Thirty-eighth Annual Report and Accounts
Transcription
Thirty-eighth Annual Report and Accounts
l Arts Counci () F ( ;R B R I TA [ N Thirty-eighth annua l report and account s 1982/83 Thirty-eighth Annual Report and Accounts 198 3 ISSN 0066-813 3 Published by the Arts Council of Great Britai n 105 Piccadilly, London W1V OA U Designed by Duncan Firth Printed by Watmoughs Limited, Idle, Bradford ; and London The Arts Council of Great Britain, as a publicl y accountable body, publishes an Annual Report t o provide Parliament and the general public with a n overview of the year's work and to record all grant s and guarantees offered in support of the arts . A description of the highlights of the Council's wor k and discussion of its policies appear in the newspape r Arts in Action which is published in conjunction wit h this Report and can be obtained, free of charge, fro m the Arts Council Shop, 8 Long Acre, London WC2 an d arts outlets throughout the country . The objects for which the Arts Council of Great Britai n is established are : 1 To develop and improve the knowledge , understanding and practice of the arts ; 2 To increase the accessibility of the arts to the publi c throughout Great Britain ; an d 3 To co-operate with government departments, loca l authorities and other bodies to achieve thes e objects . Content s 6 CHAIRMAN'S INTRODUCTIO N 7 SECRETARY-GENERAL'S PREFACE 11 REPORTS FROM THE DEPARTMENT S 16 SCOTLAN D 17 WALE S 18 COUNCI L 19 MEMBERSHIP OF COUNCIL AND STAF F 20 ADVISORY PANELS AND COMMITTEE S 24 STAF F 25 ANNUAL ACCOUNTS Funds, Exhibitions, Schemes and Awards 5 Chairman's Introductio n The strongest convictio n which I have gained during my first year a s Chairman of the Counci l is that the arts in Britai n are still flourishing despit e the many financia l Air problems they face . Theatres, both in Londo n and the regions, ar e staging some excellen t work, and undoubtedly continue to provide th e greatest range of drama production in the world . No t only is London enjoying superb opera at the Roya l Opera House and the Coliseum, but outside Londo n too opera is strengthening and gaining substantia l audiences and great critical applause . Dance performances, both contemporary an d classical, are attracting increasing and extremel y enthusiastic: audiences . and the number and variety of orchestral concerts remains very encouraging, with the Barbican Centre, despite some problems , becoming an important new concert hall as well a s theatre. It is important that we should emphasise the genera l strength of the performing arts in Britain because th e commercial and financial problems of the art s sometimes obscure the very substantial achievement s made over the years and continuing in the present . Credit for the creative work must go to the individua l companies, but it is certainly true that, without publi c funding and Arts Council provision, a great part of thi s work could not have been done . Equally important , though, is the Council's, support for the visual arts , including our arts films-which receive great praise-and literature, although the structure of their fundin g is, by the nature of things, quite different . However, financial problems remain and are likely t o remain . One of the most encouraging development s of this last financial year was the Government' s decision to give an extra Lim to clear off past deficits . The combination of this with the increase in the 19838 4 grant has allowed the Council to avoid the agonisin g decisions which became unavoidable in 1980 . It is very important that provision should continue to rise s o that we can not only go on supporting that which i s best but also encouraging the new work which i s struggling to appear . The reports of the individual departments of th e Council illustrate some of the outstanding events of the year in the various arts . For me, the opening of the Royal Shakespeare Company's tenure at the Barbica n and the completion of the new Theatre Loyal, Plymouth were amongst the highlights, giving us a new London and a new regional theatre, both of grea t importance . The general balance between arts provision in Londo n and outside London continues to concern the Counci l and was the central question raised in the report o f the Select Committee of the Hou ,,e of Commons , published in October The Arts Council believes tha t in every country it is natural for the arts to have a metropolitan base and so does not accept argument s of precise mathematical balance . Nevertheless, th e achievement cif the present very high standards i n London ought now to be followed by increasin g emphasis on the highest possible standards o f provision in the rest of the country . An important Government decision, which the Art s Council and the individual companies welcomed . wa s the establishment of the Priestley scrutiny to examin e the efficiency of the operations of the Royal Opera House and the Roval Shakespeare Company . Covemment funding for the arts inevitably depend s on public confidence in the value received for th e expenditure of its money . Both the Arts Council an d its clients must expect that this will be carefull y watched, as indeed it shoold be. The Council itself i s extremely concerned to rriaintain high levels o f efficiency and to keep to a minimum its ow n administrative overheads . There is no doubt in my mind that public provision fo r the arts through the Arts Council has proved a highl y effective system . The arts in Britain, despite man y problems, stand comparison with those of any othe r country, and in some arts Britain i ; demonstrably superior both in the range of prevision and in th e quality . This is achieved despite proportionately lowe r public funding than any other country in Wester n Europe, but it is vital that arts support should continu e to be increased . t' r 4 ' '~t~ Secretary-General's Preface Developing access to the art s I. The role of educatio n The Chairman s introduction Tightly refers to the high quality of th e arts in Britain, which is i n no small measure clue t o the discriminating grant t ivrn}; of the Art 5 (ouncil . However, th e Council is required by it s Charter not only to maintain the duality of the arts, but to make them more genf-rally, icc'essible and to foster understandin g frl them . Nevertheless, after over .30 years of Art s Council activity, the subsidised arts are patronise d only by a minority ; some put it as low as 10/6 of th e population and no-one puts it higher than lo t)/n . I n this . my last report, I would like to review, in a n una,harrtedly personal way . my own response, a s Secretary-General . to this situation . Alh~ r in the 1950s the Council's tasks were crystallised in th e words "raise and spread" . Then, my distinguishe d predecessor as Secretarv-General, Sir William Emry s Vlhlliams, argued forcibly the need to concentrate o n raising standards, believing that too great an emphasi s on spreading, would lead to the diffusion of mediocrity . When I became Secretary-General in 1975, the climat e of opinion had changed, and Williams' views seeme d like 'elitism' . Moreover, although he and I bath cam e from a background in adult education, my ow n approach was different . 