D
Sad, but In reality how many use It.
Strange the economy Is buoyant yet the cuts are stringent.
Sad, but In reality how many use It.
16K in the opening week of the childrens TV exhibition:
http://www.coventrytelegraph.net/news/coventry-news/record-numbers-flock-childrens-tv-9369846
220K in 2009:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/coventry_warwickshire/8098716.stm
Its won so many awards too, it looks great and would be a tregedy if it was closed. They are looking at the belgrade too arnt they??
As a small aside, one of the stranger paintings I've seen!
Seen, or painted....
If charging is the answer, then so be it.
I fail to see why it should be. The sums involved are hugely insignificant in the wider context of a council's full budget. It's such a pitifully small amount we're talking in a wider context, it's only being targeted because it'sa soft target.
And it ties into not just numbers of who goes, but awareness and culture of a city. Bristol, for example, invest a huge amount into their arts and heritage and, with it, they see an increase in positivity and civic pride, let alone the cultural cachet to businesses looking to invest, and tourism etc.
Not quite the buzz the museum is trying to generate.Maybe Wasps can buy it?
Attitudes have also changed mostly for the better, although not always. There is this paradox that Britain has never been so rich and the amount of money and possessions most people have cannot be compared with what people had when I first arrived. And yet the country behaves as if it has never been so poor. The refrain you constantly hear is “we can’t afford it”. It feels like we are permanently in this age of austerity in which we not only can’t afford large things – housing for all that need it, cottage hospitals in every town – but also small things such as flower beds on roundabouts. All these things the country had when I first came here, and when we were all much poorer.
Good interview with Bill Bryson in the Guardian at the weekend, this part particularly struck me:
An awful lot of truth in that, seems that since 1979, anything that can't have a cash value put on it is therefore considered as worthless and non-productive.
Yep, we went to that too. I didn't think it was THAT bad, but it was a tad disappointing for sure.
Yep, we went to that too. I didn't think it was THAT bad, but it was a tad disappointing for sure.
The History of Us exhibition that was just on was absolutely brilliant! I loved it so much I went back 3 times to see it.
Is also the problem when you have to do everything on a budget of less than zero - you end up with visions produced half-cock, and not to their best.
Yeah, but the History of Us was brilliant and that was totally free.
This looks awfully like a scare story so the council can appear heroic when they 'save' the Herbert.
PS If they hadn't wasted 250K on 'engaging with the public' on a decision about the WMCA they were going to rubber stamp regardless of what they were told maybe they wouldn't be in this position.
http://www.coventrytelegraph.net/news/coventry-news/angry-scenes-coventry-council-says-9475649
Never was a real threat to close the Herbert, I dunno these people must take the public for idiots.
http://www.coventrytelegraph.net/news/coventry-news/closure-herbert-art-gallery-no-10426713