Shopping Lists

On May 14th 1979, the newly elected Government will begin to plan its legislative programme for the next five years. Should the Arts Community require the introduction of legislation during this period, then discussion debate and formulation of…

Welfare in the State of Art

Debates in the House of Lords are renowned for their quality but not necessarily for packing a punch sufficient to hit the Government into action. However, with the new Minister for the Arts operating…

Who owns Elizabeth Frink?

Elisabeth Frink’s Desert Quartet, 1990, comprises four bronze sculptures commissioned in 1985 by property developers The Avon Group as an integrated external feature of their then new Montague Centre shopping precinct in the coastal town of…

New Administration: Reforms and Innovations

On June 10, the newly elected Government will begin to plan its legislative programme for the next five years. In 1979 this column reported the current state of play in relation to the possible legislative…

The Next Moves Forward, part 2

This month’s Artlaw continues and concludes the exploration of the newly elected Government’s past achievements and future policies in relation to the visual arts, and, in the context of joint European cultural, those policies…

Strategies for the Arts

The UK’s general election on May 5 smartly follows the ‘electorate friendly’ annual budget statement made by the Chancellor of the Exchequer in March 2005. What will the election manifestos of the UK’s main political parties…

The Way Forward?

‘Any government, whatever its political line, should take some active steps to encourage the arts. The task of a Minister for the Arts is to help to create and preserve a framework within which the arts can…

% for Art Legistaltion

Since the 1982 Art and Architecture conference at the ICA, there has been an enormous growth of local authority policies which aim to encourage collaborative efforts between artists and architects. In 1988, Oxfordshire became the first…

Yes Minister, but is it legal?

God help the Minister who meddles with art! Lord Melbourne, Prime Minister; 1837 1841 I would need to be satisfied that standards of artistic excellence will be maintained and enhanced as a result of…

Gormley on the Beach

Antony Gormley’s Another Place, 1997, has become the focus of extensive media attention centring on recent decisions made under UK planning law that will require his public artwork to be removed from its current and temporary…

Percentage for Art: UK OK?

February’s column covered the numerous Percentage for Art schemes which have been developed in America and Europe during the past fifty years. Whether or not something is to be done in this country is a…

Ballad of a Thin Wedge

An article from the Artlaw archive about sponsorship and the Arts. You have many contacts Among the lumberjacks To get you facts When someone attacks your imagination But nobody has any respect Anyway they already…

‘God help the Minister who meddles with Art’

Thus spoke the Liberal Prime Minister, Lord Melbourne. I wonder if he’s turning in his grave? Now we have a Minister for the Arts with a voice in the Cabinet, perhaps the…

Art for Architecture Legistlation

Two new publications signal serious efforts to advance the art and architecture movement in the U.K.: Art For Architecture (published by H.M.S.Q.) and The Register of Artists and Craftsmen in Architecture (published by Art and Architecture…