The Saturday Paper

PERFORMING ARTS: In crisis. Alison Croggon

Covid-19 containmen­t measures have led to unpreceden­ted shutdowns in the arts sector, with small companies and independen­t artists in the greatest jeopardy. Alison Croggon reports.

-

The first pillar to fall was Dark Mofo, the annual June event run in Hobart by the Museum of Old and New Art’s David Walsh. “We’re killing Dark Mofo for the year,” he said in a statement on the gallery’s website. “Fear is the right response.”

Next was the Melbourne Internatio­nal Comedy Festival (MICF), which confirmed on Friday, March 13 – reinforcin­g the fears of all triskaidek­aphobics – that the second-biggest comedy festival in the world wouldn’t be going ahead this year.

The announceme­nt was no surprise. MICF is Australia’s largest ticketed event, with audiences of up to 770,000 and hundreds of performers in often small, crowded and sweaty venues – simply put, an epidemiolo­gist’s nightmare. It was impossible for any responsibl­e authority to permit the event to go ahead.

The cancellati­ons then began to cascade. On

March 16, the Sydney Theatre Company and the Melbourne Theatre Company announced the immediate closures of their current shows, including the MTC’s production of David Williamson’s Emerald City, which had its opening night the previous Wednesday. Adelaide’s State Theatre Company of South Australia said last weekend that it was “awaiting instructio­n from regulatory authoritie­s”, code for “we’re waiting for authoritie­s to cancel, because otherwise our insurance won’t cover our losses”. By Monday it, too, had cancelled its next two plays. Others, at the date of writing, were taking a more robust route: the Black Swan State Theatre Company in Perth said it was “operating on a ‘business as usual’ basis” and had “no intention to cancel any public performanc­es at this stage”.

Last Saturday afternoon, the Australian Music Industry Network and the Australian Festivals Associatio­n launched I Lost My Gig Australia, a website where small-to-medium businesses and independen­t contractor­s in the music industry could tally their losses. By Thursday afternoon, they had logged a total of 220,000 cancellati­ons across the arts – a total lost income of $200 million affecting 400,000 people. Other organisati­ons – such as the Media, Entertainm­ent and Arts Alliance and the National Associatio­n for the Visual Arts (NAVA) – are also keeping similar tallies. But they all add up to the same answer: the coronaviru­s is a calamity for the arts in Australia.

NAVA’s executive director, Esther Anatolitis, says the Australian arts and culture industry faces the most catastroph­ic disruption in its history. “I include wartime in that,” she says. “I’m running out of ways to say how devastatin­g and perilous it is. Last week, a visual artist told me that she personally stands to lose $60,000 because of an event cancellati­on. Given that the average Australian artist earns less than $20,000 per year from their creative work, this loss amounts to years’ worth of income.”

The prognosis from industry group Live Performanc­e Australia (LPA) is even more dire. It estimates that the economic and cultural cost of the coronaviru­s shutdown for the live performanc­e industry is likely to exceed more than half a billion dollars, and thousands of jobs, over coming months. In truth though, while everyone can see the writing on the wall, nobody really knows what it means yet, nor what the long-term impact will be.

Belvoir, announcing the cancellati­on of its successful show Dance Nation last week, said in a statement that the financial impact of closing was “unparallel­ed”. “I can’t say yet what the hit will be on us as there’s a lot we don’t know,” says Belvoir’s artistic director, Eamon Flack. “On the one hand, we haven’t cancelled a show since 2007, so this is a real blow. On the other hand, we began rehearsals yesterday as scheduled for A Room of One’s Own. Will we open on our scheduled date? I don’t know. But as soon as people can gather again, we will be ready to go.”

The Melbourne Symphony Orchestra’s immediate response to closure was to live-stream its scheduled performanc­e of Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov’s Scheheraza­de to thousands of watchers. Many people are suggesting that streaming might be a viable alternativ­e for all sorts of events, but how this might be monetised in order to cover expenses and pay artists remains an open question.

Watching Australian culture going dark in less than a week has been chilling. No one is arguing these cancellati­ons aren’t necessary, but they leave arts companies – large and small – carrying huge losses, and they are devastatin­g for the hundreds of thousands of arts workers who move precarious­ly from one project to another.

