Toll roads safer, better-maintained, expert Says

Bruce Campion-Smith
Toronto Star
November 21, 1996

Huge construction and maintenance costs may make tolls inevitable, not only on new highways but on those already in use, a Toronto conference has heard.

While this may not be popular with drivers, there is a side benefit, U.S. toll expert Robert Poole said yesterday.

Toll roads arc generally safer, he told the “Free-Flowing Roads” conference, organized by The Next City magazine.

“We find consistently that there are lower accident rates and better maintenance on roads that are tolled,” he said.

Poole is president of the Los Angeles-based Reason Foundation and has advised governments on transportation and privatization policy.

The reasons for better safety records aren’t clear, he said, but might be attributed to fewer drunk drivers, less traffic or better maintained cars.

“We don’t really know the answer. We just know that when the studies are done carefully, that’s what (they show) – a higher level of safety.”

Toll roads have fewer potholes and are in “better general repair,” Poole said, but they remain a tough sell.

The typical motorist thinks tolls are a “rip-off by someone,” he said.

“People think those roads have already, been paid for. Well, they were paid for once, but paying for their ongoing maintenance and reconstruction is very expensive and it costs more than existing tax sources will make possible.”

As a result, he said, “we’re going to start needing to add tolls to, those roads that need major reconstruction.”

“The money is simply not there without a major increase in the taxes … already, going for highways,” he said.

“The choice is not really the status quo or tolls. The choice is higher taxes or tolls…” but people don’t yet understand that,”

Tolls may a possibility for Metro as it struggles to find money needed to repair hundreds of kilometres of deteriorating roads, said Metro Councillor Scott Cavalier (Scarborough Agincourt),

“Every year there is $38 million worth of projects we should be doing … that we don’t have the money to do,” he said in an interview at the conference.

“I’m out here looking at the alternatives for our public transportation system,” said Cavalier, a member of Metro’s transportation and planning committee.

Posted in Toll roads | Leave a comment

What would happen if regional governments disappeared?

Pamela Blais and Patrick Luciani
The Next City
September 30, 1996
First Opinion: Pamela Blais

Reality check. We need real regional government, not the current patchwork. The city is a single economic unit—one labor market, one production complex, one consumption market. As responsibilities are devolved from higher levels of government and as globalization proceeds apace, our economic fate is evermore tied to cities. Like any company, city regions need a strategy to compete effectively on the world stage. They particularly need a strategy that coordinates major investments across the city region so as to avoid duplication, optimize leverage with other investments and maximize competitive impact.

Flourishing bureaucracy. Some functions are best done at the city-region level, while others are suited to the local level. Moving appropriate functions up to the region can eliminate duplication and significantly decrease the amount and cost of bureaucracy while improving effectiveness. Take economic development departments—the Greater Toronto Area has 29. Why duplicate this function among myriad local municipalities when the real economic growth comes from outside the region anyway—either from incoming investments or from exporting locally produced products and services?

Traffic paralysis. If not properly planned and coordinated with infrastructure investment, urban growth patterns can be simply unsustainable, leading to a virtual seizure of urban transportation systems. The experience of London, England, is instructive. Having abolished regional government during the Thatcher years, traffic now travels at the pace of horse-drawn carriages—not really what is called for with just-in-time delivery and time-based competition. Labour party leader Tony Blair is promising to bring regional government back again if elected.

Eroded quality of life. Watersheds, forests and countryside regenerate our air, supply our water and provide recreational opportunities close to the city. Waterfront trails, parks, bike paths—these kinds of amenities also attract footloose industries and labor. Because natural systems don’t follow municipal boundaries, they will not be protected by the real estate market as urban growth spans outward. A coordinated, regional approach is required for their protection and programming for public use.

Second Opinion: Patrick Luciani

Competition would make municipalities better. We have this silly notion that competition works in business, but not in government. If local governments were forced to compete for our tax dollars, they’d provide better services at lower cost. People could then vote with their feet in choosing where to live. Businesses, too, would invest and bring jobs to communities that provided value.

Regional governments reward inefficiency and discourage innovation by insisting that their component communities “compete on a level playing field.” The reason urban transportation is so inefficient in large cities isn’t lack of cooperation, but lack of competition.

We’d have diversity in government. We have too much government, but too few governments. Public systems work best under a mix of different types of governments instead of a single centralized bureaucracy. We think we need bigger governments to force cooperation in the delivery of services, from tax collection to park maintenance. Instead we need many specialized governments to deliver specialized services, such as Meals on Wheels, the John Howard Society and other knowledgeable nonprofits who run efficient operations that don’t lose sight of their mandate.

Won’t diversity lead to confusion and disorder? Venice, now considered a planner’s dream, grew out of diversity, not out of a greater regional planning board.

We’d save money. Regional governments claim to save money by spreading costs over a larger population and avoiding duplication of services. But there’s no evidence that larger regional governments save anyone any money. If we’ve learned anything over the last 30 years, it’s that big government means more spending, not less.

Citizen participation would flourish. If you don’t believe it, ask the average citizen which level of government takes care of snow clearing, parks and garbage collection. We don’t know because our few governments are too big, too complex and too remote. That destroys participatory democracy. When people feel out of touch with their politicians, cynicism about all politicians grows. What looks messy to planners is really just democracy in action.

Posted in City states | Leave a comment

The Next City Discussion Group, Making art that matters (part 2)

Andrew Coyne
The Next City
September 21, 1996

Letters

  1. Richard C. Millar, Senneville, Quebec, responds: October 19, 1996
  2. Christopher Maule, Ottawa, responds: October 25, 1996
  3. Michael Sturdy, Armstrong, British Columbia, responds: November 1, 1996
  4. Walter Pitman, Toronto, responds: November 7, 1996
  5. Mendelson Joe, Toronto, responds: December 8, 1996
  6. Andrew Coyne replies
  7. Ross Bradsen, Toronto, responds: April 19, 1997



Richard C. Millar, Senneville, Quebec, responds: October 19, 1996

Andrew Coyne really hit the nail on the head.

I buy original art, but I can decide for myself what culture I’ll pay for, and I don’t see why I should support it through my taxes. As a taxpayer working in an export industry, I find the continual whining about support for the arts on CBC particularly galling. It’s driving me to listen full time to National Public Radio, which while subsidised, at least has to earn direct listener support and so reflects listener interests.


Christopher Maule, Ottawa, responds: October 25, 1996

The contributions by Robert Fulford (“The CRTC Comedy Hour”) and Andrew Coyne (“Making art that matters”) on cultural issues make excellent points. However, Coyne may want to reconsider his statement, “There is no public support for state funding of religion.” Religious organizations, as charitable entities, receive preferential tax treatment with respect to donations and real estate. This probably makes religion the industry with the longest record of state support. Given its recent performance in providing educational services to native children, it is by no means clear why it should continue to receive these subsidies.

Interestingly, religion has some parallels with culture in the sense that the benefits of both are difficult to document and assess. For example, some religions offer salvation while it is claimed that culture promotes national unity. The claims of culture are hotly debated, perhaps it is time to visit the subsidies for religion.


Michael Sturdy, Armstrong, British Columbia, responds: November 1, 1996

In “Making art that matters,” the author (and the accompanying illustration) makes the argument that the state, in subsidizing the arts, actually has the effect of diluting our gene pool of talent with mediocrity. Mediocrity is, of course, in the eye of the beholder, but are the artists, critics and curators on the juries of public money any less discriminating than those who administer private arts funds? How does giving an artist a grant make that artist less interested in sharpening his cutting edge than, say, an artist who must drive a cab all night as well? Let the markets present and future decide what is mediocre and what is not, but there can never be “too much” art. The problem here is that there is far less public money for the arts now, not too much. Canadians want the debt paid down, so Darwin must run the art shows for awhile.

I must take exception to Mr. Coyne’s somewhat irrelevant remark that “Spiritual salvation is surely at least as good as art. Yet there is no public support for state funding of religion; its mere suggestion would draw loud protests.” Obviously Mr. Coyne believes in spiritual salvation, but there are a lot of Canadians who resent the fact that there are a lot of empty pews sitting on a lot of valuable real estate that is owned by religious institutions who don’t pay a cent in property taxes even though the state helps them the same as those who do. Water, sewer, garbage collection, street maintenance and so on are services that the state has been giving away gratis for years. Why should churches be exempt? “Loud protests” have created a referendum in Colorado that would cease tax exemption for churches in that state.

