The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Voices united against sale of ‘family silver’

Pieter Brueghel paintings belong to Arbroath and that should remain the case, say former town councillor­s

- Rob mclaren

Political rivalries have been set aside as opposition to the sale of Arbroath’s valuable Pieter Brueghel the Younger paintings grows.

Former Arbroath East and Lunan councillor­s Donald Morrison and Jim Millar are more accustomed to trading blows across the council chambers on behalf of the SNP and Conservati­ves.

But the pair have joined forces to dismiss any talk of selling off the Old Master paintings that proudly hang in Arbroath Library.

It comes after Monifieth and Sidlaws councillor Ben Lawrie suggested members should debate the sale of the works, estimated to be worth more than £2 million each, to ease the burden on cash-strapped Angus Council.

Art history graduate Mr Millar said the idea “does not bear scrutiny”.

He added: “These works were gifted to the people of Arbroath and they must stay in the town.

“What kind of message does it send out, as the V&A nears completion in Dundee, that next door in Angus, there is a proposal to hold a fire sale of our cultural assets in order to temporaril­y keep some skips open.

“This is a simplistic, short-term solution which would fail to address a long-term problem, and frankly does not bear scrutiny.”

Mr Morrison urged the council to do more to promote the works, rather than “selling off the family silver in a panic”.

He said: “To suggest selling off of Arbroath’s prized treasures for what would be a temporary gain, shows the naivety from someone just in the door and who fails to understand the importance of cultural assets.

“It is not for the councillor to dictate the sale of assets left to the people of Arbroath and these paintings are akin to a Common Good asset of the burgh.

“I hope every Arbroath councillor will publicly distance themselves from Councillor Lawrie’s proposal.

“These paintings belong to Arbroath and must stay in the town.”

Former local Independen­t member Bob Spink has also entered the debate, criticisin­g the “cultural termites” in favour of the sale.

Mr Spink said: “Those who seek to steal the Brueghel paintings from Arbroath should know these iconic paintings were gifted by generous benefactor­s to the people of Arbroath many years ago and as such should be valued as a cultural asset of the burgh not for sale under any circumstan­ces.

“Do we really wish to sell our precious heritage, thereby diluting the town’s character and identity yet again?

“Like cultural termites, councillor­s continue to gnaw away at the perceived privileges of Arbroath with every opportunit­y, forgetting that a quarter of the population lives in Arbroath with the per-capita spend historical­ly the lowest in Angus.”

rmclaren@thecourier.co.uk

 ?? Picture: Dougie Nicolson. ?? St John Preaching In The Wilderness, which hangs in Arbroath Library.
Picture: Dougie Nicolson. St John Preaching In The Wilderness, which hangs in Arbroath Library.
 ??  ?? Former councillor­s Jim Millar, above, and Donald Morrison are united in opposition to the sale of the paintings.
Former councillor­s Jim Millar, above, and Donald Morrison are united in opposition to the sale of the paintings.
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