1 had been to school wit h Matthew Arnold and while not endorsing all hi s attitudes, believed passionately in the rightness of a famous passage in his Culture and Anarchy : The men of culture are the true apostles of equality . Th e great men cst culture are those who have had a passion fo r diffusing, for making, prevail, for carrying from one end o f society to the other . the hest knowledge, the best ideas o f their time ; who have laboured to divest knowledge of all that was harsh, uncouth, difficult, abstract, professional , exclusive ; to humanise it, to make it efficient outside the clsque of the Cultivated and learned in over a quarter of a century of work in universit y adult education I had long experience of combinin g both raising and spreading . To be sure, it was, and is , an uphill task . One always has to contend, whether i n universities or the arts, with some people who ar e content to cherish high standards and care not a ra p about spreading, and some who are prepared to lowe r the standards to make spreading easier . The challenge was, and is, to get across without selling out. The unexpressed major premise on which publi c subsidy is based is surely that everyone has a right t o culture, is specified in tke 1948 Universal Declaratio n of Human Rights : "Everyone has the right freely t o participate in the cultural life of the community, t o enjoy the arts . . .", However, even in our country many people arvex(luded trom full participation i n cultural life-as Jennie Lee's 1965 White Paper on th e arts noted, too many people have been conditioned by their education and environment to consider th e hest of the arts as outside their reach . Neither the Art s Council nor arts education can directly bring about a change in the environment ; that is a job for politician s and planners, though one in which 'the people' should have a voice . But the conditioning by education-o r the lack of it-is certainly a challenge both t o education and to the Arts Council, not to mention th e 4M1inister for the Arts . since: he for she) has a duty t o promote the purposes for which the Arts Council, a s the main instrument of government subsidy for the arts, was established . Jennie Lee, the first Minister fo r the Arts, did this, but none of her successors ha s shown much inclination to face this challenge, despit e the fact that most ministers for the arts have, hithert o been brigaded under the Department of Educatio n and Science, which seems to me the right place fo r them to be . A radical objection to the use of more and bette r education to develop greater access to the arts ha s been expressed by Mr Kingsley Amis, who opposes the whole idea of public subsidy of the arts . Observin g that the public for poetry is "a tiny elite", h e continues : Attempts to bring art to same much larger number will no t work . The Arts Council constantly stresses art education , pathetically pretending that some external obstacle ha s hitherto stood in most people's way and we must work t o make the arts "truly accessible to the masses only at th e cost of cheapening and diluting and simplifying it out o f existence . Most Iwo& aren't truly accessible to art and never will be and we shouldn't trv to make the m I can contradict Mr Amis, not simply by theoretica l arguments, but from long experience of seeing hundreds of adults in adult education courses wh o have responded enthusiastically to poetry and othe r arts which they had previously thought were 'not fo r them' . Strangely, extremes meet and John McGrath, socialis t playwright and director, once told an interviewer tha t he rejected what he called metropolitan, middle-class Secretary-General's Preface theatre, on the grounds that to appreciate it "yo u need experience of higher education, and that's th e politics of elitism" . He therefore agrees with Amis tha t the 'established' arts are for a 'tiny elite', and the res t need something different-in his case, "comedians, bands, rock and folk groups" . Another socialist arts worker and writer wh o unwittingly agrees with the right-wing Amis is Miss S u Braden . She wrote, in Artists and People (1978), a useful study of community artists and artists i n residence, but her basic premise is that the "so-called " cultural heritage is bourgeois and irrelevant to mos t people . The Arts Council, she alleges, is founded o n the 'artistic deception' that this culture is potentially for all, and needs only more education to make i t actually available to all . Accessible Excellenc e Anyone who has looked at studies of the audience fo r most serious arts must agree with Miss Braden and M r Amis as I do that the arts the Arts Council funds d o not appeal to a majority-in tact I began by affirmin g this . But we have very different explanations for thi s undoubted fact . Mr Amis attributes it to the invincibl e ignorance of most people, Miss Braden to the fact tha t the arts are bourgeois and have nothing to say to mos t people . I take the view embodied in the Arts Council' s Charter, that by developing understanding of the art s you will increase their accessibility . Miss Braden's claim that Shakespeare, Constable, Beethoven are not 'relevant' to working people i s nonsense . I have seen all three and many mor e examples of so-called bourgeois art-interpreted t o working people so that they saw and felt the relevanc e that was not immediately perceived but was mad e plain through the mediation of a good teacher . One of the commonest fallacies in approaching serious art s is to assume that they must be immediatel y accessible . Lord Goodman has wisely written of th e Arts Council's conviction that "the artist's message i s a unique commentary on human affairs, which, rea d with understanding, enriches the lives of the readers . We do not succumb to the error that this message ca n be understood without effort and study ." Th e difference between many middle class people wh o enjoy the serious arts and many working class peopl e who don't, is not that the arts are bourgeois but tha t they are difficult and that most middle class peopl e have had more opportunity to study them an d become familiar with them, not only through forma l education, but most importantly through the almost subliminal educational influence of a cultivated hom e background . A 1961 TUC report on the arts, noting that fe w workers were interested in the arts and that many were hostile, listed among the adverse influence s monotonous and exhausting work, bad housing an d the appeal of commercial culture . "But the majo r factor", they concluded, "is the inadequacy of thei r education ." In the early '80s, almost half of all childre n leave school with no qualifications whatsoever-no t even one CSE. At the higher levels of education, th e proportion of children from working class home s going to university is actually declining . So it seem s plain that the main reason why the arts see m irrelevant to ordinary working people (who constitut e just over half the population) is not that the arts ar e bourgeois, not that the people are different creature s from middle class people, but simply, as Jennie Lee' s White Paper pointed out, that they have bee n conditioned by their inadequate education and thei r environment . The fact that some plays (and other arts) need higher education to appreciate them is not, pace John McGrath, due to elitism, but to the complex facts of life and the complexity of art which sensitively interprets life . It is the politics of democracy (not elitism) to bring the necessary higher education t o those who need it . Despite the Arts Council's chartered aims and the fac t that most Regional Arts Associations' constitution s speak of a duty to encourage appreciation of the arts , for some arts educators and many community artist s appreciation is a dirty word, and participation-'doing your own thing'-is the preferred approach to artisti c experience . So Redcliffe Maud quoted (with apparen t approval) a community artist who said : Hanging a picture on a wall and inviting people to come an d look at it is the easiest possible thing to do . We are tryin g to do something much harder : to tap the creativity i n everyone. This statement seems to me to combine arroganc e with ignorance of what is involved in the appreciatio n of art, which it dismisses as merely passive as oppose d to the activity involved in doing it yourself . B y coincidence, Professor L . C . Knights, without knowin g the passage just quoted, has refuted it : The energy embodied in the fully achieved work, far fro m leaving the spectator, or reader, 'nothing to do', leaves hi m with everything to do; for it continually evokes new energies of apprehension- as it the eye were still growing-of thing s hard, indeed impossible, for thought alone to grasp . Secretary-General's Preface In other words, appreciating a work of art calls for a creative response from the observer as if the min d were still growing . Indeed, encouraging appreciatio n means precisely helping people to perceive th e qualities ofa work of art and those who dismiss it ma y do so because they themselves are blind to th e qualities of the best in the arts and know only th e unquestioned satisfaction of doing your own thing . Fo r no-one denies this satisfaction, or its value i n developing awareness and self confidence in th e do-er. I have always maintained that we need both th e appreciation and participation approaches, and hav e said publicly that a good community artist can be a 'centre of excellence' . Community Arts I oppose only those community artists wh o themselves oppose attempting to develop appreciation of the artistic heritage and the best of present day arts . Some community artists hav e moderated their opposition, but in 1981, a leadin g community artist was writing that community art s provided a challenge to established arts and were 'i n total opposition to the economic, social and cultura l order' . And even in May 1983, in the West Midland s Arts Association newspaper, a community artis t whose work I respect, published an emotional attac k on the Arts Council's work in developing access t o 'minority' arts with a specific rejection of opera an d ballet as totally irrelevant to working class people . I t is as though the arts world has let in a Trojan horse full of philistines . For to reject the arts tradition i n favour of 'doing your own thing' is philistine an d narcissistic . In the first half of this century, the development o f 'making' and 'doing' in education was a healthy one ; but the present rejection of the experience o f professional arts suggests that the pendulum ha s swung too far, and needs a push in the other direction . If literature means simply poems and stories produce d by the children or adults themselves, people ar e missing the experience of great literature which woul d not only develop their understanding of themselve s and others, but would improve their own creativ e work . The same consideration applies to all the arts . Of course appreciation can be badly taught ; but s o can creative work . Developing self-expression is useful , but the Gulbenkian report on Arts in Schools gives a salutary warning: Mere expression without reflection and evaluation need no t lead to an understanding of the nature of personal feelings , nor of the social values and acquired attitudes whic h influence them . It need carry people no nearer t o understanding themselves . It will certainly lead them no nearer to understandin g the arts . The Council :'a late developer? What has the Arts Council done about education fo r access to the arts? For the first thirty years of it s existence, very little . When I came to the Council i n 1975 and raised the need to develop an educationa l role, I was assured that this was not possible . At th e same time Lord Redcliffe Maud was compiling hi s survey on Support for the Arts and found that one of the most frequent criticisms of the Arts Council wa s its neglect of education for the arts . Later, th e Conservative discussion paper on the arts commente d that it was extraordinary that the Council had for s o long neglected this vital area . The prevailing view in the Arts Council at that tim e was that our duty was towards the artist, first and last. My own view was that our first duty was to the public , and to the artist in so far as he/she served the publi c well . This view is now more generally accepted . It doe s not imply any neglect of artists ; as the 1965 Whit e Paper noted : "By far the most valuable help that ca n be given to the individual artist is to provide him wit h a larger and more appreciative audience" . Further, I was told that desirable as educationa l activity might be, there was in the difficult financia l conditions already prevailing, no money to finance it . Since I was determined that we should do something , in 19781 took what, looking back, seems th e extraordinary step of getting a grant from th e Gulbenkian Foundation to fund the appointment of an 'education liaison officer' for three years . (Extraordinary, because Gulbenkian's total funds wer e a fraction of the Arts Council's .) The lady w e appointed, Mrs Irene Macdonald, proved to be ver y dynamic, and after the three years I was able to get the funding out of Arts Council funds . Eventually, we appointed an assistant, and the Council now has a n Education Unit of two officers and two secretarieshardly lavish staffing to serve the whole of England , indeed, the British Film Institute, with a grant one tent h of the Arts Council's has for years had an educatio n department, currently staffed by eight officers and fiv e secretaries . Further, the Arts Council's spending o n education for the arts is still only a small fraction o f what it spends on community arts . The Council's present educational approach i s oblique, I did not seek to have the Council take on a direct educational role-despite its first chartere d duty to develop understanding of the arts . Rather, I invoked the third chartered duty, which requires the Secretary-General's Preface Council to co-operate with other bodies to achieve its main objectives . I was also encouraged by Lor d Redcliffe Maud's plea for a rejection of the lon g established fallacy that 'arts support' and 'education ' are two separate things and his argument that "w e must insist that those responsible for them are natura l allies and see to it that they collaborate at national , regional and local level" . I therefore gave what wa s then called the Education Liaison Officer the task o f encouraging collaboration between Arts Counci l clients and educators in all fields from child to adult education . There is now a great deal of educationa l activity related to arts events going on throughout the country, and all four national companies have appointed full-time education officers . Much more needs to be done and the Council wil l need to devote more resources to education in'th e future . In particular, the quality of the educationa l work of an organisation needs to be as carefull y assessed as the quality of its artistic work . Further, more emphasis is needed on reaching out to thos e outside the charmed circle of existing patrons . A tal k before a performance reaches almost exclusivel y those who would come anyway, though it can deepe n their appreciation of what they see or hear-which i s not to be undervalued . Nevertheless, the main need i s to reach those who do not normally patronise the art s and it is here that arts bodies need the advice , expertise and full collaboration of educators particularly adult educators-though I have found , and so have my education officers, that most peopl e in the arts, when they are persuaded to think abou t education say "Oh yes, the schools . . ." . There is a strongly ingrained belief that education is somethin g you do to children and only to children . Much wise r is the Gulbenkian Report on Arts in Schools which , despite its title, emphasises that "education is a lifelong process which only begins at school" . It is no t really children, but adults (particularly young adults ) who are the 'audiences of tomorrow' . Today's childre n maybe the audiences of 10 or 20 years hence bu t then very often because of educational influence s after they leave school . I am happy to leave the last word on this theme to Mr s Margaret Thatcher, who told the Royal Academ y dinner in May 1980 : "We should see to it that ou r people are steeped in a real knowledge an d understanding of our national culture" . If the educational concern was the main policy one I brought to the Arts Council it has not been my dail y pre-occupation as Secretary-General . That was to 10 increase the efficiency of the whole organisation , especially the exercise of managerial functions by directors . As a 'regional' man, I have also tried t o remember and remind others that there is life outsid e London . I have also sought to promote