Instead of taxing religious institutions, maybe we should make them subsidize the arts. We need more tortured crucifixes, bleeding heart Jesus paintings and weeping statues of the blessed virgin. Spiritual salvation depends on it, so what’s the difference? Churchgoers wouldn’t have to feel like freeloaders, and finally we would have “art that matters.” But hang it in a gallery and patrons would find their way out faster than Mr. Solomon can flag a cab back to the big city.


Walter Pitman, Toronto, responds: November 7, 1996

Mr Coyne’s thesis is that the “subsidization” of the arts by governments and agencies of governments is unfair to those who do not wish to contribute to the arts through their taxes and, more importantly, produces a good deal of art that does not “matter.”

Mr. Coyne opens his article opining the fact that all media coverage of the arts relates to its economic problems and its political correctness. Having identified a problem that artists themselves find irritating, Mr. Coyne then exacerbates the situation by defining the arts almost entirely in economic terms. He sees the arts as essentially “product” – paintings, films and performances. Even on that level he never reveals what differentiates “good” and “bad” art, or what constitutes art that “matters” – only that too much of it is by definition “bad.”

Ironically, he does this at a time when, by his own definition of the “arts,” Canadian artists are receiving accolades as never before from the world beyond our borders. Canadian books, films, musical compositions, performances are winning awards and standing ovations everywhere in French- and English-speaking countries. Judged even by that inadequate definition, in the eyes of the world it appears that we are producing a great deal of art that “matters.”

However, that is only a small part of what the arts and artists are about. Mr. Coyne says little about the real value of the arts to the individual and the community. There is nothing about the arts as a way children develop confidence and can go on to learn languages, mathematics and sciences, as Howard Gardner and his colleagues at Harvard University have demonstrated in important research on “multiple intelligences” that has taken place over the past 10 years. Nor does Mr. Coyne say much about the way the arts are a means by which we, as humans, can express our despair and disappointment in a healing rather than destructive way. Nor does he point out the moments of sheer joy and ecstasy of the moment that the arts, and not just the “professional” arts, bring to individuals and to the community.

The arts may be a “product,” but more important they are a process by which we grow and develop as decent, caring human beings, learning about ourselves and others, reaching understandings about the nature of humankind through artistic explorations of intellectual and spiritual questions that have confronted the species throughout recorded history.

Too much arts by that wider definition – surely not! If, as a result of public support there are paintings to be viewed, performances to be given, films to be seen, these enhance our togetherness as community – no small contribution in these days of technological isolation. But to concentrate on an illusory overabundance of product as an argument to reduce “subsidies” to artists is to miss the point that arts literacy is a universal entrance to civility in daily behaviour and creativity in a host of activities quite beyond what we refer to as the “arts.”

Mr. Coyne laments that “governments pour $3 billion every year into the arts’ upkeep.” The statistics Canada statement of government expenditure, as Mr. Coyne concedes, are related to total “cultural” costs and actually come to $6 billion – nearly $2 billion of which go to broadcasting, nearly $2 billion to support libraries and over a $1 billion for heritage resources including nature and provincial parks, archaeological sites and so on, leaving something less than a billion from all levels of government that could be identified as “subsidy” to artists and arts organizations for the “making of art” – a far cry from the sum of public support that Mr. Coyne assumes that artists are pocketing each year.

Any perusal of the levels of government grants to artists will reveal the fact that they are surprisingly low in value and meagre in number. For every artist receiving a grant, dozens are refused and hundreds never apply at all. Those who do receive assistance normally go through peer evaluation that effectively weeds out the incapable and self-indulgent. The modern democracy that took over the role of noble house, the church and wealthy patron that once made it possible for an artist to survive, has not made it lucrative by any stretch of the imagination.

One could make the argument that the major “subsidizers” of the arts are artists themselves. If one looks at the salaries commensurate with qualifications and experience in most categories of arts workers compared to other categories of workers, that statement reveals a truth that should concern us when they are also asked to justify the minimal response to their needs of governments at every level.

Mr. Coyne refuses to accept any difference between “making widgets” and making arts. He states, “I’ll believe that art is not like widgets in this sense, the day that artists refuse payment.” Well, Mr. Coyne, artists are imposed upon by nearly every charitable organization in the country to give performances, appear on television, provide a piece of art and do, indeed, refuse payment – not an expectation of “widget-makers.” As well, hopefully like “widget-makers,” they often give a donation to the cause as well.

“In Canada, we subsidize everything,” Mr. Coyne complains. That is sheer nonsense. He might begin by talking to the Mirvishes. More importantly, he might contact the directors of hundreds of choirs across the country who receive no “subsidy” and whose hundreds of thousands of choristers perform for nothing. He might also talk to those who participate in countless numbers of multicultural activities – dance, drama, visual arts, music – only a fraction of which receive any public support and do give performances for no remuneration whatsoever. He might interview the thousands of craftsmen and women, not one per cent of whom receive any public “subsidization.” And that would be only a beginning in any search to find artistic activities that receive little or no public support in Canada. If as a result of a government program with all the checks and balances stated above, an artist with revealed talent can receive necessary training, have time to write and not draw a paycheque for a few months, go into the classroom of a school in a less well-to-do neighbourhood, travel to a remote part of the province to bring joy where public performances are a rarity, allow a theatre company to experiment at the edge of dramatic art, encourage a composer to write a piece of music that expresses a Canadian commitment; it does not seem a waste of public money. No one would suggest that tax resources be poured out to fund the whim of any person who calls him or herself an artist, but we are light years away from that situation in Canada.

Mr. Coyne’s preoccupation with numbers of artists is quite bizarre. In a nation of nearly 30 million people it does not seem inappropriate to have 4000 writers any more than perhaps 40,000 truck drivers and 400,000 salespersons once one recognizes the educational and human developmental role of the artist. In the matter of assigning human resources, I am more concerned with the army of individuals whose only role is that of manipulating the global financial infrastructure, creating nothing but vast profits for the few and destabilizing the economy that must support the many. Mr. Coyne’s lumping of architects with dancers and sundry others to form 200,000 full-time artists does not seem out of line with the numbers of artists found in other countries and is of no significance unless one regards the artist as a socially destructive individual whose overabundance in numbers will undermine the health of the nation.

In that context he might have admitted that virtually every country in the western world (and eastern, for that matter) makes a contribution to their arts and artists. To mention only a few countries for which comparisons are appropriate – France, Germany, the United Kingdom all “subsidize” the arts more generously than Canada. Even that bastion of free enterprise with whom we share the continent “subsidizes” the arts through the National Endowment for the Arts, state arts councils and countless municipal agencies even though there are concentrations of corporate and foundation wealth providing support to the arts many times per capita in excess of what arts organizations can find in Canada. To end the “subsidization” of the arts would certainly make Canada unique in a way that few Canadians would appreciate.

I make that statement with support from a document published by the Ontario Arts Council in 1995. When Ontarians were questioned, 79% said that the arts were important to the quality of their lives, 67% said that they would miss the arts if there were none available in their communities, 87% agreed that if their community lost its art activities, people living there would lose something of value, 92% felt that arts activities helped to enrich the quality of our lives and 88% believed that it is important for the quality of life in their community to have arts facilities such as art galleries and theatres. To say that these numbers point out that the arts could be self-sustaining is to suggest arts deprivation for many whose lives would be that much less meaningful, particularly children and young people. It makes no sense in this or the next city.

Why are the developed (and developing) nations supporting the arts – besides the obvious reasons of encouraging the economic advantage of having people employed, drawing millions of tourists to spend money in their country, having artistic product to export abroad? Could it be because of the importance of having a citizenry that is creative, imaginative, reflective and intelligent? Is it not the same reason we “subsidize” a public schooling system and publicly support colleges and universities? (I suggest this example is a better one than Mr. Coyne’s identification of churches as institutions, which do not receive “subsidy” even though they do good works for the very reason that he is wrong. Churches do not pay property taxes. Surely a more effective “subsidy” could not be given and it is one that arts institutions would covet. As well, charitable status for givings from its members is a form of “subsidy,” as it is for “good works” organizations of all kinds.)

We pay taxes to support public schools, even if we have no children, because it is in our interest to have young people graduate with knowledge and skill rather than wander the world uneducated and incapable of making any contribution to the community. The crudely put adage “If you think education is expensive, try ignorance” could be paraphrased for the arts . . . with compelling justification.

If we can stop thinking of the arts as simply commercial product and understand it as part of the process by which the intellectual and spiritual life of the community can be enhanced, the arts become a part of the “commons,” as much as transportation and communication infrastructures that are paid for by all, used by some more than others and are the basis of a modern civilized community.

