing so effectively or are in a
position to do so-- they should be.
Glasgow City Council held �Just 5 minutes� platform / exchange events
mainly for the theatre sector -- these at least were instructive as they
actually gave practitioners (limited) access to funders / supporters,
more importantly they gave funders / supporters uncurbed access to
practitioners� concerns.

Q) I would be very grateful and interested to hear about how you work
together with other artists...

Variant is free and publicly accessible online and at the broadest set
of venues throughout the UK & Ireland, and beyond.  It's a small,
independent, non-core funded, artist-run project based in Glasgow and
Belfast that works with artists & writers internationally.  How we
actually manage to do so in the current climate is a very good question...

Q) what initiatives would be useful to artists living in your area...

Giving artists� groups the money that is being ploughed into pointless
consultations would be a start -- relatively, a very large start
considering the disproportionate figures involved. 
Actual funding that allows individuals and groups the long term security
to develop and to run projects that provide platforms for debate and
discussion amongst artists and the wider public.  Basically, to fund
what's here, to support / �allow� a mature culture to develop -- I would
advocate CORE funding: GMAC; Community Radio; Indi Media Scotland; New
Media Provision; independent International Film Festivals; Matters;
Variant; Product; discussion platforms and conferences, and their wider
publishing; academic books; a raft of zines and independent
publications; and much, much more... basically, that which gives a voice
to and aids dissemination of cultural activity, collectively, to a broad
public.  HOW?: rather than funding needless public / private sector
consultancies, rhetorical questionnaires, oblique training schemes, and
the swathe of repugnant managerialism generally that leeches off
cultural activity today.

�Culture� in Scotland is one of the few devolved areas.  We have voted
to have the opportunity to �do this differently�, we should be taking
the opportunity to do so.  If those in positions of power are unwilling
or unable to do so, then they should go.

Q) How does your network enable the continued development of your
practice? Do you feel that you have skills, experience or information
which could be useful to other artists around Scotland? Is there an area
of specific interest that you would like to be able to discuss with
others around the country? Do you feel that an IT Scottish Arts
Infrastructure would be an important development for Scottish artists
and artists' networks? Or would you just like to register your interest
in order to be kept up to date with the progress of the NAN pilot?

What is a (singular!) �IT Scottish Arts Infrastructure�?  And where did
this �suddenly� come from?  Is that another way of saying the
outsourcing of the SAC�s Opportunities Bulletin, or the outsourcing of
other aspects of the SAC?  At what cost and to be overseen by who? 

If you mean something similar to Arts News
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> the Arts Council England's "arts news"
mailing list, where ANYONE subscribed can e-mail to EVERYONE or to
individuals on the list, Variant advocated this a couple of years ago,
researched support and held meetings in Glasgow and Edinburgh (all of
this was totally unfunded) -- there was overwhelming support for such a
FREE, DEMOCRATIC resource -- it makes more sense than a centralised SAC
bulletin mail out, which should be included in such an e-list anyway.
 
Surely, we don't need dragging backwards through a hedge to get such a
basic common sense resource -- if that's what's on the cards?

If it's a scheme to plug job creation jobs, or if you have to
financially subscribe to access otherwise what can and should be free
information, it's of no help or interest (and a tendency towards
monopoly, rather than support for cultural activity would have to be
investigated -- who remembers the [Scottish] British Council's Overseas
Opportunities Bulletin which rapidly disappeared once the [publicly
funded] body started charging for it!)

Like most artist-run projects in Scotland, Variant �is� a network of
concerned individuals and groups.

Like most contemporary practitioners in Scotland, I am able to discuss
areas of specific interest with others around Scotland and beyond.  If
there is genuine concern regarding enabling actual discussion and
exchange of information (rather than it being bureaucratically or
financially mediated, 
or hierarchically structured) then the simple, culturally diverse
solution would be to support a diversity of organic �networks�, and to
engage others.  There are already a number of IT networks active in
Scotland, if by that we can include Ambit and Glasgow Project Room
e-lists, not to mention the plethora that have emerged out of the
anit-war and anti-globalisation movements.

Like most practitioners having been long-term unemployed, I am not
interested in the abusive cycle of (skills) training schemes &
organisations that substitute for actual support of actual activity,
while providing for a highly removed managerial cadre.  It's window
dressing and we know it.

My main worry, born through experience, is that this may be yet another
phase of disenfranchising actual independent activity in Scotland.  If
so, when can we have our culture back?

Yours sincerely,
Leigh French
Paula Larkin

Variant

PS

DOCUMENT1 : International Human Rights Film Festival
UGC, Glasgow
Starts Friday 19th December
full programme details to be posted
http://www.variant.org.uk

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