The Origins of the Arts Council Movement

The Origins of the Arts Council Movement
Author: Anna Rosser Upchurch
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 222
Release: 2016-11-17
Genre: Art
ISBN: 1137461632

This important new book offers an intellectual history of the ‘arts council’ policy model, identifying and exploring the ideas embedded in the model and actions of intellectuals, philanthropists and wealthy aesthetes in its establishment in the mid-twentieth century. The book examines the history of arts advocacy for national arts policies in the UK, Canada and the USA, offering an interdisciplinary approach that combines social and intellectual history, political philosophy and literary analysis. The book has much to offer academics, cultural policy and management students, artists, arts managers, arts advocates, cultural policymakers and anyone interested in the history and current moment of public arts funding in the West.

The Community Arts Council Movement

The Community Arts Council Movement
Author: Nina Freedlander Gibans
Publisher: New Academia Publishing/ The Spring
Total Pages: 404
Release: 2006
Genre: Art
ISBN:

This book presents the history of the Arts Council movement as it has been captured and recorded by the first generation of people who have been involved.

The Arts Council

The Arts Council
Author: Georgia Council for the Arts
Publisher:
Total Pages: 132
Release: 1999
Genre: Arts in School Resource Guide
ISBN:

Before the Arts Council

Before the Arts Council
Author: Howard Webber
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Total Pages: 212
Release: 2021-01-28
Genre: Art
ISBN: 1350167959

This book explores the hitherto neglected history of the campaign for state funding of the arts. By focusing on the important but forgotten movements for music and drama subsidy before and during WWII, Howard Webber makes an important contribution to the history of arts subsidy. Before the Arts Council rediscovers three forgotten but influential campaigns for state support of the arts in Britain in the 1930s and wartime. Webber's impressive historical excavation challenges existing scholarship, which argues that arts subsidy was the result of the war, and instead re-situates the campaign's origins in the pre-war years. Webber does so by drawing on correspondence from influential figures including Ralph Vaughan Williams, John Maynard Keynes and J.B Priestley, along with extensive use of government papers. Before the Arts Council is a lively, compelling and scrupulously researched account of a subject consistently misunderstood and misrepresented. It changes our understanding of an aspect of British cultural history we thought we knew well. It will appeal to students of twentieth century social and political history and to anyone with a general interest in the arts and in this period.