It would clarify the discussion if we could replace the loaded word “subsidy” with a more positive term “investment.” It is surely an argument that the enormous “subsidies” given to business and industry (tax write-offs, grants for training and retraining, assistance for exploration, indeed countless forms of aid that make grants to artists pale to insignificance) are really investment in job creation. The arts, as Mr. Coyne concedes by his listing of the explosion of work in areas served by the arts and artists in the last quarter century, can make the same argument but can in fact make a better one: Dollars to arts and artists create more jobs than comparative support provided to the private industrial sector – by a large measure.

The fact is that a modern industrial state, and now the post-industrial information economy operates on a system of interdependence, with transfers of public money to assist both the private and voluntary sectors that support functions that all of us need in order to live abundantly, or live at all. It is this interaction that assures a civilized supportive community – rather than a mean-spirited, embattled collective life that spirals down to violence and anarchy.

Are there examples of “subsidies” that undermine society and cannot be perceived as investments in social health? Certainly! If, as a result of giving the forests to corporations, we find that our trees are cut down and not replaced, that “subsidy” is an outrage. If as a result of corporate power and government subservience, the nuclear industry not only puts people at risk but saddles generations with enormous debt and a costly and unreliable energy source, that indeed is a foolish “subsidy.” If as a result of overly generous support for a private sector that allows it to off-load its costs on the public purse, avoid appropriate taxation, ignore environmental limits and at the same time garner monstrous profits, something is wrong with such subsidization, particularly when we wake up 20 years later to discover the poor a good deal poorer and the rich a great deal richer both between countries and within national boundaries. That means that people suffer as a result of those “subsidies” – children starve, are homeless, sick and uneducated. That is “bad” investment and we know it.

The arts are very different. Growth in aesthetic appreciation, intellectual command and an understanding of others is growth that does not pollute or threaten the life of future generations.

In the insert in which Mr. Coyne disparages the role that nationalism plays in the lives of ordinary people thereby undercutting any argument for supporting the arts as a patriotic duty. In so arguing, he reveals his commitment to a global economy that will continue to impoverish many while making a small number of the corporate and financial élite with little commitment to any community incredibly wealthy. He is quite right in identifying and dismissing this nationalistic role of the arts in bolstering his argument. He is also in a small minority of opinion – some 4 per cent. The above-mentioned report on the attitudes of Ontarians indicates that 96 per cent agree that “the success of Canadian artists gives a sense of pride in Canadian achievement.” Globalization may be to the economic advantage of some elements of the economy, but as jobs disappear to low-wage countries we are discovering that national governments are the only protection we have to rescue the social programs that have been the triumph of the 20th century. More than ever before, people are realizing that a sense of belonging is an aspect of their quality of life. It is also the case that local economic development may be the salvation for young people faced with less expectation of a job than those of previous generations. Many of these enterprises will involve the arts.

The identification of national and provincial deficits as a danger signal has been necessary, but to unravel generations of social development in order to achieve a quick fix has been the lunacy of the ’90s. It was not “subsidies” to the arts and social services that created the deficit as much as it has been the “subsidy” of undertaxing the corporate sector and fiscal policies that have increased its power and profits on a global scale. It is the ultimate irony that the strategies that are now in place to reduce the deficit and achieve a balanced budget are further damaging the very people who were impoverished by the policies that produced the deficit in the first place.

The sustainable next city will have to be very different to the urban context we now enjoy. However, it will be congenial to a large extent on the basis of the accessibility of the arts to every child and adult within its boundaries. Artists themselves will make the art that “matters” and thereby create a society that nurtures creativity, imagination, wonder, awe and compassion – as well as prepare young people to contribute to the new economy that requires flexibility, ability to work in teams, communication skills and a host of other attributes. The small amount of investment that Canada now makes in the arts simply makes that solution more possible.

If as a result, our generation leaves something of beauty, of social and spiritual analysis and inspiration that will assist following generations to cope with the momentous challenges they must face, then government investment in the arts is surely the most effective use of tax resources that could be imagined.


Mendelson Joe, Toronto, responds: December 8, 1996

The bludgeoning anti-art diatribe painted by linear wordsmith Andrew Coyne is so damn logical and earnest it would take a master of debate like Moses Znaimer to neutralize Coyne’s foul wind.

As a primitive painter, I can only respond to Coyne’s pyramid of reason by saying art is essentially unreasonable, illogical and alinear. And, yes, Van Gogh produced his work with only one known sale, but somebody somewhere helped him survive long enough to create the magic many humans today acknowledge and savor a hundred years after his death.

As for taxpayer funding of the arts, I’m the first to denounce the fact that many individuals who receive grants are shams and shameless gluttons. No affluent person should be eligible for an individual arts grant nor should a part-timer be eligible. Nevertheless, I contend that economically-challenged (poor), full-time, committed (self-employed at his/her art for at least five consecutive years) artists deserve government support because, as Van Gogh and countless others have shown us, artists do live difficult existences, and the products of their struggles often go unrecognized for decades after their passing. I suppose I’m saying all humans deserve basic survival needs, especially those who dare to actively and methodically produce work that seems useless and even more especially, in a society that is essentially wealthy like ours despite the growing gulf between those with electric fences and those with no dinner.

No matter who produces art, whether it’s a six-year-old playing with crayons or the players in a rural village theatre group, the pursuit of ideas and imagination promotes the possibility of a world where humans might rise above pragmatic linear thought in celebration of all that is illogical like love or meteor showers or hot fruit pie.

Linear thinkers are clearly good for solving profound messes we humans create for ourselves. I’m speaking about those wizards who attempt to correct man’s big booboos such as the proliferation of nuclear power to name one very big booboo.

But then there are those linear champions like Mr. Coyne who appear to function as highly articulate warts on the backside of cynicism; Coyne lives to dull any dreams that are not imminently profitable.

So, though there are too many artists in Andrew Coyne’s Canada, I’d much prefer artists at large to cold-blooded bean-counters who would downsize a poem if it was not cost-effective.

The title “Making art that matters” is by definition a broad slight upon the spirit that inevitably inspires humans to create impractical manifestations which we term “art.” Everyone knows subsidies are essential to keep a ballet on its toes. (It’s simply not the same as hockey, Mr. Coyne.) My brain and experience tell me that in a civilized society, governments will always have to accept that the arts require special care and late night feedings, so imagination flourishes over thuggery and greed.


Andrew Coyne replies

I am grateful to Mr. Pitman for his lengthy reply. I only wish there were more in it that addressed itself to the argument I made.

To recap: I argued that it is a mistake to equate support for the arts with state support of the arts. If people want to support the arts they can; if they don’t, there doesn’t seem much point in forcing them to. There is nothing to prevent them from doing so, as in the case of “public goods,” and no evidence from history that the art that people paid for themselves was any worse than the art that was bought with other people’s money.

Indeed, if anything, we should expect to find the reverse. A work of art is not a thing of which we can never have too much (I quote again Mr. Pitman’s own esthetic credo: “The more art there is, the better it is”). It is a relationship, between the artist and his audience. That relationship, I argue, begins not with the finished product, but with the decision to create it, a decision that is inevitably tied up in how it is paid for (indeed, that is the whole case for subsidy). To the extent that it places itself between the artist and the audience, state support dulls the sense of obligation each ought to feel to the other, and to art.

The esthetic experience is necessarily personal; so, too, should be decisions about funding. That’s an artistic argument, but it remains also a statement about a civil society and the grounds on which we are entitled to demand that others pay for our pleasures. The undoubted merits of a particular work of art, or of art itself, are not sufficient in themselves to make the case for state support; if we’re going to take other people’s money to pay for something, no matter how wonderful it may be, we are obliged to show why we cannot pay for it ourselves.

What, then, is the substance of Mr. Pitman’s reply? I list his main arguments in order of appearance: The arts are good; It’s not that much money; Everybody else does it; The arts are good; People love the arts; Other things are subsidized; and of course, The arts are good. How do any of these make the case for state support — as opposed to support — for the arts?

I am alive to art’s potential use “as a way children develop confidence,” its value as a means of expressing “despair and disappointment,” not to say the “sheer joy and ecstasy of the moment” and the rest of art’s many sublime delights. I am just not clear how any of this applies to people who do not ever come into contact with the arts, nor wish to. And if they do not in fact have any direct experience of these pleasures, why should they have to pay the same as those who do? Mr. Pitman may believe it is enough to “enhance our togetherness as a community” that “there are paintings to be viewed, performances to be given, films to be seen,” but I cannot help thinking it is probably at least as important that those films actually are seen — and that subsidy makes this less likely, not more.

