FORUM
Empty theaters, unsung operas, canceled tours:
Europe’s artists vs. the virus
Artists, performers and cultural venues are hoping for
extra cash to keep industry afloat.
By KATY LEE
8/11/20, 4:00 AM CET
The coronavirus has devastated the world's cultural
and artistic venues, from opera to theater to music, and performers are struggling
to deal with lost wages and jobs
PARIS — For
Europe’s actors, musicians and dancers, the summer months are usually spent
crisscrossing the Continent, hopping from one festival to another.
Not this
year. Although European economies have been slowly grinding back into gear,
bans on mass gatherings to curb coronavirus infections mean major tours and
large-scale events have been canceled. And while some theaters and concert
halls have reopened to smaller audiences, many are warning of bankruptcy if
they are forced to keep running at reduced capacities to meet social-distancing
regulations.
Starved for
entertainment and human connection, many had hoped the culture industry would
bounce back as soon as conditions allowed. But, like most other sectors,
Europe’s artists and cultural venues are facing months of lingering
uncertainty.
"I’m
hearing from companies that usually make 80 percent of their revenues on tours
— often most of it between May and August — and they are really
struggling," said Stéphane Segreto-Aguilar, who runs Circostrada, a
European network of circus and street art performers.
Acrobats
who normally train like elite athletes have been locked out of their rehearsal
spaces for months, making it difficult to launch into performances at short
notice even if they are now permitted. And growing fears of potential second
and third waves of infections are making it almost impossible to plan ahead,
according to Segreto-Aguilar.
Francesco
Mura, Italian principal dancer of the Paris Opera Ballet, trains at his home
during the coronavirus lockdown | Ludovic Marin/AFP via Getty Images
"We’re
already seeing lockdowns being reinstated in parts of Europe, and events that
were back on track being called off again, like in Catalonia," he said.
Most
European governments have announced specific measures to prop up their national
culture industries during the COVID-19 crisis, ranging from modest grants and
loans to billion-euro-plus schemes in the cases of Germany, France and the
United Kingdom.
But the
survival of the cultural industry seems to be higher priority in some countries
than others. French President Emmanuel Macron gave a passionate speech pledging
major relief for the arts in May, including a plan for mass commissioning of
new artistic works by the state. That same month, the German government
announced it had earmarked €1 billion for the arts along with significant
funding at regional levels.
Elsewhere,
however, the picture looks worse, with freelancers struggling to make ends meet
and cultural venues that don’t fit neatly into categories qualifying for relief
facing the possibility of shutting their doors for good.
Germany
‘can and wants to afford it’
In some
countries, the cultural sector has been better prepared to weather this crisis
due to decades of heavy state investment and better social protection for
performers.
Germany,
for example, has invested long term in culture because "it’s a country
that can and wants to afford it," said Katharina Schmitt, a director and
playwright based between Germany and the Czech Republic. Although the future is
uncertain, a long tradition of public subsidies has cushioned venues in both
countries from lost ticket revenues during the pandemic, she said.
As an
illustration, she pointed to the Berliner Philharmonie, which sold tickets at
an average price of €48.90 in 2014. For each of those visitors, the concert
hall received an additional €66.90 in public funding.
It’s a very
different picture in the U.K., where venues traditionally enjoy little state
support and are heavily reliant on their own ticket sales. While that business
model means the arts normally contribute healthy sums to U.K. coffers, British
theaters have spent much of this crisis warning of impending catastrophe and
receiving no support. Hit London shows including "Hamilton" and
"Les Misérables" have been called off until 2021.
The U.K.
government finally announced a £1.57 billion arts rescue package in early July,
under pressure from a celebrity campaign to stop Britain from turning into a
"cultural wasteland." But by that point, some theaters had already
announced mass redundancies or permanent closures. On Twitter, culture vultures
suggested the arts were not a priority for Boris Johnson’s government because
the theater-going public is less likely to vote Conservative.
For some of
London's West End shows, like "The Phantom of the Opera," the
coronavirus closure is permanent | Chris J Ratcliffe/Getty Images
In Hungary
meanwhile, the right-wing government has made use of an emergency arts scheme
to advance a nationalist agenda. Playwrights and composers were offered modest
grants to write new compositions, but there was one major condition: They had
to be themed around the centenary of the Treaty of Trianon, an event that has
long formed part of Viktor Orbán’s nationalist rhetorical arsenal.
"Content-wise,
it was just a propaganda thing," said Fanni Nánay, a Budapest festival
organizer. "It was really a scandal."
Netflix
steps in
Making a
living as an artist or performer was precarious before the pandemic. Of the 2
million Europeans who work as artists and writers, about half are self-employed
and most rely on short-term contracts and one-off gigs.
