Australian Arts: Where the Bloody Hell Are You? : Australian Arts in an International Context
ISBN: 9781743329115
Platform/Publisher: Ebook Central / Sydney University Press
Digital rights: Users: Unlimited; Printing: Limited; Download: 7 Days at a Time
Subjects: Fine Arts; Political Science;

The German government spends over 160 million a year on arts advocacy and cultural diplomacy through its network of Goethe-Instituts. The Chinese government has recently moved to set up over 120 university-based Confucius Institutes in over 50 countries. Australia's expenditure on international cultural exchange reflects a distinctly lower priority. The Australia Council was able to allocate around $7.4 million on international activities in 20056. The Australia International Cultural Council, established to address Australia's regional image in the wake of Hansonism, exists on a paltry $1 million. Other international projects are scattered among different departments at different levels of government with little sense of coordination or collaboration.

'Australian Arts: Where the Bloody Hell Are You?' was a one-day symposium in December 2006 organised by the Research Institute for Humanities and Social Sciences at the University of Sydney to consider Australia's international arts profile. 'An unfenced zoo' according to one commentator; to another, a unique space for a distinctly Australian vision. Bringing together artists, academics and arts administrators from diverse artistic disciplines and backgrounds, the forum considered Australia's current international arts profile, available resources, success stories and the need for an advocacy council.

The forum examined cultural advocacy not as a one-way process but as a means of facilitating cultural flows that benefit both artists and society. It highlighted the substantial benefits of international cultural exchange and concluded that strengthening existing programs rather than a large bureaucracy would best serve Australia's current circumstances. Doubling or trebling Australia's current expenditure would enable the public to enjoy more fully the fruits of those who are currently Australia's biggest arts subsidisers, the artists themselves.


John Clark is a professor of art history at the University of Sydney and founding Director of the Australian Centre for Asian Art and Archaeology.

Peter McCallum is an academic advisor in the Office of the Provost and Deputy Vice-Chancellor at the University of Sydney.

Ian Maxwell is the Chair of the Department of Performance Studies at the University of Sydney.

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