We can argue, then, the precise amounts that governments contribute to the production of art, but whether it’s $3 billion a year or $1 billion or $1, it’s money ill spent — and money that is unavailable to other causes for which the case for subsidy is better established. It is not, in the same vein, an argument for subsidy that artists get so little of it if they should not be getting any of it — especially as they seem so willing to work without it. But certainly the availability of subsidy has helped fuel the rapid expansion of those seeking work — and funding — as artists and, thus, has necessarily left each having to make do with less.

Mr. Pitman’s other arguments are equally baffling. That other countries subsidize the arts does not make it right; that other things are subsidized in Canada, on the other hand, may be either right or wrong. Where it is wrong, as in subsidies to nuclear power, it hardly makes subsidizing the arts any more right. Where it is right, as in public education, it is for reasons that are not present in respect of the arts. We do not, as Mr. Pitman fancies, pay for public education “because it is in our interest to have young people graduate with knowledge and skill.” Our interest in those young graduates’ skills is fully discharged by the salary that we pay them. We subsidize public education in order to ensure that children from poor families can go to school, and if we were wise we would subsidize the families rather than the schools. Possibly those children will study the arts at school and, so, encounter art’s civilizing mission. Wonderful. That is a very different matter than picking up half the tab for the carriage trade’s nights at the opera.

Mr. Pitman seems incapable of distinguishing between a good whose benefits are largely restricted to those who consume it directly, and which can therefore be paid for privately, and those whose benefits are diffused over the community at large, and which can therefore only be paid for collectively. If he likes a thing, it is simply deemed to be of benefit to the community. About the only place he succeeds in conjuring a collective benefit from the arts, a benefit enjoyed just as much by those who do not attend the arts as by those who do, is in the matter of national pride. This is indeed an argument for state involvement in archiving extant works: the National Gallery of Canada, for example. A collection of the finest art that a society has produced may well be the object of national pride; as such, it may be something people would be willing to pay for, whether or not they actually visited the place.

This is to be distinguished from the usual business of subsidy, which is directed to supporting artistic creation. The celebration of works on which there is already a high degree of consensus is more likely to generate a collective benefit, or “positive externality,” than the commissioning of new works on which tastes may differ violently. By the same token, the culture that arises from the accretion of individual judgments and individual sacrifices seems more likely to inspire national pride than the subsidized offspring of closeted peer juries.

But to repeat: The problem of subsidy is independent of the quality of the work produced. I do have concerns about the kind of art produced in a cultural milieu that is so firmly rooted in contempt for the audience. But even if state support produced nothing but Shakespeare and Molière, there are larger questions afoot than just: What does it mean for art? We must also ask: What does it mean for society? On what grounds, in a liberal democracy, are we justified in reaching into our neighbor’s pocket? It is not enough to argue the means by reference only to the ends.

The palace of Versailles is a magnificent artistic achievement. It probably could not have been done in a democracy. It does not make the case for absolute monarchy.


Ross Bradsen, Toronto, responds: April 19, 1997

My company is in the product development business. We take ideas and turn them into salable products. The process is as much art as it is science. Just as a sculptor takes an amorphous lump of clay, we take a variety of materials, manufacturing processes, and information (market research, costings, and so on) and “mold” them into a product that we hope will be the correct mix of benefits for a sufficient number of consumers to be willing to pay hard cash for.

Often the mix is not quite right, and we have to revise the design at our cost to better meet the consumer need or changing market dynamics. This process is creative, artistic, visionary, and, dare I say it, a darn sight more difficult to achieve given the myriad of real life practical constraints (sourcing, costing, regulations, collective decision making, and so on) than an artist has in creating a work that really only needs to meet his own standards. Not only this, but a business that has “created” a product or service must then go through the rigorous, time consuming, and costly process of making their offerings known to their customers and then forcing sales closure.

The definition of art is the creative application of skills. People in business do it every day. The difference is purely economic: Business artists are commissioned, others are not. If an artist wants to make a living, then he must do what the rest of us do (either collectively as a company or as a solo entrepreneur), do the research, create what people are willing to pay for, create awareness, generate a sale.

It is a tragedy that Van Gogh was not recognized during his lifetime. Sad though this may be, people at that time did not find his work sufficiently inspiring to pay good money for. If an artist’s work is good enough, and it is marketed properly, we will buy his product. Don’t ask me to subsidize an artist who does not have the drive, education, and general wherewithal to make it happen.

We are all artistic in our own fields. The tragedy is that the traditional artist wants no part of business and businesses fail to utilize the very skills that will turn their me-too products and services into unique and valuable entities.

Posted in Culture | Leave a comment

The Next City Discussion Group – Making art that matters(Part 1)

Andrew Coyne
The Next City
September 21, 1996

Cultural subsidies don’t produce art. They just produce more

“WE WORK IN THE DARK,” HENRY JAMES WROTE IN The Middle Years, “we do what we can — we give what we have. Our doubt is our passion and our passion is our task. The rest is the madness of art.”

We make art because we can, or rather because we are. Granted creation, we cannot but create; forbidden to know the meaning of our existence, we seek it or scorn it in art. “All art is a revolt against man’s fate,” wrote André Malraux. “Each of the masterpieces is a purification of the world, but their common message is that of their existence and the victory of each individual artist over his servitude. . . .” Art is the revelation of truth in man’s surroundings. It is the discovery of God.

Madness, passion, doubt, task, give, do, work. You may search in vain to hear art spoken of in such terms in Canada. In fact, it is hard to find much discussion about the arts, per se, at all. Read the arts section of any metropolitan newspaper on any given day. Mostly, it is about politics: whose grants were cut, which arts-lobbying group wants what and what the minister of culture says about it all. It is about gender representation, voice appropriation and cultural sovereignty. Or else it is about economics: tax writeoffs and union rules, ownership controls and content regulations or, the rationale du jour, culture’s contribution to employment. The one thing it is almost never about is art.

All of this transpires in the usual deathwatch tones that accompany all discussions of Canadian culture. The slightest setback for any section of what have come to be called “the cultural industries” sets off a great collective keening in the nation’s press, a kind of ritual theatre in which the same lament is endlessly repeated: Canadian culture is dying, defeated, doomed, and all for the want of a few government dollars. “For the last two decades, Canadian culture has been obsessed with its own death,” Robert Fulford has written. “This melodramatic approach keeps cultural bureaucrats and politicians alert, and, for journalists, has the further advantage of being easy to report. Editors (perhaps readers, too) may respond with more interest to a piece about the Canada Council’s dwindling budget than to an essay explaining the power of Mavis Gallant’s new book.”

It is especially easy when the reportage amounts to writing exactly the same thing every day. Most arts reporters consider it the whole of their duty to instil in the anxious reader the proper attitude to state support of the arts. They set themselves to this task with devotion, if not enthusiasm. The formula never varies. Nor is it necessary to give space to the other side, or even to acknowledge that one might exist. One might as well suggest presenting the other side of an airline safety demonstration. And yet, it must exist, somewhere, for why else this edgy insistence?

Throughout this perpetual dirge, governments pour more than $3 billion every year into the arts’ upkeep ($6 billion, counting, as Statistics Canada does, libraries, galleries and national parks). The money funds more than expensive or high arts like opera, the traditional recipients of subsidy abroad. In Canada, we subsidize everything. Movies, theatre, television; painting, sculpture; music, dance; books, magazines, even the odd newspaper — all of it. We subsidize rock groups.

Consider the publishing industry. An author might receive a subsidy to write a book; the publisher a subsidy to put it out. The book will pass through subsidized distributors to subsidized bookstores (until lately, by subsidized mail), whereupon it will be reviewed in subsidized magazines, perhaps eventually to be the subject of subsidized academic research. And many more people will receive subsidies to write feelingly of why this circle must continue.

THE NEW, “ECONOMIC” ARGUMENTS TO SUBSIDIZE THE ARTS, cranked out semi-weekly in reports from various sections of the arts bureaucracy and faithfully relayed to us through the press, are not that new. Though franker than usual in arguing for subsidy on the same terms as every other industry — for the jobs created and the income generated, always ignoring the jobs destroyed and income lost in the process — they nevertheless insist that culture not be soiled by exposure to mere commerce. For as much as those in the arts proclaim culture to be above economics invariably rely on economics.

In mocking their attempts, the economist and art-lover William Grampp, in his wonderful 1989 critique, Pricing the Priceless: Art, Artists and Economics, summarizes their case this way: “Art costs more and is worth more than the public at large is willing to pay for it. Because of its cost, it is unable to support itself, and because of what it is worth, it should not be asked to support itself.” That, stripped of the bad-tempered rhetoric, is more or less the gist of every argument for arts subsidies. It is understandable that their advocates should know nothing about economics; what is more distressing is how little they seem to know, or care about, art.

