The Scotsman

Rein takes arts funding back to the drawing board

- Brian Ferguson

It is hard to avoid the conclusion that something has gone badly wrong inside the Scottish Government’s arts agency given the extraordin­ary descriptio­n of an explicit film project it agreed to support.

It is hard to believe Creative Scotland approved funding for a project looking for six performers to take part in “non-simulated” sex scenes.

It is clear that Creative Scotland has serious questions to answer about its £84,000 grant for Leonie Rae Gasson – a Glasgowbas­ed director specialisi­ng in “interactiv­e installati­on, live performanc­e, participat­ion and virtual reality”.

The prospect of her planned installati­on, Rein, offering a “raucous communal exploratio­n of dyke sexuality” and “a magical, erotic journey through a distinctly Scottish landscape” may not seem that unusual given what is seen on stage and screen in Scotland.

But her website’s full descriptio­n of how it would involve “intimacy co-ordinators with experience across film and sex work” certainly set alarm bells ringing. The critical question is how much Creative Scotland knew about Gasson’s intentions when it approved her applicatio­n. If it was given even half the details provided on Gasson's website, the agency will face huge questions over its funding criteria and policies.

However if, as Creative Scotland suggests, it was not fully aware of how explicit the project would be, it will call into question the robustness of its decision-making and the scrutiny of applicatio­ns.

Gasson is far from an unknown quantity, previously working with the National Theatre in Scotland, and two Creative Scotland-funded dance organisati­ons Dance Base and The Work Room, which are also supporting Rein.

She is likely to have been supported in line with one of Creative Scotland’s four key priorities – to champion equalities, diversity and inclusion (EDI). Its annual plan states “all Scottish society needs to be represente­d” if Scotland's cultural life is to be “sustained, refreshed, richer and more dynamic”.

Yet recent months have seen the Edinburgh Festival Fringe Society, the Lammermuir Festival classical music event, theatre company Cutting Edge, the Glasgow Jazz Festival, the Edinburgh Deaf Festival and music industry showcase Wide Days all turned down by Creative Scotland.

What needs to be addressed urgently is whether the EDI commitment­s both Creative Scotland and the Government have made around culture risk damaging the sector and confidence in how funding is awarded.

With culture secretary Angus Robertson left to face a grilling from MSPS, Creative Scotland has significan­tly undermined its case – at the worst possible time.

With Mr Robertson having now effectivel­y cancelled the funding decision on Rein, it is clear that Gasson, Creative Scotland and the Government will all have to return to the drawing board.

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