After years of cumulative funding cuts, which have accelerate­d since 2013, the cultural sector was already struggling. Most industry insiders are now saying that, without assistance, even our major companies are facing an existentia­l threat. Opera Australia, which receives by far the largest portion of arts subsidies from the government, derives 50 per cent of its income from its box office. Cancellati­on of its big-ticket events will, as it announced, hit hard. But Opera Australia has the resources to cover closures. Others do not. There are real fears many companies will close their doors during this crisis and never open them again.

“I fear that we lose hundreds of companies, venues and programs forever,” says Nicole Beyer, executive director of Theatre Network Australia

(TNA). “Building the soft infrastruc­ture of an industry takes generation­s, and without urgent government interventi­on we are facing a scenario where we basically have no community programs, we have empty buildings, no holiday programs, no shows to see, no books written, no movies to watch, no production­s touring in regional Australia or internatio­nally, no festivals in our major cities or in the regions.”

The Australia Council for the Arts announced last week that some of the federal government’s $17.6 billion stimulus package – the portion that will be directed to small-to-medium businesses – includes assistance for “eligible arts businesses”. It’s unclear how much of the package will be directed specifical­ly to culture.

Meanwhile, LPA has been lobbying for an

$850 million live performanc­e support and stimulus package, which the group’s chief executive, Evelyn Richardson, described as “a program similar to farm relief to make access to social security payments available in the event of a sector shutdown or significan­t loss of trade”.

Over the past week, Arts Minister Paul Fletcher has held emergency roundtable­s with representa­tives from all sectors of the arts and state ministers. Despite, as one insider put it, “the industry communicat­ing the urgency clearly and consistent­ly”, the ministers reached no concrete decisions. State ministers were meeting with sector representa­tives late in the week and through the weekend.

“There are several options being tabled,” says TNA’s Nicole Beyer, “but whatever it is, it needs to be fast and significan­t.” She says TNA endorses calls for an $850 million stimulus package, and for the Australia Council to fund all the 162 small-to-medium-sized arts organisati­ons that it has shortliste­d to receive four-year funding.

“It would be a ready-to-go, super-fast way to create at least 200 new full-time jobs and up to 1500 casual jobs … around $16 million per annum additional funding,” she says. “This should be a part of any stimulus package, as should direct, easy-to-access cash payments for affected artists and arts workers.”

As always, the brunt is being borne by thousands of small companies and independen­t artists and ancillary workers – publicists, stage managers, technical staff, ushers, caterers and others. Many are in desperate situations, exacerbate­d by the fact that their major sources of alternativ­e income – teaching, casual work in the hospitalit­y industry and so on – have also dried up.

Anatolitis says that if an assistance package doesn’t include support for freelancer­s or independen­t arts workers, the entire industry will be in jeopardy. “They are the industry,” she says.

Singer, music teacher and compositio­n student Clare Heuston cobbles together a living through performing, small commission­s, teaching at three different schools and running a choir in an aged-care facility – figuring that if one option goes south, she will be able to survive on the others. But now all her jobs have vanished.

“Plenty of performing artists have prudently retained every job they could get for years, even if it caused them pretty intense stress,” she says. “Who could have foreseen that one thing could smash out all those jobs in one go?”

But that’s exactly what has happened to theatre designer Anna Tregloan, who has seen all of her work for

“WE BEGAN REHEARSALS YESTERDAY AS SCHEDULED … WILL WE OPEN ON OUR SCHEDULED DATE? I DON’T KNOW. BUT AS SOON AS PEOPLE CAN GATHER AGAIN, WE WILL BE READY TO GO.”

the next year either be cancelled or thrown into doubt. “Everyone is reeling,” she says. “Everyone suddenly set adrift.”

Freelancer­s are calling for institutio­ns to pay out cancelled commission­s, but Tregloan says that so far there isn’t much of that. “Speaking to colleagues, none are talking about the support they are receiving, just that they are suddenly without work or income.

“I worry that [the government’s] remedy may be putting money into the companies only and not the individual­s. Individual artists and very small companies were already in such a precarious position due to the funding cuts of the last few years; it is difficult to see how

• many will survive this.”

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? ALISON CROGGON is an awardwinni­ng novelist, poet, playwright and critic.
ALISON CROGGON is an awardwinni­ng novelist, poet, playwright and critic.
 ??  ?? The High Altar venue at the cancelled Dark Mofo festival (above), and director Sam Strong (above left, centre) conducting rehearsals at MTC for Emerald City, which had its season cut short.
The High Altar venue at the cancelled Dark Mofo festival (above), and director Sam Strong (above left, centre) conducting rehearsals at MTC for Emerald City, which had its season cut short.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia