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BublikArt Gallery > Blog > Art News > what art world figures want from the new Labour government
Art News

what art world figures want from the new Labour government

Irina Runkel
Last updated: 5 July 2024 10:12
Published 5 July 2024
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Contents
Tristram Hunt, director of the Victoria and Albert Museum, LondonTiffany Jenkins, author of Keeping Their Marbles: How the Treasures of the Past Ended Up in Museums And Why They Should Stay ThereRyan Gander, artistSally Bacon, co-chair of the Cultural Learning AllianceMartin Clark, director of Camden Art Centre, LondonAaron Cezar, director of the Delfina Foundation, LondonBendor Grosvenor, art historian, broadcaster and contributor to The Art NewspaperJoe Scotland, director of Studio Voltaire, LondonJenny Waldman, director of Art Fund

The Labour party has won a thumping majority in the UK general election with leader Keir Starmer due to enter No. 10 Downing Street today with a current tally of 410 seats (the Conservatives have so far secured 119 seats while the Liberal Democrats will have 71 Members of Parliament). With such a convincing mandate, arts figures are watching to see whether the culture sector will be transformed in any way, possibly through extra funding (Labour announced its arts and culture plans in early June). In the wake of the Labour victory, we asked high-profile names in the art world what they hoped for from the new Labour government.

Tristram Hunt, director of the Victoria and Albert Museum, London

In no particular order: emergency financial support for regional museums facing bankruptcy; commitment to swifter and transparent trustee appointment processes; treasury confirmation of Exhibitions Tax Relief for museums and galleries; establishment of a Soft Power Council to support UK creative industries; reset of European Union relations to support the easier flow of creative practitioners, musicians and young people between the UK and the continent; inclusion of museum and gallery infrastructure and maintenance in Green New Deal funding; and freedom for city mayors to introduce a hotel tax to fund arts and culture.

Tiffany Jenkins, author of Keeping Their Marbles: How the Treasures of the Past Ended Up in Museums And Why They Should Stay There

I call upon this Labour government to embrace the arts with the same enthusiasm as the last Labour administration, but without its instrumentalisation. The arts should be championed for their own sake, free from extraneous demands imposed by policymakers and professionals. I urge the government to discard the philistine and crude expectations that culture should bolster the economy, identity, promote diversity, address climate change, or any other fashionable cause of the day. Instead, the government should aspire to recognise and appreciate the most important and vital roles of the arts: the pursuit of beauty and truth. This approach will benefit everyone, now and in the future.

Ryan Gander, artist

An understanding that the ephemeral has greater value than the physical. The Tories have made us obsessed with understanding the world by belongings, things, money and growth. What we need is values we can’t see and measure like magic, stories, memories, conversations, relationships. YOLO [you only live once]. And you can’t take it with you. The right has never been right.

Sally Bacon, co-chair of the Cultural Learning Alliance

Cultural Learning Alliance would like the EBacc (English Baccalaureate), which excludes arts subjects, to be scrapped. And for Labour’s planned curriculum and assessment review to be really bold and ambitious, and first address the purposes of schooling, so that equal curriculum areas, including the Expressive Arts, can be mapped onto new, clear purposes. We need a future-facing and well-rounded educational experience for all students.

Martin Clark, director of Camden Art Centre, London

I’m hoping the new government will not just understand and talk up the value and contribution of arts and culture—one of the few things we continue to lead the world in in this country—but will also recognise that a relatively small economic investment into our museums and galleries will make a disproportionately transformative impact on institutions and communities across the UK. The numbers needed to fix the NHS, social care, schools etc. are eye watering. The numbers needed to transform access to life-changing art and culture for millions are modest by comparison.

Aaron Cezar, director of the Delfina Foundation, London

Considering direct funding to the arts will be far down their list of priorities, I wish the Labour government would implement tax incentives on charitable giving. All political parties seem to expect private philanthropy to fill gaps, but there are virtually no incentives for individuals or corporates to do so. Related to this, Labour needs to carefully consider the negative impact of their policies on non-doms [non-domiciled residents] who make significant philanthropic contributions to the arts and other sectors.

Bendor Grosvenor, art historian, broadcaster and contributor to The Art Newspaper

My wish list would be for Labour to fully implement their (excellent) creative industries manifesto, including the greater distribution of art from national museums to the regions, and open access for museum images. Both policies will provoke pushback from national museum leadership teams, who really don’t like change, but must be done soon to help build the audiences of the future.

Joe Scotland, director of Studio Voltaire, London

Support and protect the rights of trans people.

Jenny Waldman, director of Art Fund

Museums and galleries can play a vital role in improving wellbeing, education, economic growth and bringing joy to communities across every part of the UK. I hope a Labour government will take some important first steps: strategic investment and a review of local authority funding, a Museum Collections Bill that supports the sharing of collections, and a national curriculum that promotes every schoolchild visiting a museum or gallery every year.

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