Quote:
Originally Posted by Gordon Booth
If the children aren't building dens and enjoying 'tactile experiences' they might have more time to learn to read,write and do maths. Going off what employers and universities say they certainly need it.
A childs first painting at school will be impossible without arts grant support? Don't be foolish.
Designers, architects, wheelchair designers? Now you're really bringing tears to my eyes. Not one of those you list needs or gets arts grant support. I HOPE! I wouldn't like to live in a house designed by an architect who couldn't survive without an arts grant.
Times are bad. People who come from 'northern impoverished old mill towns' need a lot of convincing that the taxes they pay should, at the moment, be spent on art, or even Art.
Forget the emotion and give us just one thing from the art world you think needs and deserves some of the money we're currently borrowing from the rest of the world!
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Garinda- I am coming to the end of a Graphic design degree. Some people may feel the need to start harping on about how myself, being a student, is just wasting your taxes etc.
Let me assure you that no money for my education has come from your wallets/purses or anyone elses but my own. I have worked from the age of 16, full time once I left college and have never been out of work. So I think enough of my own taxes would cover that. But I am a self-funding student. Do I get a loan, yes but it has to be paid back-every penny.
(Gordon) So the cuts have been discussed with us (lucky us eh?) and the future of many courses looks bleak. That includes design, multi-media (film makers, web designers, product designers etc). Although there are plenty of professionals out there quite capable of doing the job and not needing funding, eventually the trades may diminish like many before and I just wonder where that will leave us.
'A child's first painting at school will be impossible without arts grant support? Don't be foolish.' I didn't actually say that.
With regards to something that might be worthwhile, how about using an old derelict building for a creative hub, (artists, designers, sculptors musicians etc) which would not only generate local income through visitors, but would also give employment and volunteer opportunities to those in the 'local mill towns'. Cafe, local workshops.
It's main aim would be to improve community solidarity and give people of all ages the skills to become partially sufficient from the land.
Rather than having an empty building that once served as a mill, why not use it for a new kind of employment opportunity?
What if it was developed mainly from private funds- not government funding, but the local community had a say in it's development?
Rather than a profit making company, it would be a social enterprise- non profit, putting back in to the local area.