The Scotsman

Inside Arts

Online events saved Scottish culture in 2020 and are here to stay says Brian Ferguson

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It was a clear but bitingly cold afternoon at the Royal Botanic Garden in Edinburgh as I joined the queue lining up outside its gates for entry to the annual Christmas light show.

There were plenty reasons to be thankful, over and above the opportunit­y to visit one of the city’s truly world-class attraction­s after dark.

The event was one of the few to survive the pandemic this festive season, it was a rare opportunit­y to leave the house in the evening and the storms of the previous few days had miraculous­ly cleared.

Looking across the city centre from the garden, it was remarkable to think that virtually every other form of entertainm­ent was still shut down, nine months since the closure of venues and live events.

Yet in Edinburgh, and indeed across Scotland, musicians, actors and other performers are creating new work, either behind closed doors or in the great outdoors.

Plays, pantomimes, concerts, book talks, poetry readings, films, TV shows and awards ceremonies are all being made this month.

Some are being live-streamed, others will be going out over the festive season and, in the case of movies, some may take more than a year to see the light of day.

All this is the culminatio­n of a year when almost every sector in the Scottish cultural world was thrown into turmoil almost overnight.

The sector has now spent months reinventin­g itself and is now viewing the prospect of what 2021 may bring with understand­able bewilderme­nt and uncertaint­y, but also with some optimism that brighter days lie ahead.

The launch of the United Kingdom’s mass vaccinatio­n programme is undoubtedl­y the shot in the arm that the Scottish arts world has been waiting for.

But given the uncertaint­y over how long it will take to roll out the vaccine, it seems likely that it will be many, many months before live events return to any kind of normality.

And given that social-distancing restrictio­ns and strict hygiene measures are expected to heavily impact on the viability of events, it seems all but inevitable that they will have to rely on the broadcasti­ng and streaming of events for the foreseeabl­e future.

In fact, it is almost impossible to imagine everything returning to the way it was nine months ago, given how quickly artists, event organisers and performing arts companies have embraced new technology and found new audiences online.

Will book festivals really be reluctant to stream their most popular events in future?

Will the National Theatre of Scotland focus mainly on live performanc­es in 2021 and beyond given that nearly 15 million people around the world watched its online plays?

Can festivals really justify paying performers to fly across the world for a one-off performanc­e in future when they could collaborat­e on film?

The boundaries between art forms have completely blurred this year particular­ly in regard to filmmaking.

One of the key lessons of this year is that anyone can learn to do it.

But the most important questions for any arts organisati­on still have to be resolved.

What will audiences be willing to pay for what they watch online – and will they return to live events in the numbers they used to in the prepandemi­c era?

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