Of course art is not the same as widgets, in the sense that it yields its own particular sort of satisfaction. Art making still involves costs to be incurred, prices to be paid and competing wants to be resolved. I’ll believe that art is not like widgets in this sense, the day artists refuse payment for their work, together with the gaggle of hucksters, middlemen and bureaucrats who dwell in the ever widening gulf between artist and audience. It is one thing to say every civilized person should support art. It is quite another to say that such support must be expressed through the state.

Sometimes state subsidies are justified. But this has to be demonstrated, not asserted by reciting endless variations on the theme that Art Is Good. Lots of things are good, but not all of them are publicly funded. Spiritual salvation is surely at least as good as art. Yet there is no public support for state funding of religion; its mere suggestion would draw loud protests. The church endures all the same.

With no single, universally agreed path to salvation, the church was disestablished. There is also no single, universally agreed standard of esthetic value. That does not mean there is no such thing as artistic merit, any more than there is no such thing as religious truth, only that no one view can claim unchallenged possession of it. If a man does not care for art, we are entitled to despise him as a boor. We are not entitled to take his money. And if we do take his money, we might at least give him a good reason.

Public spending is sensible for “public goods” (or services): goods we all enjoy, but for which individual consumers cannot be charged. Where pricing is possible and the good is in sufficient demand, private providers will supply it. But where enough people can enjoy a good or service without paying for it, too little of the good will be provided, since some will choose not to pay in the belief that others will. Whenever those who do not pay for a public good benefit from it, collecting payment by taxation is justifiable.

In the arts, these conditions rarely apply. Consumers can almost always be charged, whether for a painting or a book, a live performance or a recording. If subsidy proponents think in these terms at all, they have a hard time explaining why those who do not care for the arts should pay for the enjoyment of those who do.

Even if a benefit to the uncultured might be conjectured — if they do not appreciate the arts now, perhaps they will in time — it encounters the uncomfortable fact that the uncultured do not share in the conjecture. At which point the case for subsidy looks alarmingly like a case for theft. Sometimes this case for subsidies is bravely defended as paternalism toward the artist. Bravely, and wrongly. If a group of high-minded citizens sponsors artistic works with its own money for the benefit of the unenlightened, that is paternalism. Art subsidies, rather, tend to take money from the unenlightened for the benefit of the high minded.

Artists for PropagandaThere is another, entirely separable argument for state support of the arts, especially in the mass media. Here, the fear is not so much that the public, left to itself, would fail to support the arts, but that it might fail to support Canadian art. The wrong kind of art is in this case not necessarily inferior — indeed it is frequently acknowledged to be superior — but foreign.

For the cultural nationalist, a nation’s culture is not an organic necessity, the product of its citizens’ natural human urge to create: It is a thing forever threatened with extinction, imperilled less by the ignorance or indifference of the art-going public than by its cosmopolitanism. The task of government becomes to ensure, by a range of protectionist measures, that arts supporters direct their patronage to Canadian artists and their works.

For the most part, the desirability of such protection is considered self-evident, at least to those in the mass media. But what do we hope to achieve by it? In particular, is its purpose artistic or political? As a matter of art: Whether Canadian artists make Canadian art for Canadian audiences, or whether Canadians choose to view foreign art, while their own artists venture abroad, is a point of supreme esthetic indifference. Esthetics is concerned with quality, not nationality.

No, the purpose is entirely, often avowedly, political. Cultural nationalism is not about culture; it is about nationalism. If Canadian artists produce works of Canadian art, and if Canadians see their works — if we “tell ourselves our own stories” — we will create a shared national consciousness. In particular, this will emphasize how different we are from other peoples, and (by inference, or at any rate by default) how much we have in common. Art will define the nation as a distinct cultural entity, and so will justify the existence of the state: the same state, as it happens, that sponsored the art.

It is easy to see why politicians should find this bit of philistinism so appealing. Less clear is why so many artists are so eager to be co-opted. Two generations of Canadians have been told that the purpose of art is to create national feeling, and two generations of Canadian artists have gladly enlisted in this endeavour. As art, the results have been about as dire as one might predict. (While it has not been unknown for great art to further the agenda of its patrons in the past, the passion of Christ makes a better subject for propaganda than Canada’s Unique Cultural Identity.) Yet, even as a political strategy, it must be pronounced a failure: After 60 years of the CBC, 40 years of the Canada Council, 30 years of Canadian content, we are more divided than ever.

There is something faintly ludicrous in the idea that art is all that stands between us and annexation. Even if nationhood were rooted in difference, if such cultural distinctions are so great as to constitute an argument for nationhood, they are presumably not also so trivial as to fall away in the face of a few imported magazines. But suppose these differences were to disappear. Why precisely would this be objectionable? Foreign culture only represents a threat so far as it prevents Canadians from discovering their real culture. It is only inadequate as an expression of Canadian beliefs and values so long as it remains alien to them. But if these vital differences disappeared, these objections would no longer hold. The very process of assimilation is its own defence.

That is, unless nationhood is an end in itself: Perhaps it is not that we want to be a nation because we’re different, but that we want to be different in order to buttress our claims to nationhood. But if that is the case, if difference is merely a ploy to justify a claim to nationhood that in fact springs from other sources, then defending our cultural sovereignty is less necessary still. Where before it was merely pointless — the claim to nationhood would have disappeared along with our distinctiveness — in this case it is entirely irrelevant: The nation does not depend upon cultural difference for its existence. Either it has some other, more substantial claim — as I believe it does — or it has none.

Or perhaps we merely wish to preserve our differences, just for the sake of being different. I see no virtue in difference as an end in itself, but perhaps others might. Regardless, I fail to see where the argument for cultural protectionism fits in all this. If foreign art, being foreign, cannot speak to us in the same way as domestic art, then Canadians’ cultural choices will presumably reflect these innate differences, without need of government steering. The only kind of art that would need protection — protection, that is, from the choices of Canadians — would be works that were so determinedly irredentist as to articulate a difference that did not exist.

Few cultural nationalists would insist that art should invent cultural differences that aren’t there. Rather, the argument has come to rely, almost exclusively, on an idea borrowed from the dismal science, economies of scale. Canadians are different, the argument runs, and would naturally choose works of art that spoke to those differences, in preference to the alien art that comes to us from south of the border. But they are not presented with such a choice, or not on equal terms, because of the immense scale economies available to producers of American art, who may thus undercut Canadian producers. Students of economics will recognize this as the “infant industry” case for protection.

As a matter of economics, it is shaky enough: Assuming the case for supporting the arts, were accepted, there are better ways than protection, notably direct subsidy. But even in cultural terms, it collapses under the weight of its own internal contradictions. Again: either we are different from the Americans in some fundamental way, or we are not. If we are, price comparisons are irrelevant. Canadian culture and American culture are not, under this assumption, substitutes, interchangeable with each other, but wholly unrelated articles. One might as well complain that pencils were being underpriced by paperclips. If, on the other hand, we are not all that different, if Canadian and American artists are each as likely to have something to say to us as the other — if, in short, artistic truth is universal — then our artists have the same economies of scale as theirs: for just as American producers would find willing buyers among Canadians, so would our cultural output find a ready market in the United States.

The arguments of the cultural nationalists would be hazy enough, even if anyone could define, in any meaningful way, what was Canadian and what was foreign art. Does the producer of a movie have to be Canadian? What about the director? The writer? The stars? The location? What if all of these were Canadian, but the movie was about a bunch of Americans? And what does it mean to say, even, that the director is Canadian? Is that on the basis of birthplace? Citizenship? Residence? There is no way of getting around this conundrum, which is why we have been treated in recent years to the periodic spectacle of various government bodies declaring, after much complex calculation, that Bryan Adams is not Canadian, but that Seagram’s (New York) is.

So we will protect what no one can define, with results no one can discern, for reasons no one can describe. A potted definition of cultural nationalism: the unreadable in pursuit of the ineffable.

WHEN I SAY THAT NOT ENOUGH OF SOMETHING MIGHT BE PROVIDED, I mean not as much as people would be willing to buy. When people in the cultural industries fret that, in the absence of subsidy, not enough art would be created, they mean any amount less than created now. This is implicit in subsidy arguments celebrating the large subsidy-driven expansion in Canadian artistic activity. That we are invited to bemoan the corollary — less subsidy, less art — reveals the essentially philistine premise that lurks within: More art is better art. Do I exaggerate? Listen to Walter Pitman, former chairman of the Ontario Arts Council: “The more art there is, the better it is.”