Still, some
are better protected than others.
In France,
performers and theater technicians benefit from a social security status
intended to offer a degree of protection from the precariousness of their work.
During the pandemic, these 130,000 French "intermittents" have been
granted an extension of their rights to payouts, while registered
"artistes-auteurs" — creators of literary, dramatic, musical,
choreographic or artistic works — have also been granted tax relief.
Across all
industries, the self-employed got a rawer deal in some countries than in
others. Germany’s freelance scheme was widely praised for swiftness and
simplicity — Schmitt said €5,000 landed in her bank account just days after she
applied for emergency aid — while freelancers in Hungary and Spain received
little help, other than being let off from their usual tax bills.
"That
came to about €400," said Igor Bacovich, an Italian choreographer living
in Spain. "We didn’t get much support, especially considering that we lost
so many jobs."
The Uceli
Quartet performs for an audience of plants at the Liceu Grand Theatre in
Barcelona on June 22, 2020 | Lluis Gene/AFP via Getty Images
Many
Italian freelancers, meanwhile, had to wait for weeks to receive a one-off €600
payment weeks after applying for relief. Self-employed Brits were told in March
that they would receive nothing for at least two months.
Plenty of
British culture workers still do not qualify for financial help under the new
government scheme, and many theater workers have now applied for emergency
grants from a fund set up by James Bond director Sam Mendes with the help of a
£500,000 donation from Netflix.
The fund is
one of a wide array of NGO, private and citizen-led initiatives that have
popped up to help where governments have not, a reflection of Europeans’ pride
in their cultural offerings.
Help is out
there, said Segreto-Aguilar, but "the difficulty often lies in knowing the
aid is available and how to get hold of it."
The
question now is whether cash can reach small theaters and arts groups in time
to keep them from folding. Funding from arts councils and foundations can often
only be accessed via lengthy grant applications. In Paris, Mayor Anne Hildago
promised ahead of her recent reelection to take financial control of venues on
the brink of collapse; two are already seeking to take up her offer.
Similarly,
small but historic venues in London may simply end up closing. The Royal
Vauxhall Tavern, an LGBTQ cabaret club, is among those brought to the brink of
bankruptcy by the pandemic. There has been no let-up in its rent, and the lack
of government support forced managing director James Lindsay to "go out
with the begging bowl" and ask members of the public to stump up £50,000
to help the establishment stave off bankruptcy.
The club is
a beloved part of the local queer scene, but like many such nightspots, it
falls somewhere between being a bar and a performance venue. It would not
normally receive arts funding.
Now,
however, it is a race against time to find out whether the club will qualify
for emergency aid under the U.K. culture package. The venue is currently
welcoming just 35 percent of its usual clientele due to social-distancing
restrictions. Without additional help, "we won’t be able to go on like
this for more than eight or 10 weeks," Lindsay said.
EU to the
rescue?
Given the
urgency of the situation, the EU’s culture agency Creative Europe has sped up
implementation of the €48.5 million grant program it is running throughout 2020
and has fast-tracked applications to maximize the chance of relief reaching
organizations before they go bust.
Ahead of
last month's summit on the bloc's next long-term budget and recovery fund, the
culture industry pushed for a doubling of Creative Europe’s funding. The
program has become an increasingly key player in arts funding since its
founding in 2014, particularly for cross-border projects and as national
budgets have been depleted.
London's
Royal Vauxhall Tavern has taken to soliciting donations to avoid bankruptcy |
Niklas Halle'n/AFP via Getty Images
A number of
high-profile European artists — including performing artist Marina Abramović,
film director Agnieszka Holland, writer Nina George, composer Jean Michel Jarre
and singers Björk and MØ — even issued a joint call for the EU "be bold
and to invest in culture and the arts, to invest in all our creative
futures."
The €1.64
billion now on the table for Creative Europe as part of the budget deal reached
at the summit is a slight increase on figures put forward by the Commission in
May, but still falls short of what the industry needs, advocates say.
"It
is, of course, a very modest and a bittersweet increase – yet it goes in the
right direction," advocacy group Culture Action Europe said in a
statement. It also called on European leaders to "fully include culture in
their national strategies" on how to allocate new money coming in via the
recovery fund.
Critics may
argue that culture is a luxury in times like these, and yet EU citizens clearly
value it — they spent the lockdown binging on TV shows and online offerings,
said Tere Badia, Culture Action Europe's secretary-general.
"Culture is a fundamental part of the European project," said Badia. "It’s not just any other sector, it binds us together. Try to imagine a country without any culture — what would there be left?





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