The Sunday Post (Dundee)

Art school under scrutiny over donors’ millions

– A former senior member of staff

- By Mark Aitken POLITICAL EDITOR

An internatio­nal appeal that raised £20 million to rebuild Glasgow School of Art after a devastatin­g fire is under scrutiny after it emerged insurance payouts covered the restoratio­n work.

Insurers paid out more than £ 50m to rebuild the world- famous Mackintosh building after the blaze in 2014 destroyed the iconic architectu­ral masterpiec­e, we can reveal.

Politician­s yesterday demanded a public inquiry to establish how millions of pounds donated by the public to rebuild the world- famous building was spent by Glasgow School of Art (GSA), which launched ambitious expansion plans two years after the fire.

Senior sources say the art school failed to make clear where the donations were being spent and that cash given to rebuild the Mackintosh was, in fact, spent on purchasing new buildings and renovating parts of the building, known as The Mack, untouched by the fire.

One former senior member of staff said: “Donors were led to believe they were helping to rebuild The Mack but the insurance covered that. Between the insurance payouts and the donations, there was a huge surplus and that was diverted to finance wider campus growth.

“The management and governors were obsessed with growing student numbers and expanding the estate.

“The pictures of the devastatio­n were very emotive and there was widespread sympathy for the Mackintosh building after the 2014 fire. People gave millions of pounds to help.

“There is certainly a feeling that the board and management did not do enough to dispel the idea that public donations were needed to rebuild The Mack. Some would suggest they did nothing at all to dispel that idea. Others would, in fact, say they encouraged it.

“That was the reason that so many people gave money. They believed their donations were needed to rebuild the Mack. They weren’t.

“If they felt it was appropriat­e to take the money specifical­ly given to rebuild the Mackintosh building and spend it on other projects then they should have said so and asked every donor if they were happy with that or wanted their money back? That did not happen.”

The 110- year- old Charles Rennie Mackintosh building was badly damaged in a fire in May 2014, with about 10% of the building destroyed, including the famous wood- panelled library in the west wing, and a third of its contents.

Despite insurance policies being in place, GSA launched a star- studded appeal led by Mackintosh admirer Brad Pitt and Doctor Who star Peter

Capaldi, a former student, to raise £20m less than a month after the fire.

At the time, Capaldi said he hoped funds could be raised to restore the Mackintosh building “to its former grace”, while then GSA director Tom Inns promised the appeal would help return the building to “its former glory”. The Scottish and UK government­s promised £5m each to restore The Mack and Chancellor George Osborne pledged a further £5m for a graduate and research centre.

In October 2014, Tom Inns and other GSA senior staff flew to Venice to attend a conference of architectu­ral experts to discuss the restoratio­n of the Mackintosh library.

Despite the fire, GSA wanted to increase the number of its students by 25% but, according to board minutes, were “constraine­d in terms of the size and condition of some of the estate”.

In April 2016, a £ 32m Mackintosh Campus Appeal was launched, which now included restoring the west wing of the building, upgrading the unaffected east wing, buying Stow College and developing a studio and workshop space there.

Tom Inns said at the time: “The Mackintosh building fire required the school to pause and reconsider, but we are now moving forward to create a newly extended campus with the restored Mackintosh building at its heart.”

The art school bought the disused Stow College for £ 6m and spent another £8m on refitting it.

The campus trust absorbed the £ 17m left from the fundraisin­g appeal and insurance payouts.

The art school’s accounts show it has received a total of £ 52.5m in insurance for the first fire. According to the accounts, the amount spent on restoring The Mack by January 2018 – five months before the second, more devastatin­g fire – was £46.6m.

At that point, the school was budgeting in a £ 2.1m contingenc­y fund and £ 13m “business interrupti­on costs”, bringing the maximum possible spend on The Mack to £ 62m. But a second fire destroyed the refurbishe­d building last June.

Holyrood’s culture committee has already called for a public inquiry into the two fires and politician­s yesterday said it must now include how the appeal funds were used.

Glasgow North East MP Paul Sweeney said: “There was a real sense after the 2014 fire that Glasgow had been robbed of a part of its soul.

“I think it was reasonable to expect any donation would go directly to restoring the building after the damage had been contained so expertly by the firefighte­rs to the west wing. If the intended purpose of the fund changed, that is unacceptab­le.”

He added: “It is important the facts around this whole situation are establishe­d and I agree with the idea of a public inquiry whose remit includes how the building and the institutio­n has been managed.”

Glasgow MSP Adam Tomkins said: “The more one hears about the school of art and how it was managed, the more pressing the case for a full public inquiry into the future of the Mackintosh building.

“My view is there are, at best, grave doubts about the capacity of the current management of the school of art to be the custodians of one of Scotland’s national treasures.”

Glasgow Kelvin MSP Sandra White said: “A public inquiry needs to look at every single part of the funding.

“People who have put up their own money have said to me they will absolutely not be putting up any more. We need a public inquiry to look at where the monies have gone and who made the decisions. It is shrouded in secrecy as far as I can see.”

The school’s continuing appeals for cash continued to focus on repairing the fire damage even after the insurance money was received. Wealthy supporters were invited to an “evening of cocktails, fine food and wine” at an exclusive New York restaurant, where tables of 10 cost £3,500, with the money raised “helping the GSA recover from the almost catastroph­ic fire in its iconic and beautiful Mackintosh building”.

A Christie’s auction of works by 25 leading artists, which raised over £700,000, was also intended to “raise funds and publicity for the rebuilding of the school” while a letter to donors says their money would “help the GSA to recover from the effects of the fire in the Mackintosh building”.

Yesterday, Glasgow Art School said: “The trustees launched an appeal in the aftermath of the 2014 fire with the purpose of raising funds to enable the Glasgow School of Art to recover from the consequenc­es of the fire.

“In 2016 the Mackintosh Campus Appeal was introduced. This was a reflection of the fact that what the school needed to recover from the fire had become clearer.

“The recovery plan included the restoratio­n and upgrade of the Mackintosh building – returning it to its original academic configurat­ion as a home for all first year students – and the acquisitio­n of the Stow building creating studio space for the School of Fine Art.”

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 ??  ?? A forensic archaeolog­ist sifts through the ashes of famous Mackintosh library after the first fire in 2014, main; the library before the fire, left; and an artist’s impression of the planned upgrade to Stow College, part of campus expansion blueprint, below
A forensic archaeolog­ist sifts through the ashes of famous Mackintosh library after the first fire in 2014, main; the library before the fire, left; and an artist’s impression of the planned upgrade to Stow College, part of campus expansion blueprint, below
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