The results of this quantitative theory of esthetics are all around us: what Jacques Barzun has decried as the “glut of art.” The author and critic John Metcalf, in his scalding attack on literary subsidies, Freedom from Culture, noted the 4,000 professional writers registered with the Public Lending Right Commission in this country. Four thousand! Balzac lamented the 2,000 painters in 19th-century Paris, but 4,000 Canadian writers. . . .

It gets worse. The 1991 census shows 670,000 Canadians consider themselves employed in the cultural sectors. Of these, 348,160 reported a “cultural occupation” as their primary employment. That’s as of 1991. Since 1981, the cultural labor force has been growing more than twice as fast as the general work force, roughly three per cent per year. The census data included 11,815 architects, 11,450 painters and sculptors, about 30,000 designers, 28,715 illustrators, 12,330 photographers and camera operators, 15,165 producers and directors, 11,650 musicians and singers, 1,635 composers, conductors and arrangers, 1,445 dancers and choreographers, 4,125 actors, 26,670 fine arts teachers and fully 41,550 writers and editors. By any reasonable definition, then, Canada now has close to 200,000 full-time professional artists — 200,000 people trying to make a living, let alone a reputation as artists, and more joining them all the time. (An ominous portent: More than 50,000 Canadians in 1992 reported taking acting lessons in the previous year.)

They can’t, of course. But they are sustained in the illusion by the continual ingestion of grants from up to four different levels of government. Canada’s performing arts organizations, in particular, rely on the state for one-third to one-half of their revenues. Even the theatre, arguably the most commercial of the performing arts, earned little more from ticket sales ($70 million, in 1992-93) than from grants ($62 million). Every year, the state pours roughly $50 million into the production of painting and sculpture, $190 million into literature, $320 million into the performing arts, $330 million into film, video and sound recording, and $1.7 billion into radio and television broadcasting — not counting the millions more extorted from private broadcasters as a condition of licence. The Canada Council, with a budget of around $100 million, had a client list in 1992-93 that included, in addition to 36 orchestras, 160 publishers, 37 dance companies, 65 film and video producers, and some 100 magazines, more than two dozen arts service organizations — the Writers Union of Canada, the League of Canadian Poets, the Association of Canadian Women Composers, and so on — groups that exist mainly to lobby government for more support.

As Barzun notes, “an oversupply of art does not lower prices or cause the artist to ‘give up the business.’ It only augments the need for subsidies. . . . We can pay farmers not to grow crops, but we cannot pay artists to stop making art.” The swollen ranks of the subsidized don’t just deplete the share of public funds available to each: Critical standards are inevitably drawn down to accommodate them all.

It smarts to think that so much effort and resources, so much well-meaning and “creativity” has been wasted. But almost all the art that has ever been created — at a guess, 95 per cent — in all times and all places, is so much surplus tissue: gone, forgotten, and deservedly so. Mediocrity is the great constant of human existence.

That many people would need to abandon their chosen careers without the taxes of others is perhaps unfortunate. It is not in itself an argument for subsidy: Not everyone who wants to be an artist should be. The pitiless truth is that most people aren’t very good at their jobs, including prime ministers, journalists and artists. Whether or not one goes so far as to say, with Metcalf, that less art would be better art — “above all,” said Degas, “we must discourage the arts” — it is certainly not true that more art is better art. More art is more art.

Without subsidy, says a more sophisticated variant of the case, the art created would be of the wrong kind — mass market, lowest common denominator, McCulture, name your cliche: all Phantom, all the time. Of course, if popularity defines the wrong kind, this is self-evidently true. The assumption — unstated, unexamined, often unconscious — is that popular taste must inevitably fail to appreciate the highest artistic achievements, a sometimes self-serving position firmly rooted in the romantic fallacy: Some great artists died penniless, therefore all penniless artists are great.

Rather than too quickly frame the debate simply as a battle of elite versus popular taste, however, we might first ask why, even if members of the public are such boobs, we should so completely ignore the role of the private patron: one who supports an artist or his work out of a philanthropic concern for artistic excellence or, on the theory that popular taste is not so much low as slow, with a more entrepreneurial eye for art that may, in time, find its audience. The case for the government as patron amounts to saying that state hirelings, spending other people’s money, will do a better job of picking art than private patrons, spending their own. “They tell me we have no literature now in France,” said Louis Napoléon. “I will speak to the Minister of the Interior about it.”

But surely the presumption, if any, should be the reverse: “If I am thinking of buying a painting,” writes Metcalf, “I will look at it with all the intensity, experience and knowledge that I can bring to bear. All my faculties will be sharpened by the prospect of imminently parting with a goodly sum of my own money. If I am buying a painting for you, a friend, on your behalf, it is almost inevitable that I will be slightly less rigorous and less demanding. . . . Consider now what happens when I am buying not one but several paintings. And I am buying them not with my money and not with your money but with that abstraction called ‘public’ money. And I know that all that money must be spent.” Paintings or plays or songs or books: The argument applies with equal force.

What is the evidence for the contrary proposition that left to private choices, art would wither? Subsidy advocates like to reel off the names of artistic greats who were beneficiaries of the state, as if that settled the matter: Leonardo da Vinci, Raphael and Michelangelo; Haydn, Mozart and Wagner; Shakespeare and Molière. This does not get us far: Whoever said they weren’t? Yet proponents of subsidy seem often to imply, if they do not believe it themselves, that no art worth the name could possibly be produced without subsidy. Do I exaggerate again? Critic Paul Goldberger, in the New York Times, summarizes the common view in suitably sweeping tones: “Culture has never been able to support itself,” he writes. “The marketplace has never been a testing ground for artistic validity; history shows few correlations between what is popular enough to pay for itself and what is good enough to last.” Or listen to Ray Conlogue of the Globe and Mail: “Since the Renaissance, memorable art has been subsidized one way or the other.” Similar examples could be culled from the arts section of any major newspaper on any given day.

Very well: Two can play that game. What do Beethoven’s symphonies, Picasso’s paintings and Joyce’s novels have in common? All are recognized masterworks, and all were created without a shilling, or a sou, of state support. (All right: Joyce once received a grant of £75 from the Royal Literary Fund.) The idea that state subsidy was the norm of artistic creation so contradicts historical fact it is difficult to know where to start. Shall we take, I don’t know, the Ds? Dante, Delacroix, Dostoevsky, Dvorák. Or should we play categories — say, French writers of the 19th century? Flaubert, Stendhal, Balzac, Hugo. Not a subsidy in the lot. The state was nowhere part of the rise of the novel, or photography, or film, it had no hand in jazz, blues, folk or country music, or indeed in most of the painting, sculpture, music or poetry that has ever been created: For beyond those produced for sale stretches that immense body of art that belongs to the private or household realm, made neither for the state nor for the market, but solely for the enjoyment of the artist and his immediate circle.

Any honest survey of the past will in fact find every combination, in every field: great artists who were supported by the state, great artists who weren’t; bad artists who were popular favorites, and some just as wretched who were favored by the court; great artists who were shunned and went hungry, great artists who were honored and rich; and of course the numberless mediocrities who lived, worked, died and were instantly forgotten.

Certainly no evidence supports the myth that art, if worthwhile, must inevitably elude an audience: that obscurity is depth, that odium is merit. “The great artist neglected in his own time is largely an unhappy fiction,” writes Michael Lewis in the New Republic. “Most artists smiled upon by history received their due in their day.” Take literature, for starters. The writers of the past we most admire today, from Cervantes and Shakespeare to Balzac, Dickens and Goethe, were not typically the preserve of the select: They were popular favorites in their own time.

Or music. Haydn left the suffocating security of his continental patron for England and the risks of the open market: He was a huge hit. Mozart, too, prospered by his pen between patrons. Forced to retire from a lucrative performing career by the onset of his deafness, Beethoven groused, “I am obliged to live entirely on the profits from my compositions.” But that is exactly what he did. Even opera, the ne plus ultra of art-that-must-be-subsidized, was once a thriving industry: As early as the 17th century, Venice alone had 10 opera houses. In the 18th and 19th centuries, opera occupied the affections of the Italian public as only sports can match today, with rival entrepreneurs competing ferociously for audiences and performers. To be sure, they produced a lot of dreck. They also produced Verdi.

