Calgary Herald

Arts group pulls plug after federal funding blow

Lawren Harris helped found cultural body

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A cultural group founded by artists including Group of Seven member Lawren Harris is suspending operations after 67 years, a victim of federal spending cuts.

The Canadian Conference of the Arts, the largest national alliance of the arts, culture and heritage sector, said Tuesday it will start winding down its work immediatel­y.

The group was warned 18 months ago that the Harper government in- tended to end 47 years of funding.

It asked for two years of transition­al financing while it weaned itself off public money, but was offered only six months of support.

The group said it found a lot of private support, but its board decided it couldn’t make the shift in six months and decided to shut down immediatel­y.

Conference chair Kathleen Sharpe said the organizati­on made a concerted effort, but fell short.

“Despite our best efforts, transition­al support of six months was not enough and we have simply run out of time to develop new revenue streams,” Sharpe said in a statement.

A spokesman for Heri- tage Minister James Moore said the conference got 60 per cent of its money from the federal treasury, including this year.

“Funding was provided to give the council the opportunit­y to work with individual­s and groups it claims as its stakeholde­rs to develop a new mandate and funding model,” Sebastien Gariepy said in an email.

“Our government has delivered unpreceden­ted levels of support to the arts. We will continue to invest in affordable, effective programs that support culture in Canada.”

Alain Pineau, the national director of the conference, posted a farewell message on the group’s website. “This was not the way I was hoping to end my time with the CCA,” he said. “But I leave knowing that all of us at the secretaria­t have given everything we had to make this transition a success. “I can only hope that someone else will pick up the challenge. The Canadian cultural sector needs and deserves a CCA if it is to be effective and thrive.”

The conference was founded in 1945 to promote the interests of artists and the cultural sector at the federal level.

Pineau said the organizati­on will be suspended in the hope that someone can eventually resuscitat­e it.

“We concluded that the best we could do in the circumstan­ces would be to leave the organizati­on in order, in a suspended state, in the hopes that a group ready to take on the challenge of relaunchin­g this unparallel­ed instrument in the arts, culture and heritage sector would emerge.”

 ?? Canadian Press/files ?? Old Stump, Lake Superior, by Lawren Harris, who helped to found the Canadian Conference of the Arts.
Canadian Press/files Old Stump, Lake Superior, by Lawren Harris, who helped to found the Canadian Conference of the Arts.

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