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Presentation by Orlaith McBride Director/Chief Executive Officer. Arts Council Of Ireland Developing the Governance, Independence and Decision Making of a State Agency. Arts Council Remit. 1951 Arts Act established the Arts Council charging it with stimulating public interest
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Presentation by Orlaith McBride Director/Chief Executive Officer Arts Council Of IrelandDeveloping the Governance, Independence and Decision Making of a State Agency
Arts Council Remit • 1951 Arts Act established the Arts Council charging it with • stimulating public interest • promoting knowledge, appreciation and practice • assisting in improving standards in the arts • 2003 Arts Act reiterated those three key purposes • and re-calibrated the relationship between the Arts Council and Government. • It underlined the autonomy of the Council as the expert body for funding the arts, steering their development, and offering advice on arts and cultural matters to Government.
Arts Act 2003 • Stimulate public interest in the arts • Promote knowledge, appreciation and practice of the arts • Assist in improving standards in the arts • Advise and assist the Minister in the performance of his functions • Advise Government • Furnish advise to a public body in relation to any matter relating to its function
Our mission is to support and develop the arts in Ireland • By supporting artists to make work of excellence • By enabling people to experience the arts • By working with partners and stakeholders • By advising and advocating
Arts Areas x 20 Genres & Disciplines OrganisationalFunctions
Actions x 4 Pillars 3. Investment Grants to organisations [Recurring and Non-recurring] Awards to Individuals [Cnuas (Aosdána); Bursaries; Commissions; Projects; Residencies;Travel and Training] Schemes [Festivals and Events; Young Ensembles; Touring and Dissemination; DEIS] Initiatives [Arts Audiences; Raise; Laureate na nÓg; Ireland Chair of Fiction]
People & Places • National – Regional – Local • People • Audiences • 1. Regular • 2. Occasional • Audience Development Agenda [Research, Information and Actions] • Publics • 1. Those engaged as participants • 2. Specific constituencies • 3. Those not attending/engaging
Number of annual non recurring awards and schemes • 120 – number of different awards and schemes across a range of artforms and arts practice areas. • 850 - awards made to individual once off projects/individuals decided by peer panel assessment in 2013.
Decision Making • Grants Committee • - Council members consider recommendations on all regular • recurring grants annually. Recommendations prepared by the • executive including the staff and the external adviser (engaged • over a 3 year period to ensure ‘new thinking’ contributes • to strategy, policy and decision making). • Independent Peer Panel • Practitioners from the sector and chaired by a member of Council • make decisions on all non recurring funding. This ensures that • expertise and diversity from the sector and current trends in • practice contribute to decision making on what is funded.
Peer Panels • Allows a diversity of expert views to inform decision-making process and entrusts the arts community thus ensuring greater openness and transparency • Council agrees list of panellists annually • Each panel is composed of up to 5 external assessors. Arts Managers present during meeting. Member of Arts Council acts as an independent Chair • Peer panel members use their expertise and knowledge to assess, score and make decisions on funding in line with published criteria consistent with overall policy and strategy
Relationship to Government • Arts Act 2003 – articulates that the Arts Council is independent in • its functions • Government appoints Council Chair and members every five years • Liaise regularly with Department of Arts and work together on a • range of areas of common interest but the development of Arts • Council policy and all related strategies/decisions including funding • are exclusively the role of the Council • Annual Grant to Arts Council made by Government with no • Attached directives/instructions
National Cultural Strategy • No National Cultural Strategy – vacuum. Necessary to ensure • cohesion and affirm delineation of roles and areas of responsibility • for all public agencies including Arts Council and Government • Department.
Arts Council Strategic Review 2014 • Commissioned an Independent Review to ask a number of • questions: • Is the Arts Council operating as effectively as it can? • Is the Arts Council delivering on its statutory remit? • Is the Arts Council operating to the highest governance standards in terms of decision making and processes in terms of measuring the impact of investment and development? • Is the Arts Council as expert an agency as it can be? • Is the Arts Council meeting the needs of the arts sector?