Commercial acumen has been a feature of some of the greatest artists in the Western canon. The summer best-seller in 1532 involved a family of giants in Arthurian times. Impressed by its sales, the then unknown Rabelais stole its cast of characters and ground out a sequel — Pantagruel — to even greater success. Shakespeare not only acted in the plays he wrote, but was an investor in the company, entitled to as much as 14 per cent of the gate. He died a wealthy man, owner of the fanciest house in Stratford-upon-Avon. Reynolds got his first work as a portraitist by cunningly pricing his paintings just below those of his teacher. Wordsworth, author of the chart-topping Lyrical Ballads, served tea to admirers in his home — and charged for it. Rubens was known to add or subtract scenes from his work as his customers preferred. After audiences hissed at the heroine’s plain dress in the first staging of La Traviata, Verdi dressed the cast in the style of the court of Louis XIII, and turned a flop into a hit. Beethoven often sold the same pieces to several publishers. Stravinsky insisted on conducting his own works, so as to avoid splitting the fee. “Get this into your head,” said Renoir. “There’s only one indicator for telling the value of paintings, and that is the sale room.”

The same holds true today. The German art writer Willi Bongard in the 1970s collected and quantified data reflecting expert opinion on contemporary artists — 300 points for each work shown in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, 200 points for a lesser museum like the Stedelijk in Amsterdam; 50 points for a mention in art aktuell, 10 points for Connaissance des Arts, and so on. (Sure, it’s a bit arbitrary, but it’s as good a system as any.) Correlating Bongard’s rankings with the price of a representative piece by each of the artists, Grampp showed “that the price of the work of the principal living artists of the world is consistent with the critical judgment that has been made of them.”

Popular taste as often leads elite taste as follows. The most famous story of a group of artists who were supposedly ahead of their time, the impressionists and post-impressionists, in fact confirms the opposite. While they were indeed spurned by the academy, and though they were at first sustained by a few sympathetic dealers and friends, it was the public that came to their rescue. Indeed, the modern art market coincided with the arrival of the impressionists, or rather with the American collectors, flush with cash and hungry for European art, who devoured them — their prices being cheaper for having been excluded from the salon.

Or look at it another way. It is true that Van Gogh sold only one painting in his lifetime (Cézanne and Renoir were among those who hated his work). It did not seem to prevent him from painting.

STATE PATRONAGE OF THE PAST IN NO WAY COMPARES TO TODAY’S ARTS funding, in its methods, objectives or beneficiaries. It was generally exchanged for a service, whether in the religious or political message the artist’s work propounded or in the pleasure it afforded the patron. It resembled more a commission than a grant: its purpose rooted in the work itself, not in the promotion of the arts in general or the artist’s self-actualization. A dissatisfied patron always had the option of takin his business elsewhere, and often did. The charismatic ideal of the artist, alone with his genius, is a new invention as is the very concept of the arts as distinct from the everyday arts of life. Until the 19th century, arts referred to those things which provided pleasure, whether performed by professionals or amateurs. The ability to join in the conversation in the local tavern was an art, as was building a pleasant and functional cottage.

This humble idea, of art as craft, produced some of the most cherished works of the human hand and mind. Because most citizens participated in the arts, they were qualified to evaluate their worth. Then in the 19th century, writes John Pick, the art historian, “that common sense flew apart. Art separated itself off from crafts, from design, from sport, from pastimes and from entertainment.” It became something professionals did, which only an educated minority could comprehend. Yet the participation of the vulgar public was an element in some of the world’s greatest ages of art. “Renaissance Florence,” New Republic‘s Lewis writes, “was a city financially obsessed. The distinct impression left by the thousands of personal account books is of an entire city perpetually toting up its net worth.” It was also the soil for one of the greatest flowerings of artistic expression. The art historian Richard Goldthwaite credits the Renaissance with the discovery of “things,” along with antiquity, nature, man and the individual. “The venture of Italians into the world of goods . . . marked the first stirring of what today is called consumerism. . . .”

Spurred by a booming mercantile economy, the art market developed at much the same time and in much the same way as the market for other goods, and with the same impulse to conspicuous consumption. Italian businessmen made materialism their religion; the pieces they commissioned for their own aggrandizement were the secular equivalent of the devotional works that graced the local duomo. Sometimes the two worlds overlapped: Florence in the quattrocento boasted more than 600 private chapels, each decorated to taste. Eventually, the first private art collections were formed. “By enshrining these objects in museums,” Goldthwaite argues, “we pay homage to the luxury consumption of the past and thereby reverently celebrate the passion for spending for things that keeps the capitalist system of the West going.”

The same twined flourishing of culture and commerce occurred in 17th-century northern Europe, the extraordinary golden age that gave us Rembrandt, Vermeer, Hals and de Hooch, all painting for private customers. And again, the next century in Britain, where state patronage was all but unknown, yet the market for good writing, good music and good art, coupled with exuberant participation in music, dancing, painting and literature exceeded anything seen before or since.

The arts were vital, the debates fierce, the coffee houses filled. Art was not provided to meet needs perceived by bureaucrats. It was a part of ordinary living, nurtured by the straightforward wants of people. The robust world of commercial art did not debase standards to meet some supposed low level of popular taste. Artist and audience each raised the other to a higher level.

At one time, even in Canada, in Orwell’s phrase, the arts had not yet been captured by the bureaucrats. It is simply untrue that Canadian culture began with the Canada Council or the Massey Commission. As noted by the late George Woodcock, who was no foe of either, “the myth that the Canada Council in itself inspired the artistic flowering of the past quarter of a century or so is untenable.” Callaghan and MacLennan, the Group of Seven and Painters Eleven, all predate the Canada Council; the Stratford Festival, the regional theatres, the National Ballet of Canada, the Canadian Opera Company, the municipal orchestras were already up and running on private money and volunteer enthusiasm without the help of the Canada Council. “It is obvious that a great movement in the arts was gathering impetus before the council appeared, and would have continued with or without patronage, generating its own flow of interest and — though doubtless on a less lavish scale — created its own economic base.”

If in the postwar era we were now evincing more interest in the arts, the intrusion of the state was less a cause than a result. Margaret Atwood, contrary to popular myth, was not first published with the help of subsidy: Her first book of poems was privately published by a friend, her second by the unsubsidized Contact Press, her third by the Oxford University Press. The most revered figures in Canadian popular music, from Joni Mitchell to Neil Young, hit the charts long before Canadian content laws. “When one remembers how similar was the development of an independent tradition a couple of generations earlier in the United States,” Woodcock wrote, “it is hard to believe that in its broad outline the situation would have been greatly different in Canada today if the Canada Council . . . had not come into being.”

IF HISTORY DOES NOT POINT TO THE NECESSITY OF SUBSIDY, the present does not offer much evidence of its success — in terms of quality, that is, not of quantity.

The practical effects of Canada’s extensive system of subsidies and other protective devices have been attacked by a growing band of critics. They point out that much of what nestles under the wing of the state in the name of the starving artist is profitable enterprise undertaken by multibillion dollar corporations; that much of what is legislated in the name of Canadian culture is ineffective or counterproductive; that it has created a closed, clubby, self-indulgent community of backscratchers, logrollers and hangers-on, a hothouse culture requiring cadres of bureaucrats to administer, in the name of accountability, ethnic representation and other good things. Of these even subsidy proponents are edgily aware; yet the system might still be defended as beneficial on balance, its faults amenable to correction, so long as its basic premises were sound.

In the end, rather, we return to the relationship between the artist and the audience, and what each owes to the other and to art. If what is popular is not always good, neither can good art never be popular. A work of art may have merit even if it fails to find an audience, but art defeats its purpose without at least seeking one. The artist, wrote Conrad, appeals “to the latent feeling of fellowship with all creation . . . to the subtle but invincible conviction of solidarity . . . which binds together all humanity, the dead to the living and the living to the unborn.” Books are written to be read, pictures are painted to be seen, now and for all time: They are the manifests of that solidarity.

If that is so, does the relationship between artist and audience begin with the completed work, or at the moment of its conception — with the choice of which work of art to create? If the latter, then art is inextricably bound up with its financing, for that will determine which artists are at work, and which works they create. As much as the artist, the paying audience is present at the creation where, in a sense, each chooses the other as collaborator in the esthetic experience.

A work of art is a conversation. Here, look at this, the artist says: I think it’s beautiful, or true, or at any rate interesting. What do you think? Perhaps a work has value even if nobody values it. But how would we know? It is not enough for the artist simply to declare its worth. He must at least open it to public debate. He must expose himself to the choices of his audience, and hope to persuade them of its merits. So far as subsidy insulates him from this requirement, it lessens the obligation to speak directly to his audience, in favor of a committee of his peers. One-half of the collaboration is lost.