by writing , speaking and broadcasting, the cause of publi c subsidy of the arts . In particular, I have urged in an d out of season the need for substantially increase d government funding and have been rebuked by bot h a Labour and a Conservative minister of the arts fo r doing so . I was therefore glad that during the yea r under review the all party House of Common s Education Science and Arts Committee on funding th e arts despite the then Minister's assurance that the art s were "managing to survive", concluded in the light o f all the evidence they received that the arts in Britai n are 'gravely', indeed 'irresponsibly', underfunded . Th e Peacock report on inflation in the arts pointed out tha t the fact that the arts survive as well as they do is partl y because many performers continue to be under-paid . This applies particularly to actors, dancers an d orchestral musicians . Further, many artistic directors have to spend too much of their time worrying abou t money or wooing possible business sponsors, to th e detriment of their artistic role . As a result of my initiatives (some would say 'nagging' ) scores of clients, especially the major ones, have bee n persuaded to give more explicit acknowledgment i n programmes and publicity of their Arts Counci l subsidy . An unpublished Mori poll commissioned b y the BBC this year confirmed my belief that most people just do not know how many of the arts the y enjoy are substantially subsidised by the Arts Council . Since we are spending taxpayers' (not th e government's) money, I feel strongly that it is essentia l that taxpayers should be aware of what is being don e with their money . And, of course, that more of the m should be helped to enjoy the arts they subsidise, along the whole continuum, from the work of th e individual community artists to that of major oper a companies . I am proud to have served the cause of public subsid y of the arts, and to have led the efforts of a skilled, ver y dedicated and often heavily overworked staff . Departmental Report s Art The advent of Channel 4 has opened a new outlet fo r the showing of films on the arts to a large audience . Two Arts Council films, The Pantomime Dame an d Give us this Day, were screened shortly after the ne w channel opened . The latter film also woh the Grierso n award for 1982 for the best short film . Major commissions to artists for works on public site s often take years to come to fruition . Three suc h projects were completed during the year : Ro n Haselden's neon sculpture for the new Nottingha m Concert Hall ; Patrick Caulfield's mural for London Lif e Assurance, Bristol ; and Eduardo Paolozzi's mosai c murals for Redditch Shopping Centre, unveiled by th e Chairman in April . The Arts Council's financia l contribution to such projects is often a relativel y minor one and they indicate an increasing readines s on the part of industrial and commercial companie s and public authorities to patronise living artists and t o incorporate art in building projects . Another successful example of collaboration betwee n the public and private sectors was the exhibition Coal: Bntish Mining in Art 1680-9980, organised by the Art s Council and jointly funded by the National Coa l Board, Barclays Bank and the Association of Britis h Mining Equipment Companies . The exhibition wa s shown in Stoke, Swansea, Durham, Nottingham and a t the Science Museum in London. The exhibition wa s notable for bringing in new audiences and in som e places exhibition visitors were able to go down a coa l mine . The most important international cultural event of th e year was the Festival of India which brought a n extraordinary range of art treasures, musicians , dancers, theatre groups, craftsmen, films and artifact s of all kinds to this country to delight audiences o f more than a million . The Arts Council's contribution s were two very different exhibitions : In the Image o f Man an exhibition of sculpture and painting at th e Hayward Gallery, visited by over 70,000 people ; an d The Living Arts of India held at the Serpentine Galler y and in four cities outside London where an equa l number of visitors were enthralled to watch India n craftsmen and women at work on their traditional and exquisite crafts . Dance This year there was a substantial increase in trainin g opportunities for dancers, choreographers, mimes and composers and designers for dance . Over f18,000 was spent from the Dance allocation on individual stud y or training bursaries, many of which are not listed a s awards . Dance-Artists-in-Education schemes too k place in schools in Biddick (Tyne and Wear), Knowsley (Liverpool), Peterborough, and at the Dance Centre i n Leicester. The second Mime-Artists-in-Education pilo t scheme took place in Bromley (Kent) . Response t o these schemes indicates that this concentrate d experience of either dance or mime for schoo l children is of exceptional value not only to them an d the artists concerned, but to teachers, parents and th e wider community . Mime was a growing area of the department's wor k during the year. More mime groups and solo artist s were given first-time help than ever before and th e training opportunities ottered by the British Summe r School of Mime Theatre and by individual short ter m bursaries enabled many professional artists to develo p and improve their skills . Moving Picture Mime Sho w broke new ground with a four-week, well attended , run of Passionate Leave at The Place, London . Lack of funds unfortunately meant that th e International Mime Festival could not take place i n Spring '83, but the growing number of talented group s and soloists who need this Festival as a 'shop-window ' has persuaded advisers that it must have priority i n 1983/84 and we are looking forward to a lively Festiva l in London and the regions in spring 1984 . Sadly, this year also saw the death on 12th June 1982 of Dame Marie Rambert, the founder of Balle t Rambert . The company was one of the Arts Council' s earliest clients . It came onto the books of the Council' s predecessor CEMA (the Council for th e Encouragement of Music and the Arts) in 1942/43 . Ballet Rambert made the rest of the year a fittin g tribute to 'Madame's' memory with a first appearanc e in the Big Top, Battersea Park, London, a first tour o f America, and a Memorial Season at Sadler's Well s Theatre in March 1983 . Dram a One of the most significant events in regional theatr e in 1982/83 was the completion of the new Theatr e Royal, Plymouth . It stands on a prime site in the centr e of the city-ideally situated to provide plenty o f opportunities for the cultural enrichment of the area . The Theatre cost f9 million (including a Housing th e Arts contribution of £500,000) and was opened on 5t h 11 PRODUCTIONS FROM ARTS COUNCIL SUBSIDISED THEATRES PLAYING I N LONDON'S WEST END 398218 3 FROM MERMAID FROM STRATFOR D EAST CHILDREN OF A LESSER GO D 84 CHARIN G CROSS ROA D STEAMIN G (LONDON) J FRO M YVONNE ARNAUD THEATRE FRO M KEY ~ :--. FOR TWO - (GUILDFORD) BIRM NGHAM REPERTORY THEATR E CALL M E MADA M GREENWICH THEATRE SEAS (LONDON) HALF MOON THEATR E LON DON PALACE THEATRE (WATFORD) ~ GREETINGS REPERTORY f.::._ . # THEATRE M RED WILD, WILD (RI E A TRElo WOME N STRATFORD EAST (LONDON) A STAR IS TORN ''1 FROM THEATRE (LONDON) 12 ROYAL EXCHANG E Id a ANDY CAP P 0 RULES OF THEATR~ THE GAM E PLYMOUTH THEATRE ROYA L MIKAD O (GUILDFORD) HAMPSTEAD ROCKET TO THEATRE THE MOON (LONDON) HAMPSTEAD FRO M MANCHESTER FRO Mmommollill "11 YVONNE FRO M w ROMANTI C COMEDY SURREY ) G DESIG N FOR LIVING no ORANGE FFp M REENWIC H THEATRE AND A BIRMINGHAM TY Y YAK FRO M P4ESSIAH + GREENWICH THEATRE (LONDON) TH E DUCKIN G OU T r Departmental Reports May 1982 by HRH Princess Margaret . Designed b y Peter Moro to provide two theatres in one, a n auditorium seating 1,300 can be reduced to 758 by th e automatic lowering of part of the ceiling . This enable s the needs of opera and ballet as well as a variety o f stage shows, from the single star attraction to th e regular provision of drama, to be satisfactorily met . There is, in addition, a studio theatre the Drum with a flexible seating capacity of 150-200 . In its first few months of operation, audiences i n Plymouth and the South West were able to se e performances by companies such as the Royal Ballet , Glyndebourne Opera, Kent Opera and the Nationa l Theatre, as well as productions mounted by their ow n Plymouth Theatre Company . The continuin g development of this company both in and out of a complex as challenging as that provided by the Theatre Royal will be watched with great interest . During the year more than double the usual numbe r of playwrights benefited from attachments to theatre companies and organisations through the Residen t Dramatist Attachment Award Scheme . This has bee n streamlined to apply to short attachments of si x months only-with an option to extend for a furthe r six months if the writer and the theatre mutually agre e that it would be beneficial . Playwrights assist thei r hosts in all matters relating to new writing and writ e a new play for the company . The 18 awards during th e year went to organisations ranging from small-scal e touring companies like Northumberland Theatr e Company, through new playwriting centres lik e London's Hampstead Theatre to major regiona l theatres such as the Crucible in Sheffield . Bradford, a public library scheme for the sale o f children's books received subsidy towards publicit y costs . The Literature Department continues to welcom e applications for assistance in this field ; librarians an d booksellers who are interested in establishing scheme s in their own areas may find it useful to view the vide o film, which is available for hire through the Nationa l Book League . A one-day conference on Writers' Fellowships wa s arranged during the year by the Literature Department and Education Unit, under th e independent chairmanship of Professor Malcol m Bradbury . It brought together writers who have take n part in the Council's scheme since its inception i n 1974, and representatives of many intereste d organisations . A clear view emerged that writers' fellowships were amongst the Literature Department' s most successful schemes, and that provision shoul d be significantly expanded, both in the number, th e variety and the remuneration of fellowships . Following the conference the Council decided that, a s highlighted by the conference, a three-yea r development period for the scheme on a carefull y monitored basis should be initiated to continue th e success so far achieved . The Council has also been concerned to develop it s existing schemes for subsidising the publication o f books of literary quality, so that these books can b e made more readily available to the public . At the en d of the year, discussions were started with th e Publishers' Association which, it is hoped, will lead to a major new initiative in this area . Literatur e Musi c The Council has taken a keen interest in th e establishing of bookselling facilities and book-ordering points in public libraries as a means of increasing th e availability of books to the public . Some encouragin g initiatives in this area took place during the year . A t a one-day conference on the subject held at Boo k House, Wandsworth, booksellers, librarians, and othe r interested parties were able to see a video film, mad e with subsidy from the Council, showing some of th e bookselling schemes currently operating in libraries . Subsequently, the Council provided funds towards th e establishment of library book-ordering points i n Durham; and in Gateshead, where the schem e includes the display of a selection of literary titles fo r sale, as well as the facility for ordering books . In One of the most consistently newsworthy aspects o f music is opera . The 1982/83 season has been n o exception, with headlines about touring seasons , absentee starts and, inevitably, cost of subsidy . A two year study of the future provision of opera and danc e undertaken by the Arts Council has been complete d and a report released for comment and discussion ; and a government scrutiny team has been lookin g into the working of the Royal Opera House as well a s that of the Royal Shakespeare Company . Whatever views may be held about any individua l aspect of opera in Britain, there can be no doubt tha t in overall terms this country enjoys an operati c provision outstanding in its quality and variety . The 13 Departmental Reports subsidised companies range in scope from the Roya l Opera House, through the national and regiona l companies, to the small scale touring Opera 80. Over the 1982/83 season the range of work s performed by the subsidised companies has bee n extensive . An enthusiastic opera-lover with time an d money to spend could have attended some 5 4 different operas by 22 companies . 12 of these coul d have been seen in more than one production . Man y of these productions would, of course, have bee n revivals . The number of new productions offered wa s 27 ; not as many as companies or audiences woul d have liked, but still a creditable achievement i n financially difficult times . Less conspicuous to the public view is the work of th e National Federation of Music Societies . The Federatio n represents almost 1,200 music clubs and societie s from all parts of Great Britain, who promote annua l seasons of concerts (more than 3,000 concerts in al l attracting one million attendances) involving bot h amateur and professional performers . The greater part of the financial support for these activities (which tota l nearly f4 million) is raised by the members themselves, with additional assistance from suc h bodies as the Local Authorities, the Regional Art s Associations, the Arts Council, and private an d commercial sponsorship . This 'grassroots' music making, involving as it does thousands of committed enthusiasts, offers invaluabl e employment, worth more than f2 million to freelanc e professional musicians . It harnesses local initiative an d goodwill in the cause of music and embodies tha t co-operation and mutual understanding betwee n amateur and professional which have long been a distinguishing feature of British musical life . Despite economic pressures, the work of the Federatio n continues to flourish . Regiona l In 1982/83 the scope of the Regional Department's work was broadened to extend its functions fro m liaison with the twelve English Regional Art s Associations and touring management to a wide r concern with the whole of the Council's regional work . This integrated the work of the Council's department s in the regions with that of the RAAs and of loca l authorities . A new Regional Advisory Committee with member s from the Council's arts advisory panels and from the 14 RAAs, local authorities and arts management visite d four regions-the East Midlands, Southern, Greate r London and Merseyside and held regular Londo n meetings to consider orchestral provision outsid e London, arts centres development, local governmen t arts spending and the future roles of the RAAs and th e Arts Council . The Touring and Combined Arts sub committees considered a similarly wide range of issues ; theatres' development, middle-scale danc e touring, the marketing of tours, educational back-up , arts centres' development, role of the Arts Council fo r community arts after devolution and provision fo r performance art and mixed media activity . This year the Department took over responsibility fo r Housing the Arts from the Council's Financ e Department . The Department's work during the yea r has included its involvement in the opening of th e Theatre Royal, Plymouth and the Orchard Theatre , Dartford as important new touring houses and th e Royal Centre, Nottingham as an entertainmen t complex; the most successful ever tour mounted b y the National Theatre and the most successful seaso n ever by the Royal Shakespeare Company i n Newcastle ; the restructuring of a new trust to re-ope n Riverside Studios in London and progress toward s opening the Wilde Theatre at South Hill Park Art s Centre in Bracknell . Amongst