Western Morning News

Festival founder hits out after missing out on arts funding

- WMN REPORTER wmnnewsdes­k@westernmor­ningnews.co.uk

AFESTIVAL has criticised the way the Government’s £1.6 billion Culture Recovery Fund has been allocated. The Sea Change Festival in Devon, which would have celebrated its fifth year this summer, applied for a grant of around £92,000, but was knocked back.

On Monday, the Government announced the arts organisati­ons, from a traditiona­l circus to a museum which served as a location for Downton Abbey, which have been awarded grants of up to £1 million.

Rupert Morrison, founder of the festival, which had to cancel this year’s event, said: “We’re pretty resilient people. We will find a way to come back. But in the short term we have a responsibi­lity to make sure we cover those debts incurred for production costs, especially our marketing and advertisin­g.”

He told the PA news agency: “The decision not to run the event this year was taken away from us. There needs to be culpabilit­y on a government­al level.” Mr Morrison said of the grants: “I do not know who they’ve spoken to. I don’t know what the criteria was. It’s not been clear who gets it and why. And there’s no advice for people like myself who didn’t get it.”

He criticised the way the funding, allocated by Arts Council England, was promoted. “If you look across the hashtag (Hereforcul­ture) for who received the funding, it’s the same copy, the same imagery. DCMS (Department for Digital, Culture, Media & Sport) have been tagged in everything. It’s the same line...”

An Arts Council spokeswoma­n said that, despite the suggestion made by some on social media, it would not have withheld money should applicants be unable to do publicity or social media activity about the grants.

She said: “Part of the Arts Council’s remit is to champion and advocate for public investment in arts and culture, and the positive impact that publicly-funded arts and culture has on people’s lives. An important aspect of this advocacy is for grant recipients to acknowledg­e the public funding they’ve received, how they’re using it and the impact it is having on their community.”

Culture Secretary Oliver Dowden said the grants will “allow our theatres, museums, music venues and cultural organisati­ons to survive this crisis and start putting on performanc­es again... This is just the start, with millions of pounds more on the way for cultural organisati­ons of all sizes that still need our help.”

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 ?? Kirsty Burge/Sea Change Festival ?? The Sea Change Festival in 2019. The festival has criticised the way the Government’s £1.6 billion Culture Recovery Fund has been allocated
Kirsty Burge/Sea Change Festival The Sea Change Festival in 2019. The festival has criticised the way the Government’s £1.6 billion Culture Recovery Fund has been allocated

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