Key Findings of Strategic Review • National Arts Policy • Vacuum / Stasis • The arts and wider civil society / public policy and provision • The internal world of arts and culture • Public Finances • AC € to remain as is • Change cannot be contingent on more € • Change might leverage more €
Key Findings of Strategic Review • Professional Arts Sector • Primary Focus of Arts Council is professional arts sector • Section 24 of Arts Act (dispersal of monies) is chief strategic focus of the Arts Council and commands most corporate effort
Key Findings of Strategic Review • Public a secondary concern: largely conceived of as audiences for professional arts……….with several consequences: • production / consumption model > engagement / participation • arts a feature of social exclusion • digital challenge & potential under-explored • arts planning lacks demographic dimension • low investment in children/young people in Arts Council areas of responsibility • risk of ‘disconnect’ between ‘Arts Council Arts’ and public who engage with arts in different ways
Profile and Pattern of Funding • some funding relationships (over) determined by history / precedent • ongoing funding of 47 arts centres / venues unsustainable • 80% Arts Council € in established funding relationships / 20% ‘new & experimental’ • limited investment in data & information impedes accountability and advice • little commitment to research • extremely low investment in development/promotion/advisory functions
Quality • Current definition meets with general approval • Arts Council peer assessment does not apply to grants / unlike international ‘best practice’ • Corporate Effectiveness • critical commentary in relation to Arts Council decision-making particularly in relation to the Board: • issues in relation to conflicts of interest • confusion in relation to procedures in decision-making • excessive corporate effort particularly at Board level on funding > policy / strategy / planning • Engagement and Communication • Need and appetite for ongoing dialogue about the arts across society • Arts Council take on ‘thought leadership’ role nationally
Be the Development Agency for the Arts focussed on the Public Good • Develop new strategy which sets out: • Goals and Objectives of Arts Council as the National Arts Development Agency • Limited number of priority areas (including children and young people) • 2. All actions, decisions driven by strategic objectives & priorities
Make policies and strategies that are explicit and connected • Have clear policy positions on key areas within whole arts environment • Develop a spatial strategy (defining national / regional / local) • Develop precise policies and detailed strategies for each arts area • Ensure all strategies have priorities / objectives / outputs / outcomes • Clarify to all stakeholders that strategic / selective = ‘hard choices’ • Underline that the Arts Council values whole arts environment and not just areas in receipt of funding
Change its investment strategies and behaviours… • Publish and implement an investment strategy (overall and individual areas) • Make clear budgetary effects of required re-balancing x 4 • Infrastructure / fixed costs and programme activity • National and regional / local • Established orgs / new artists and new work • Direct investment in arts sector / actions to develop the arts • Strengthen strategic relationship with local government / change funding relationship with individual local authorities to reflect new Arts Council strategy and especially spatial strategy • Make Arts Council strategic priorities and objectives central to all funding agreements with arts organisations and partners • Ensure all funding agreements and relationships target, monitor and measure outputs and outcomes
Be well-informed and evidence-based • Invest in a data and information programme to improve • Strategic planning • Evaluating and reporting • Increase commitment to research to • Underpin role as lead agency • Ensure advice and promotion are evidence-based and well-informed • Encourage Irish research community to develop arts expertise and develop national and international research partnerships
Strengthen AC Capability and that of the Arts Sector • Focus commitment / expertise of Arts Council members on policy / strategy / planning and oversight of programmes • Ensure staff and advisers provide Arts Council with range of expertise / depth of knowledge required for Arts Council as effective development agency • Advise Minister re benefit of broader membership to encompass perspectives / expertise required for Arts Council as effective development agency • Support a more resilient and resourceful arts sector by supporting professional development, strategic partnership, joint actions, shared services
Engage widely and communicate openly • Make the Dialogue and Communications process of the Strategic Review an ongoing feature particularly with the arts sector • Widen circle of arts conversation to include those outside the ‘arts world’ to benefit from its interests and experiences • Work to fold the arts into appropriate forums and events especially those outside the arts where public good is a particular focus • Ensure that in all its communications Arts Council represents itself as the development agency for the arts with a primary concern to serve the public
Final Remarks • Maintain a strong relationship with Government but one that clearly respects the autonomy and independence of the Arts Council • Ensure decision making is open and transparent and that the external expertise of the arts sector/arts practitioners is involved in the decisions. • Communicate and dialogue with the public (s) including the sector on an on-going basis demonstrating the leadership and expert role of the Arts Council and the broader impact on the arts to society • Develop an integrated framework that clearly articulates the strategic priorities/goals of the Arts Council corporately aligned to clear funding decisions/agreements that can also capture and measure key deliverables, outcomes, impacts and indicators to meet the needs of the Arts Council in articulating its argument(s) for public funding • Invest in research and development initiatives that support public value/investment arguments