The Scotsman

Inside Arts

After lockdown, our culture sector will need help, writes Brian Ferguson

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Almost a month has passed since that dark week in the middle of March when Scotland’s cultural sector was effectivel­y forced into Covid-19 lockdown, yet there is still something surreal about seeing an image of a building bereft of visitors, activity, life and colour, like those posted on social media by a member of staff looking after V&A Dundee this week.

They made me wonder what life must be like for the security guards patrolling vast empty museums, galleries, castles, palaces and concert halls. But they also provoked thoughts of what these places will feel like, and who will be first to visit them, when Scotland does begin to properly emerge from lockdown and restrictio­ns affecting such places are eased.

Of course, exactly when that might happen is still anyone’s guess. Things are no clearer now than they were a month ago. If they were some of the first places to be forced to close down it is highly likely they will be some of the last to be back up and running again.

The only faintly optimistic signs emerging from elsewhere in Europe, such as in France and Spain, would suggest that the waiting game for cultural venues will have to go on until at least July or August. It is certainly possible to imagine that some venues, such as museums, art galleries, outdoor attraction­s and heritage sites, could reopen in the summer, particular­ly if they can put appropriat­e social distancing measures in place. This may be more challengin­g at sprawling sites like Edinburgh and Stirling castles, but not insurmount­able. Concerts at the Hydro in Glasgow, or musicals at the Edinburgh Playhouse, the biggest venue of its kind in the UK, are another matter.

It is worth rememberin­g that among the earliest restrictio­ns in Scotland were a call for events of more than 500 people to be cancelled. For anyone involved in anything above that, the autumn may be a more realistic prospect, although some experts in America were this week casting doubt on the wisdom of concerts and festivals rescheduli­ng anything this year.

There seems no question of any social distancing restrictio­ns being lifted in the UK until there are significan­t downward curves of cases and deaths in the UK. But that does not mean that cultural organisati­ons, venues and attraction­s should not be planning ahead for possible reopenings. I can’t begin to imagine how difficult the sudden lockdown must have been for them, particular­ly those hugely reliant on income from ticket sales and bar takings. Yet I can’t be the only one who feels that the current crisis could be turned into a series of opportunit­ies when the lockdown is eventually eased.

It is clear audiences have already been hugely supportive of their favourite venues and festivals in recent weeks. Harnessing that goodwill in the next year or so will be crucial in getting them back on their feet but equally important will be the ability to capitalise on a public desire to get out and about again, which I’m convinced will be there as soon as restrictio­ns are lifted.

A government-backed campaign to get Scots to make more of what is on their doorstep, rediscover previous holiday destinatio­ns and dig into their own heritage could help many places get back on their feet. It could also capitalise on the fact that Scots are far less likely to be booking a foreign holiday this year, either due to uncertaint­y over travel restrictio­ns or their own economic circumstan­ces. When the time is right, many of these venues could host their own tributes to the country’s coronaviru­s front line heroes.

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