several regional plannin g research projects, a major study into arts provisio n and subsidy in the Eastern region started . The Arts Council promoted four public meetings i n Norwich, Southampton, Birmingham and Leeds at which its work was opened to public debate . Work also began on a number of joint projects in facilitie s provision with the Sports Council . I Newcastl e 2 Sunderlan d 3 oillingha m 4 Middlesbrough 5 Darlington 6 Richmond (Yorks ) 7 Harrogate 8 York 9 Hull 10 Leed s 11 Bradfor d 12 Blackpoo l 13 Presto n 14 Southport 15 New Brighto n 16 Liverpool 17 St Helen s 18 Mancheste r 19 Stockport 20 Ashton-Under-Lyra e 21 Rochdal e 22 Huddersfiel d 23 Scunthorp e 24 Rotherha m 25 Chesterfield 26 Buxto n 27 Crew e 28 Stok e 29 Derb y 30 Noltin ha m , Newar k 32 Lincol n 33 !Norwic h 33 Peterboroug h 3 ; Leiceste r it, Coventr y 17 Birmingha m 38 Warwic k 39 Hereford 40 Malvern 41 Cambridg e 42 Bury St Edmund s 43 Harlo w 44 Stevenag e 45 Oxfor d 46 Cheltenha m 47 Bristo l 48 Weston-Super-Mare 41 0 Bat h )0 Swindo n 51 Readingg )2 HillingdO n )3 Ric hmond (Surrey ) 34 Croydo n 55 Bromle y 56 Hornchurc h 57 Darlfor d 58 '- rays 59 Canterbury 60 Basingstoke 61 Taunto n 62 Plymouth 63 Exete r 64 Poole 65 Bournemouth 66 Southampton 67 South Sea 61 6 ti Chichester tBrighto n -1i tatitbourne 00 . 1 , nnnn • nn n 2 1 • nn 3 ! nn nn nn n amount 49 I nn 5 6 • • • n nn n i3 n n 14 • ! 17 • 11 • n • n • • • • n • n n n ! l0 ; n • • nn rn nn n 24 29 n ~ n n • n 38 n n n 36 • • • 47 9 48 • n i n n n n n n 32 _ 35 n n n 390 n n 50 venues . n n n n :3 1 n n 30 • • • n 40 2 46 l n 23 n n n n • 37 • n 9 • n 26 n 28 R tionally, there were severa l ones . I%vo and Ihr" nigh t smaller drama and danc e companies throughout th e country_ 01)0ra 80 t(lUfLd for a t+ilal (it 8 1, week ,, L o n 22 n n 27 n k3 nn nn 221 18 0 1 20 19n •16 n i t and middle-scale ra, dance and drama tourin g ed by Arts Council louring. • n 4• n 44 n n 43 n 7t 44 n n n n 0 j n 56 57 58 n n 52 n n nn n '/ .3 n n n n S 54 n A S n n 6n n nn • bh • i h,- n n 68 nn 6y n n nn nn n n 62 n . '.Opera Dance n Dram a Each ~vmbol represents one wt Scotlan d Fuller details are given in the Scottish Arts Council's own Annual Report, published separatel y Scotland possesses approximately one third of the land mass of Great Britain and one tenth of its population . While sixty per cent of its people live in the central belt, many others live far from the major centres . In thes e areas, occasional visits by touring companies and what is frequently amateur arts activity often provide the onl y opportunities for the enjoyment of the arts . As a body with national responsibilities, the Scottish Arts Council is therefore especially conscious of the secon d object of the Council's charter-'to increase accessibility of the arts to the public' . The costs of providing opportunities for the enjoyment of the professional arts in many parts of Scotland ar e often high but the Council has continued to welcome and support organisations and projects which enable thos e living in the more rural and remote areas of Scotland to experience and share in at least some of the arts activitie s which are so often taken for granted by those living in the major centres , Elsewhere in this report are details of the Council's financial assistance towards these activities : regional art s centres such as Eden Court in Inverness, the Crawford in St . Andrews ; or the Pier Arts Centre in Stromness ; approximately seventy music clubs and arts guilds, away from the main population centres, each promotin g about six professional events per annum ; 17 touring theatre and dance companies giving over 200 performances , many of them in remote areas, and companies like Borderline, Guizer, 7 :84, and the Mull Little Theatre, whic h operate extensively or are based in rural Scotland . Meanwhile, the Council's own Travelling Gallery and its tourin g exhibition programme has brought a wide range of exhibitions to places without a permanent gallery of their own . Financial restrictions and the rising costs of touring the arts have naturally placed increasing pressure on th e Council and those organisations it subsidises in their efforts to maintain a programme of this kind . Yet the Counci l remains convinced that access and availability must remain a vital part of its policy . It has therefore continue d wherever possible to maintain its support for those organisations who are fulfilling such a role, to encourage th e development of new projects such as local arts festivals and community arts programmes throughout Scotlan d and to insist that the major national institutions should continue to fulfil their national responsibilities by servin g the whole of Scotland . There remains much to be done ; there are few well-equipped, purpose built facilities for the arts away from th e main urban centres and the Council is currently conducting a survey of arts facilities throughout Scotland whic h it is hoped will help to establish priorities for improvement . The Council currently awaits the report of its workin g party on Traditional and Folk Arts and is also considering ways in which it might provide further assistance fo r amateur arts activities and improve the promotion and coordination of visiting performances in rural areas . The Council cannot work in isolation to achieve these ends and scarce resources must be coordinated to th e best effect . During the year SAC established an informal working party with other agencies too try to develo p a cooperative approach to arts development in rural areas . At the same time, the Council and its officers have continued to work closely with local authorities who play a crucial part in the support of the arts throughou t the country . The changes in responsibility brought about by the Local Government and Planning (Scotland) Ac t 1982 will require a reappraisal of the Council's partnership with local authorities and the Council and its staf f will continue to give this matter their urgent consideration in the coming months . These changes together with the difficulties resulting from the current recession have created a climate o f uncertainty . That the arts seem to have survived so well is a tribute to the enthusiasm, dedication and skill o f artists, administrators and boards of management . The Council remains only too aware that the arts in Scotlan d are perilously underfunded . There can be few areas of public expenditure where even a small increase coul d achieve so much . But arts organisations, large and small, must continue to ensure that they are cost-effective , that they are responding positively to the challenge of changing circumstances, fulfilling the functions for whic h they are the recipients of public support and ensuring their own availability and accessibility to the public whic h supports them both directly and indirectly . TIMOTHY MASO N Directo r Scottish Arts Counci l 16 Wale s Fuller details are given in the Welsh Arts Council's own Annual Report, published separatel y In addition to the three public patrons of the arts-local government, Arts Associations and the Arts Councilthere is a large body of independent national and regional organisations (a recent rough count revealed ove r 60 of them in Wales) which in one way or another promote or assist arts activities on a regular basis . They vary in size, composition, purpose and in the way they function either as single organisations or as collectives fo r independent constituents . They have developed policy making and managerial systems best suited to thei r individual needs ; all are served by volunteers, not all have full time paid arts staff . Although their materia l resources are often very sparse, in human -terms they are impressive in the numbers of dedicated people the y involve . No serious claim is made for consistent high quality in their contribution to the arts, for their total artisti c input is often spread over a very wide area subject to so many limitations, but at least quantitatively th e contribution is impressive . They draw