One of the most interesting moments in the first hearing of the Senate inquiry into George Brandis’ arts funding changes came midway through the first afternoon.
That was when the Performing Arts Touring Alliance’s Merryn Carter told Senator Glenn Lazarus and his colleagues that the major performing arts companies do not, in fact, do the most touring — far from it.
According to Carter, the major performing arts sector carried out only 18% of the international touring in the years 2010-14, while 82% was undertaken by the small-to-medium sector. She also pointed out that national and regional touring followed the same pattern: in 2013 and 2014, 32 of 44 tours funded by the federal program Playing Australia were from small-to-medium organisations.
These figures were important, because they directly contradict Arts Minister George Brandis. In justifying his National Program for Excellence in the Arts, Brandis has consistently asserted that the major companies are the ones that have the largest audiences and do the most touring.
The idea that the majors are simply bigger and more important than the smaller companies appears to be an underlying tenet of Brandis’ obsession with “excellence”. At Senate estimates, for instance, Brandis made the following claim:
“… let us not forget that the major performing arts companies are the heart and soul of the performing arts sector in this country. They are the big employers of artists and arts workers. They are the people who undertake most of the touring, including the regional touring, as well as the international touring. They are the people who provide the performances that the great audiences of Australia enjoy.”
This sounds impressive. Unfortunately for Brandis, there’s no evidence for it.
Taken together, the available evidence suggests that the many hundreds of smaller companies that make up the small-to-medium sector employ more artists, undertake more touring and reach a greater audience than the 28 major performing arts companies.
Unfortunately, we don’t really know for sure. High-quality data comparing the small-to-medium sector to the majors is simply not available.
One reason for that is that the Australia Council is not releasing it. The Australia Council has turned down repeated requests from Crikey for data comparing the small-to-medium and major sectors for this article. We’ve also repeatedly requested an interview with Australia Council CEO Tony Grybowski.
That’s why the Senate inquiry testimony was so interesting.
Crikey has seen the aggregated data — in spreadsheet form — to which the Performing Arts Touring Alliance referred during the hearing. Crikey understands it was compiled from both publicly available major performing arts data and internal Australia Council databases.
The data shows an aggregated figure of 2.57 million in international attendance for Australia Council-supported performing arts companies in the five years 2010-14. Of this, the major companies were responsible for only 463,000, or approximately 18%. Smaller companies were responsible for 2.11 million, or 82%.
According to Performing Arts Touring Alliance data, small-to-medium companies outperform the major performing arts sector. Image: Crikey.
One small-to-medium company, Circa, had a higher figure for international attendance in that period than the entire major performing arts sector.
How can we assess this data? It’s important to state that this is not official Australia Council data, although we have repeatedly requested confirmation from the council.
But it is possible to get a snapshot of the inequities in Commonwealth arts policy by examining the output of a number of the largest performing arts companies against some of their smaller cousins.
In funding terms, for instance, Opera Australia now receives more federal funding than all 145 smaller companies funded by the Australia Council’s Key Organisations program put together.
What about output? Crikey approached a number of performing arts companies for their international touring figures. We were able to build up a picture of international touring that again contradicts Brandis’ assertions.
Crikey gathered data from 26 major companies and the small-to-medium sector. Here is what we found: between 2010-2014, 15 small-to-medium companies performed to a total audience of 1,432,155 at international events. Eleven major companies toured to 359,869.
Crikey obtained data from 26 Australian performing arts companies funded by the Australia Council for data. Smaller companies clearly outperformed companies from the major performing arts sector.
About a third of these attendances were from world-beating Brisbane company Circa, whose total attendance was 528,773. The Snuff Puppets, a small but lively puppetry company, reported 486,000 attendees. Smaller performing arts companies also toured well. Stalker Theatre had 42,850, Monkey Baa Theatre had 42,149, Patch Theatre had 40,690, and Windmill Theatre had 35,442.
The majority of these small-to-medium companies toured internationally every year. While some shows were niche affairs for an audience of 50, others were outdoor tours reaching more than 100,000 people.
During that same time frame, the total number of attendees at international performances for 11 major performing arts companies was 359,869. That’s about a quarter of the figures from the smaller companies.
The major company with the largest international figures was the Sydney Theatre Company, which had 120,381 attendees on the back of its very successful US tours. The widely travelled Circus Oz had 100,496, the Australian Chamber Orchestra had 59,766 and Belvoir had 51,369.
The figures for Opera Australia are particularly interesting. Its 2014 figures are not yet available, but between 2010-13 it sold only 21,331 tickets outside Australia. Based on the data available, Opera Australia’s international touring is less than 1% of the output of the Australia Council’s small-to-medium sector.
This would appear to shoot down Brandis’ claim that the major companies do most of the touring.
And yet Opera Australia is the largest major company and the single largest recipient of Australia Council funding. It will receive more federal funding in 2015 than the entire small-to-medium sector put together.
The disparity between the performance of the majors and the smaller companies is now a highly contentious issue in the cultural industries. As the Senate inquiry heard from a number of witnesses, George Brandis’ Excellence raid will hammer the small-to-medium sector, while the major companies will benefit.
By exempting the major companies from his cuts, Brandis is playing reverse Robin Hood — taking from the poor to give to the rich. He is also taking money from the companies that tour most, and giving it to the companies that tour least.
The shake-out is already underway. Brandis announced $600,000 in new touring grants last Friday. They went only to companies from the major performing arts sector. No smaller companies were supported.
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