But if the consumer is to do his part, he must make an “investment in taste,” in Grampp’s phrase, with which to winnow the false from the true, the shallow from the profound, the shoddy from the well-made. He will not make that investment until he makes his own choices with his own money. Only when he consciously participates in the sacrifice will it be worth his while to devote the time and study needed to get the most out of the experience: Price not only rations consumption, it intensifies it. That can not happen when the state chooses for him.

Perhaps this mutual obligation makes art different from other goods. Or perhaps not. The purchase of a chair, for instance, depends on more than strict functionality. That part of its value we ascribe to the esthetic pleasure it yields represents a transaction in art. No subsidy is needed to encourage the production of beautiful chairs, only demanding and knowledgeable clients. The chair that glittered in the light of momentary fashion becomes in time an expensive reminder of past folly. If nothing cost anything, we would have no need to be choosy.

If we did not like something at any given moment, we could simply throw it out and buy another. Consciousness of cost instils a respect for things that last and values that transcend. It increases the returns to an investment in taste.

There is no inherent tendency to vulgarity in the market: Indeed, there is not one market, but several. It may be that most people are vulgar, but most people need not buy a good for it to be produced. It only takes one, provided he will pay the price. Or if a buyer cannot be found, it depends solely on the creator’s desire.

If the market is a democracy, it is not one where the majority rules: Every taste may be represented, no matter how few its enthusiasts. Would there be fewer symphonies, fewer operas, fewer plays without subsidy? Or would they just carry a stiffer ticket price? The answer depends strictly on whether their supporters are willing to put their money where their mouths are. Suppose an unsubsidized opera ticket cost $150. Would the average opera-goer blanch at this? The same person will pay $150 to a scalper for hockey tickets, or for a silk shirt, or for Nintendo, things he would profess to care little about. Why not pay as much for things he does care about?

Subsidizing the creation of art, then, dulls both parties’ awareness of the other, discouraging an esthetic bond between them. To make art a thing of exchange, on the other hand, is not to “commodify” it: quite the opposite. In paying for a work of art, we are explicitly choosing to forgo the worldly goods the same money would have purchased. Artist and audience freely pledge the fruits of their labor to each other. It is a kind of communion, the transubstantiation of commonplace wants into art.

This is plainly not to say that all art produced with subsidy yields no claim to merit. I am only talking of tendencies, of probabilities, of the likely consequence of funding art divorced from the choices and experiences of its audience. To oppose state subsidy is not to worship at the shrine of the market, or to put efficiency and profit in place of truth and beauty. It is only a plea for voluntarism, impelled by the belief that art, of all things, cannot be the fruit of coercion.

We would not, after all, conscript artists to create art. Why then should we conscript the public to support it?

Posted in Culture | Leave a comment

Planners from hell -Rules are rules — or are they?

Cecily Ross and Sasha Chapman
The Next City
September 21, 1996

 

Rules are rules — or are they?

MUNICIPAL GOVERNMENTS HAVE GIVEN the world more than their fair share of procedures, bylaws and regulations. So you would think they’d be the first to play by their own rules. Well, think again. When one Toronto resident, Barry Glaspell, objected to his neighbors’ intention to build a front-yard parking pad for their cars, he stumbled into a bureaucratic comedy of errors that demonstrates the arbitrariness of the elaborate rules set out by the city to supposedly protect and accommodate property owners.

Glaspell lives with his wife and two young children on a tree-lined street in Toronto’s Annex district. Last spring he noticed a sign in front of a neighboring redbrick semi-detached house. The sign served notice that the owners of the two units — in one case, a renovator who was fixing it up for resale and in the other, existing neighbors — had applied for a parking pad permit. Area residents had until May 23 to register any opposition.

Glaspell, like many of his neighbors, doesn’t like front-yard parking pads because they turn attractive downtown neighborhoods into eyesores. He also worried that traffic across the sidewalk poses a risk to his children. But his good relations with the neighbors who were co-applying for the parking made his decision to join 11 other neighbors in objecting all the more difficult. Despite everyone’s objection, the application was approved by the May 23 deadline. On May 24, the renovator’s house, which had been purchased eight months earlier, was sold.

Even though the parking pad seemed a fait accompli, Glaspell, who is a lawyer, decided not to give up hope. He checked the bylaw and learned that the city was too casual by half with its own rules. For example, the bylaw requires the applicant to be the owner of the premise, but in this case the applicant/renovator was long gone and wouldn’t build the parking pad himself. He likely applied for the permit just to add value to what was a development project.

Glaspell also found out that if more than 25 per cent of “residential unit residents within the public notice posting area object in writing to the application within the public posting period, the application shall be refused.” Residents of numbers 161 to 207 on the street were eligible to file written complaints. The city works department did tell Glaspell that it received 12 complaints (a 13th was deemed late) from a possible 49 “dwelling units” — or just under 25 per cent.

But when Glaspell examined the language of the bylaw, nowhere was the term “residential unit” defined or “dwelling units” referred to. And anyway, shouldn’t they actually be counting residents, not units? At no point did anyone actually go out to the neighborhood and count the residents or residential units. Nevertheless, city hall insisted they were sticking to their guns at 49.

Still determined, Glaspell drafted a detailed letter to city works which he intended to present at a public meeting on the issue scheduled for August 14. His research unearthed the anomalies and contradictions present in the application process in head-spinning detail pointing out vagueness, confusion and errors over such things as:

  • the extent of the public posting area;
  • whether residents or residential units should be counted;
  • the ownership of the residence;
  • whether there was actually enough space to park a car; and
  • who was really eligible to be polled.Finally, Glaspell pointed out that the applicant’s house, a duplex, was included in the 49 residential units polled. And he persuaded the city that the property applying for the parking pad should not be included in the public notice posting area since its owners would be unlikely to object to the application. This brought the number of units in the posting area down to 47, which, with 12 complaints, now meant that just a shade more than 25 per cent of those eligible to complain did so. On that basis, city works reversed the approval, denying the parking pad.

    This reversal at city works is also good news for other opponents to front-yard parking pads in Toronto who may now be able to appeal some of the pavement that has been overtaking their neighborhoods in recent years. City hall, prior to this event, decided it didn’t like parking pads after all. On May 22, the City of Toronto announced a moratorium on front-yard parking pad permits. On July 2, the ban went into effect.

    Cecily Ross

    Japan’s national railway runs off the rails

    NEXT TO TOKYO’S EXCLUSIVE GINZA shopping district lies an unused former rail yard the size of 70 football fields. In a city where prime office space costs three times that of New York City’s, this vast empty lot, known as Shiodome, is a yawning monument to government bungling and economic ineptitude.

    Shiodome is one of many unused properties owned by Japan National Railway Settlement Corp. (JNR SC) which was formed in 1987 to bail out the country’s bloated national railway system. Under the plan, the government gave JNR SC 10 years to pay off two-thirds of the railway’s US$240-billion debt by selling off its assets — approximately 30 square miles of Japanese real estate. Since land values were sky rocketing at the time, the plan seemed solid. Nine years later, it has failed miserably. With only one year left to the loans coming due, half the land remains unsold and the railway land’s value has plummeted. The Shiodome property, for instance, valued at US$28 billion in 1990, is now worth US$6 billion. The JNR SC’s debt has risen to US$258 billion, growing at an annual rate of five per cent. The bailout itself needs bailing out.

    Getting into this fix wasn’t easy. Instead of simply allowing the JNR SC to sell off its assets and pay off its debt, the Japanese government began imposing bizarre conditions on the company. Subscribing to a reverse theory of supply and demand, the government concluded that auctioning off properties would push up land prices and with them, property taxes and housing. So, the cabinet passed a ban preventing the JNR SC from auctioning its best parcels of land. Then, to appease taxpayers, government-hired estimators set land prices about 30 per cent below market value. Secret deals were made, with much of the land sold to local governments. A prime 3.7-acre-lot in central Tokyo became the site of a municipal museum. Other plots were turned into bicycle paths and parking lots.

    While the politicians squabbled and dickered, a valuable opportunity was missed. Real estate values peaked in 1991 and have been dropping ever since. In 1994, with the JNR SC’s debt growing apace, the government finally relented and allowed the lands to be auctioned. But it was too little too late. Scared off by falling real estate prices and draconian development restrictions, buyers stayed away in droves.

    Bailing out the JNR bailout could cost Japanese taxpayers as much as US$1,500 per person. The government must choose the least of three evils: pay the debt by issuing more bonds, a move that would trigger inflation by pushing up interest rates; raise taxes, and risk cutting economic growth in half; or delay the inevitable by passing a law extending the debt elimination deadline.

    Or it could create the JNR SC-SC, a new settlement corporation to take on the JNR SC’s debt.

    Sasha Chapman

Posted in Regulation | Leave a comment