to the arts large numbers of people as participants, mostly amateur, an d large audiences . As the costs of the arts rise and financial support from public funds is less able to meet them, the possibilitie s of a closer relationship in operational and management terms between the official sponsors and representative s of these national independent organisations become attractive, to help to withstand the current threat of declin e in provision and standards . Without a reliable calculation of the total expenditure on the arts in the country as a whole-various studies indicate different sum totals depending on the kind of activity excluded from qualifying as art-it is difficult t o convince the public that the Council's portion of the whole, crucial as it is, is relatively small . Yet the impressio n given in discussions on public funding of the arts is that the Council is, if not the only, then certainly the larges t single sponsor of the arts . The Council's expenditures on certain kinds of artist and performing companies are fundamental to and for m the core of the country's professional arts provision-a fact which excites public interest in the Council as a management body . Since the number of people involved in managing this expenditure is small and the numbe r affected, the arts providers and audiences, is large, attention is invariably focussed on the question of democrati c accountability of Council, more than on its arts policy or on the artistic productions it supports . Local Authorities provide large scale help for the arts directly and indirectly by helping professional and amateu r organisations and by employing many arts practitioners in the education services they control . The question of . their public accountability is hardly ever raised . The Regional Arts Associations, co-funded by local authoritie s and the Arts Council, are constitutionally responsible to the community they were designed to serve . They to o are considered sufficiently accountable for their activities . Since 1952 responsibility for distributing government's grants to the arts (via the Arts Council of Great Britain ) spent in Wales, has rested with the Welsh Arts Council . The 20 members of the Council are chosen by th e Secretary of State for Wales and appointed by the Arts Council of Great Britain . The Council is advised by a number of subject committees and panels with membership exceeding 80 persons of appropriate expertise bu t doubt still persists over the Council's commitment to wide accountability . The total number of individuals wh o serve in one capacity or another in forming policy for the arts and managing expenditures and programmes o f activities for the three main public patrons is much larger than is generally realised . They represent a very wid e cross section of public opinion but even so is still smaller and narrower than that involved in the managemen t and in the activities of national, regional and local independent arts organisations . The Welsh Arts Council-Regional Arts Associations-Local Authorities pattern of arts patronage is a loos e partnership which continues to serve an essential purpose . It could be strengthened by drawing into it-th e obvious point of assimilation is the Regional Arts Associations-representation from as many of the independen t national and regional bodies as is compatible with their interests . Some are already represented on Regional Art s Associations committees but a new extended partnership is now called for to fortify the RAA's role by drawin g together in it the two strands-the formal and informal-to fortify them as democratic_ centres of art s representation, with specialist as well as universal suffrage . ANEURIN THOMA S Directo r Welsh Arts Council 17 Counci l The Council is appointed by the Minister for the Art s and its Chairman and 19 other unpaid members serv e as individuals, not representatives of particula r interests or organisations . The Vice-Chairman i s appointed by the Council from among its members and with the Ministers approval . The Chairman serve s for a period of five years and members are appointe d initially for four years . Sir William Rees-Mogg Chairma n Marghanita Laski Vice-Chairman Tony Churc h The Lady Digby Gerald Ellio t Buchi Emechet a Sir Hywel Evans, KC B Albert E . Frost, CB E Ronald Henson, M D Professor Derry Jeffare s John Las t John Manduell, CBE Colin Nears Mathew Prichard Robert Rowe, CB E Donald Sinden, CB E Sir Roy Stron g Dr Robert Woof Sir Brian Youn g Finance and Policy Committe e Sir William Rees-Mogg Chairman Albert E . Frost, CBE Vice-Chairman Tony Churc h Gerald Ellio t Sir Hywel Evans, KC B Marghanita Lask i John Las t John Manduell, CBE Colin Nears Sir Roy Stron g Sir Brian Young (June 1983) 18 Membership of Council and Staf f Valedictory to Sir Roy Shaw Poacher turned gamekeeper, Roy Shaw had enjoyed all the zestful freedoms of a council member for nearl y three years until in late 1974 he was appointed the Arts Council's 5th Secretary-General, and took on th e disciplinary duties, both of staff and of Council members, pertaining to that office . Roy Shaw entered this service in the now almost unbelievable days of continuous expansion . He and his the n Chairman Kenneth Robinson kept their nerve through the cruel truncations of art endeavours imposed by th e economic crisis of 1979 ; and he played a major part in creating an atmosphere of stabilising strength which turne d the potentially stultifying years that followed into a time of useful stock-taking and even of such fructifying move s forward as the inauguration of the new regional policies . Every Secretary-General has left his marks, both on policy and in legend, and already we can perceive what Ro y Shaw's are likely to be . In formal policy his mark will undoubtedly be recognised in the new emphasis the Council • now lays on its duty to integrate the arts into education, and, not least, into the education of adults after forma l education has ended . Roy Shaw's legend will be his catchphrase :'You must start where people are' . Yet his mos t lastingly useful monument at the Arts Council may well turn out to be his enthusiasm for the importance of ' the popular arts where these are excellent, and his courageous readiness to discourage those manifestations ' o f even the highest arts when they are not . Marghanita Lask i Counci l The following left the Council : William Cleave r David Sylvester, CB E The following were appointed as Council members : Tony Church, Director of Drama at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama ; acto r Mathew Prichard, President of the Welsh Group of Artist s Sir Roy Strong, Director and Secretary of the Victoria and Albert Museum ; critic and lecture r Dr Robert Woof, Reader in English Literature at Newcastle University ; former Vice Chairman of Northern Art s Associatio n Sir Brian Young, Former Director General of the Independent Broadcasting Authorit y Staf f Secretary-General Sir Roy Shaw, DLitt, DUniv retired and Luke Rittner was appointed to succeed him . Music Director Dr Basil Deane resigned and Richard Lawrence was promoted to succeed him . Drama Director John Faulkner resigned and Dickon Reed was appointed to succeed him . Keith Jeffery retired as Adviser for External Affairs . Honour s Our congratulations are extended to The Right Hon Kenneth Robinson, DLitt, Chairman of the Arts Council fro m 1977 to 1982 awarded Knight Bachelor in the 1983 New Year Honours and to Albert E . Frost, member of th e Council, awarded CBE also in the 1983 New Year Honours . Our congratulations are extended to David Sylvester, until lately a member of the Council, awarded CBE in th e 1983 Birthday Honours. Obituar y We record with great sorrow the death of Lord Clark of Saltwood, OM, CH, KCB who served on the Counci l for the Encouragement of Music and the Arts and the Arts Council from January 1940 to April 1960, and wa s Chairman of the Council for the last seven years of that period . 