I think the below signals a truly profound shift not just in the arts
funding in one relatively small EU country but overall in the approach of
the neo-liberalized state to culture in its various forms--let the market
rule.
 
Since the Internet is a product of culture and a very important contributor
to and purveyor of culture, this has to be seen as a significant setback to
those who see a vision of humankind somewhere beyond the marketplace.
 
M
 
 -----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of annet dekker
Sent: Monday, June 13, 2011 11:07 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [NetBehaviour] new dutch cultural policy


sorry for cross posting

Some of you will have heard by know, but unfortunately it seems the Dutch
government will follow UK suit. 
Although the official letter by the minister has not been published in
English, some response letters for and from those who are about to be hit
the hardest have just been translated. 

http://svenlutticken.blogspot.com/2011/06/slash-burn.html?spref=fb 

and: 

*letter to Mr Zijlstra and members of the Lower House* 

Dear Mr. Zijlstra, 

Honoured members of the Lower House, 

The memorandum announced by the Secretary of State today does not signal a
new beginning, as he indicated earlier, but simply the end of an
internationally valued cultural climate, unparalleled anywhere in the world.


For Thorbecke -- the spiritual father of the Secretary of State Zijlstra, or
at least of his party -- the policy was the result of a long-term vision. He
saw the political manager as the designer of the age, who interprets
historical lines and develops a vision for the future on that basis.
Compared with his predecessor, the measures proposed by the Secretary of
State pale into insignificance. They choose short-term results which do not
take into account historically acquired benefits and social developments. 

One prominent Dutch collector called the Secretary of State's memorandum a
new "iconoclasm". This comparison is striking and appropriate. The field of
the "visual arts" is crippled in and by this memorandum, with fatal
consequences for the public. 

We live in a culture of images. Knowledge and information mainly circulate
in the form of images. Art, and the visual arts in particular, are the
perfect field for teaching us to deal with things we do not yet know and
providing us with unexpected visions and horizons. The visual arts relate in
a self-conscious and critical way to the ubiquitous image. Therefore it is
incomprehensible for a government which wants to prepare its citizens for a
promising future to decide to remove the part of the social system which
guides the public in this respect. The extremely hard approach adopted in
relation to the sector of the visual arts (a reduction from 53.5 million to
31 million) is not supported in this memorandum by either logical or factual
arguments. 

Amongst other things, the Secretary of State has decided: 

- to halve the budget of the Mondriaan fund; 

- to drastically reduce the number of presentation institutions in the BIS
from 11 to 6. The institutions which are no longer in the BIS cannot go to
the Mondriaan fund either, and therefore have no chance of survival; 

- to no longer provide any subsidy for art magazines; 

- to put a complete stop to the government subsidy for functions which are
now carried out by biennial Manifesta, SKOR | Stichting Kunst en Openbare
Ruimte (Foundation for Art in Public Spaces), the sectoral institute
Premsela, Virtual Platform, the Netherlands Media Art Institute (NIMk); 

- to put a stop to financing post-academic education for artists in the
Ateliers, Rijksakademie voor beeldende kunsten (Royal Academy for Visual
Arts), European Ceramic Work Centre and the Jan van Eyck Academy; 

to only support the continued development of 50 visual artists who have
proved themselves as top talents in the next four years; 

- to halve the individual basic stipends and working grants for artists, and
to COMPLETELY stop the present subsidies which serve to provide an income. 

The direct and immediate effects of these measures for the PUBLIC which
wants to see and experience contemporary art are catastrophic: 

The makers, producers and artists form the basis of the cultural
infrastructure. After all, with no artists, there is no art. No subsidies or
insufficient subsidies for artists to focus professionally and full time on
creating work means that there will be no innovative work. 

No post-academic education means there will be no growth of new artists who
excel and can represent the Netherlands abroad. Removing this function will
immediately lead to a reduction in the provision of Dutch presentation
institutions, so that the Netherlands will lose its competitive position.
This will result in the total impoverishment of the art market in the
Netherlands and to a weaker position of the Dutch galleries on the
international art market. 

A minimal number of presentation institutions means that the new art will
not find its way to the public and will remain locked up in studios and
warehouses. The Dutch and international public in the Netherlands will not
be able to see any innovative art. 

Removing an institution such as SKOR means that the presence of art in
public spaces -- democratic and by definition "anti-elitist", because it is
accessible to everyone free of charge -- will decline. 

Closing an institution such as NIMk means that a valuable, partly digital
heritage -- video art and film art and media art -- will become fragmented
and will no longer be accessible to the public. 

The innovative part of the field of the visual arts, which also determines
the international image of the creative Netherlands, cannot survive without
a financial injection from the state. 

The current cultural system which was definitively torpedoed today has
produced artists and curators who are currently making an international
furore and are, amongst other things, a focal point in the current biennale
in Venice -- the world championships of the visual art 

For example, the work of Navid Nuur has pride of place on the front cover of
the official catalogue of the Venice Biennale. Like Amalia Pica, who lives
in the Netherlands, he is taking part in the central exhibition
Illuminations. Their colleagues, Praneet Soi, Yael Bartana, Wendelien van
Oldenborgh, Han Hoogerbrugge, Aernout Mik, Libia Castro, Olafur Olafsson,
Edwin Driessens and Maria Verstappen, play a major role in the pavilions of
India, Poland, Denmark, Roma, Iceland and Dropstuff respectively. The
Dutchman Guido van der Werve can be seen at the same time in the context of
the Future Generation exhibition, where the Ukrainian Victor Pynchuck is
showing the way to the talent of the future. It is not only Dutch artists
who are a glittering presence in Venice this year; their fellow curators are
also prominently present. No fewer than five curators working in the
Netherlands are furnishing pavilions this year. The Marres director, Guus
Beumer, is responsible for the Dutch pavilion, the BAK director Maria
Hlavajova is doing the Roma Pavilion, the freelancer Maria Rus Bojan is
doing the Romanian pavilion, the SKOR director, Fulya Erdemci, is doing the
Turkish pavilion and the Appel tutor, Henk Slager is doing the Georgian
Pavilion. 

The achievement of these artists and curators were made possible due to the
existence of a cultural system which has cherished experimentation,
innovation, the development of talents and an international focus up to now,
and made it possible (financially). They were able to develop their work and
their practice due to investments by the state of the Netherlands. These
investments are now bearing fruit and showing results in an "export product"
of which the Netherlands can be proud. This system is recognized and
celebrated all over the world because of its efficiency and future-oriented
approach. 

The Secretary of State's memorandum shows that the cabinet is thinking only
of what is producing immediate results today, and not about what can
generate "value for the future". We all know that there is not only a today,
but also a tomorrow. We would like to see that in tomorrow's Netherlands
there will be still be a great deal of contemporary art and historical
heritage which can be seen frequently. We hope that the Lower House shares
this desire and will oppose a policy that looks only at today. 

The boards of directors, managements and representatives of: 

De Zaak Nu -- on behalf of the presentation institutions 

SKOR | Stichting Kunst en Openbare Ruimte (Foundation for Art in Public
Spaces) 

NIMk -- Nederlands Instituut voor Mediakunst (Netherlands Media Art
Institute) 

The post-academic institutions -- de Ateliers, Rijksakademie and the Jan van
Ecyk Academy 

The collector Martijn Sanders and the patrons Maurice van Vaalen and Rob
Defares 

The artists' action group, 'Schuilen in het Rijks' 

PLease sign the petition:
http://petities.nl/petitie/bezuinigen-op-cultuur-zonder-alle-feiten-nooit 





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