Feis Ceoil faces crisis

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Over the weekend the Irish Times reported on fears over the Feis Ceoil’s future, following a budget crisis and the need for resources to maintain and grow the competition:

Over the years, the Feis Ceoil has grown from its starting point of 32 different competitions categories to the 177 it now boasts. Choirs, orchestras, ensembles and soloists on all manner of instruments from eight years old upwards have been steadily convening in halls and venues in and around the RDS in Ballsbridge since last Monday for this annual event, which has expanded to such an extent that it now spans a full fortnight […] the Feis Ceoil has only faltered on one occasion, when it was cancelled six years ago during the height of the foot-and-mouth crisis.

“Apart from that it has always gone ahead,” says Carmel Byrne, who has been the Feis Ceoil administrator for the past 10 years. “Through wars and the Easter Rising, and the Talbot Street bombing and everything, they still went on with the Feis.”

Now it seems that an event world wars couldn’t hold back may be threatened instead by lack of funds, even as its popularity thrives and the number of entrants increases on an annual basis. It is its exponential growth that may even bring about its downfall, explains Deirdre Kelleher, who has been on the Feis Ceoil’s board of directors for three decades. “The Feis Ceoil has expanded and there are more people, therefore more usage of halls, therefore more time spent,” she says. “The artistic cost of living has caught up with us.”

With a €100,000 budget shortfall due to the departure of Siemens, their sponsor of 22 years, the Feis is appealing to government and private sponsors to keep the competition going. A petition to government has been launched by the Feis; details are available from their website.

Don’t let the turkeys get you down

dustintheturkey.jpgApologies for the gap in postings– and with so much going on!  An Oscar for Once, a turkey headed to Serbia, and a new series on the arts in Ireland in The Irish Times… it’s all heady stuff 😉

Last thing first: the recent series about the arts in The Irish Times has dealt over the past few weeks with the value of the arts and inclusion issues, drawing quotes from various figures working in Irish arts organisations. Yet the series has, to me, felt pretty unoriginal and written in ‘student essay’ mode… this discourse about the social value and instrumentality of the arts is one that has long been in the public domain, and is discussed with more sophistication and nuance elsewhere (see Demos, the Journal of Cultural Policy, or the research going on at the Centre for Cultural Policy at the University of Warwick, for starters). While the series perhaps offers a useful summary for the general reader, I was hoping for more critical insight than has been offered…

Meanwhile the flap over Eurovision and Dustin the Turkey continues…  I quite enjoyed Fintan O’Toole’s take over the weekend:

A culture that was genuinely smart wouldn’t be so uptight about the terminally uncool. It might recognise that when there’s Arvo Pärt in Drogheda two weekends ago and a book club festival in Ennis today, serious art is hardly under siege. But the persistent need to sneer at Daniel O’Donnell or make a feck of the Eurovision exposes the anxiety within the clever, clued-in, media-saturated world.

(speaking of which, buzz about Arvo Pärt was amazing, and I’m sorry to have missed it.) The turkey metaphor is, indeed, too rich a field to go unplundered… and I’m disappointed as well, as an avid fan (no irony required) of the Eurovision. Take away the Baudrillard, thank you very much, but you’ll have to pry the ABBA albums out of my cold, dead hands…

New Science Gallery launches with ‘Lightwave’ festival

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The long-anticipated new Science Gallery at Trinity College Dublin will be launching in early February with the fantastic programme Lightwave (click here to download a programme pdf), running from 2-9 February. The festival offers a wide range of exhibitions and event on the theme of light, blurring the boundaries of science and art. Offerings include a fashion show, interactive games, films, a Volkswagon beetle covered with thousands of lights that will be patrolling Dublin city centre, and other happenings.. too many to list here! DO check out the schedule– this is something very unique that hasn’t been done in Ireland before, and it’s sure to be fantastic!

Opera’s bringing sexy back

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The Arts Council’s Public and the Arts Survey (2006) tells us audiences for opera are in decline: what gives? According to Peter Conrad in The Observer, arts marketers are seeking out new ways of seducing listeners back into seats… (more)

Classical, schmassical

bell.jpgReactions to the Washington Post’s subway experiment with violinist Joshua Bell keep rolling in… Three new books recently reviewed in the New Republic– Who Needs Classical Music? Cultural Choice and Musical Value (J. Johnson), Classical Music, Why Bother? Hearing the World of Contemporary Culture Through a Composer’s Ears (J. Fineberg), Why Classical Music Still Matters (L. Kramer)– attempt to engage with the ‘crisis’ of classical music. Do they have a point?