19 Advisory Panels and Committee s A key element of the Council's structure is its Advisory Panels and Committees . Council appoints their member s from nominations which are open to the public-Members, who serve voluntarily for up to four years, are generall y specialists in each arts discipline : working artists, arts administrators, scholars and critics . They advise the Counci l and its officers on the formulation and implementation of policy . Listed below are members of the Panels and Committees of the Arts Council of Great Britain, and the Scottis h and Welsh Arts Councils (themselves committees of the Council) as at June 1983 . England Advisory Panel on Art Sir Roy Strong Chairman Dr Christopher Green Vice-Chairma n Julian Andrews t Gillian Ayre s Helaine Blumenfel d Marc Chaimowicz Professor Christopher Fraylin g David Joh n Sir Denys Lasdun, CBE Diana Pain t David Phillip s Bryan Robertson, OB E Robert Rowe, CBE Hilary Spurlin g NikosStangos David Thompso n John Willett Exhibitions Sub-Committe e Bryan Robertson Chairma n Marc Chaimowic z Tony Fostert Dr Christopher Gree n Mark Haworth-Boot h Robert Hoppe r Helen Lucket t David Phillip s David Thompso n John Willet t Advisory Committee on Art s Film s Sir Brian Young Chairma n Dr Dawn Ade s John Bradshaw t Ben Brewste r Wayne Dre w Peter Ferre s Barrie Gavi n Norbert Lynto n Bruce Nightingale$ A . L . Ree s Barrie Vince Michael Whyte Peter Wollen 20 Artists' Film and Vide o Sub-Committee A . L . Rees Chairma n Susan Barrowclough John Bradshaw t Mary Pat Leece Stuart Marshal l David Parson s Anne Rees-Mogg Roger Wilson Advisory Panel on Danc e Colin Nears Chairma n The Lady Digby Vice-Chairman Richard Alsto n Peter Brinso n Gillian Clar k Jane Dudley Sally Gilmou r Shobana Jeyasing h Graeme Kay t Brenda Last Gale La w June Layso n Veronica Lewi s Joan McLaren o David Palmer Joseph Seeli g Robert Sykes # Anthony Van Laast Barry Wordswort h Dance and Mime Projects and Award s Sub-Committee Joseph Seelig Chairman Gillian Clar k Shobana Jeyasing h Desmond Jone s Graeme Kayt Jude Kell y Marie McCluske y Jenny Man n Jann Parry Jeremy Ree s Advisory Panel on Dram a Tony Church Chairma n Dr Robert Woof Vice-Chairma n Mike Alfred s John Bond Josephine Burnst Michael Covene y Brian Cox Robert Fowle r Pamela Howard David Jone s Nicolas Ken t Clive Perr y John Pott s Guy Slate r Elizabeth Sweeting, MB E Robert Sykes * John Wallban k Olwen Wymar k Projects Sub-Committe e Michael Abbensett s Mike Alfred s David Jone s Caroline Pinde r Michael Quin e Guy Slate r Jenny Toppe r Theatre Writing and Bursaries SubCommitte e John Bon d Nicolas Ken t John Wallban k Olwen Wymar k Advisory Committee o n Housing the Arts John Last Chairma n Tony Churc h Sir Hywel Evan s Anthony Everitt t Ronald Henso n Thelma Hol t Professor Derry Jeffare s Gale Law John Manduel l David Roc k Robert Row e Nicholas Thompso n Richard Welto n Advisory Panels and Committees Advisory Panel on Literature Marghanita Laski Chairman Dr Robert Woof Vice-Chairman Michael Church Dr Ken Churchill# Douglas Dunn Penelope Fitzgerald Catherine Freeman David Harsent Philippa Pearce Tim Rix Laurence Staigt Anne Stevenson Advisory Panel on Music John Manduell Chairman Wallis Hunt Vice-Chairman Neil Ardley Lady Barbiroll i Dr Derek Bourgeois John Fordham Arthur Hammond Ian Horsbrugh Barrie Iliffe# George Pratt John Stephens Tony Woodcockt New Music Sub-Committee Ian Horsbrugh Chairman Dr Derek Bourgeois Johri Carewe John Fordham Rolf Gehlhaar Philip Jones, OB E Nicholas Kenyon Peter Manning Eddie Prevost Bobby Wellins Advisory Group on Photography Sir Brian Young Chairman Dr Michael Weaver Vice-Chairman David Bailey Stevie Bezencenet John Bradshawt Harold Evan s Colin Ford Professor Christopher Frayling Fay Godwin Laxmi Jamdagni Daniel Meadows Roger Taylor David Watt Regional Advisory Committe e John Last Chairma n Ronald Henson Vice-Chairma n David Beeto n Helaine Blumenfel d David Brierle y David Brow n Cyril Davie s William Forste r Raphael Gonley t Gavin Henderso n Adrian Kellet t June Layso n Philippa Pearce Robert Scot t Smit h Joh n Stephen s John Elizabet h Sweeting Elizabeth TThomas homas David Watt Combined Arts Sub-Committe e William Forster Chairma n Geetha Bala Oliver Bennett Fred Brooke s Hugh Champion t John Cumming Buchi Emechet a Clare Higne y Christopher Ker r Michael Launchberry t Diana Pain t Jan Murra y Bob Ramdhani e Pippa Smit h Touring Sub-Committee David Brierley Chairma n Tim Brassell t Val Bourn e Christopher Durha m Armand Gerrard Patric Gilchris t Arthur Hammon d Brenda Last Graham Marc:han t Clive Perry Ian Reeki e Stephen Remingto n Robert Scot t Advisory Committee o n Trainin g The Lady Digby Chairman Pat Abraham t Lady Barbiroll i Michael Churc h Tony Church Jane Dudley Professor S . J . Egglesto n William Forster Nicholas Hooton David Joh n Gerald McDonald, OBE Caroline Phillips ' John Turtl e t British Council ex officio t Observer nominated by the Counci l of Regional Arts Association s o Observer nominated by the Inne r b-ndon Education Authority Scotlan d Scottish Arts Council Gerald Elliot Chairman' Professor Derry Jeffare s Vice-Chairman' Mollie Abbot t William Cunningha m Charles Drury, OB E Roderick Graham ' Brian Ivory Joan Knigh t Joan Lingard James Logan ' Robert Logan * Father Colin Maclnnes Coln MacLea n James Nlichi e Alexander Moffa t Alexander Orr Professor Donald Pack, CB E Willis Pickar d Stewart Sanderson ' Sheriff Nigel Thomson ' Ann Turner Thomso n "Member of Policy and Resource s Committe e (Housing the Arts matters are now dealt with by the Policy and Resource s Committee and Professor Peter Lord attends for this item on the agenda ) Art Committe e Robert Logan Chairman Robert Alliso n Christopher Alla n Kenneth Dingwal l Alexander Frase r Atholl Hil l Alexander Moffat Ann Turner Thomson 21 Adt icon Panels and Committee s Awards to Artists Panel Alexander Moffat Chairman Mick Campbel l Alexander Fraser Kenneth Dingwal l Bill Scot t Peter Seddo n Will McLea n Liz Munr o Exhibitions Panel Robert Logan Chairma n Barbara Grigo r Alan Johnston e Alexander Moffat Drama Committe e Roderick Graham Chairma n Ron Bai n Charles Drury Marilyn Irelan d Joan Knigh t Jan Mcdonal d Stephen Mulrin e James Scotland, CB E Dance and Mime Sub-Committe e Joan Knight Chairman Mollie Abbott Evelyn Langlan d Peter Lincol n Elaine McDonald, OB E Patricia Mackenzi e Royston Maldoo m Kedzie Penfiel d Literature Committee Stewart Sanderson Chairma n Stewart Con n Janis Fo x Joseph Hendr y Joan Lingar d Colin MacLea n Willis Pickar d Bursaries Panel Joan Lingard Chairma n Professor Peter Bayley Joseph Hendry Elizabeth Marshal l Willis Pickar d Dr Hilda Spea r Book Awards Pane l Willis Pickard Chairman Dr James Aitchiso n Lt Cdr Diarmid Gun n Professor Rosalind Mitchison Ishbel Maclea n 22 Grants to Publishers Panel Stewart Sanderson Chairman Peter Cochrane Janis Fox Professor Andrew Hook Dr George Watso n Alan Taylor Mixed Programm e Committee James Logan Chairma n William Cunningham Astrid Huggins Brian Ivory Moosa Jogee Father Colin Maclnnes Graeme McKinnon Alexander Orr Mary Urquhart Music Committee Sheriff Nigel Thomson Chairman Antony Collett Peter Evans Paul Hindmarsh Edward McGuire Alexander Orr Professor Donald Pack Touring Committee Professor Derry Jeffares Chairman Robin Anderson William Cunningha m James Donald Edward McGuire James Scotland Jennifer Wilson Wales Welsh Arts Council Sir Hywel Evans, KCB Chairman* William B . Cleaver Vice-Chairman* Dr Peter Cannon-Brookes D . Ivor Davies, MBE* Walford Davies Professor D . Ellis Evan s Lindsay Evan s Professor John Eynon Professor Richard M . Griffiths Lady Harlech Ken Hopkins Professor Hugh Hunt, CBE* Professor William Mathias* Dr Prys Morgan* Suzanne Murphy Captain H . W . Phillips Mervyn Phillips* Mathew Prichard ' Derrick Turner ' Aled Vaughan ' Margaret Williams ' Valerie Wynne-Williams Member of the Finance and Polic y Committee Art Committee William B. Cleaver Chairma n Dr Peter Cannon-Brookes Brenda Bloxa m John Boydell Roger s Alistair Crawfor d Paul Davie s Glyn Jones Jonah Jone s Ronald Lowe Andrew Lain g Hugo Perk s Mathew Prichar d Muriel Wilso n Panels of the Art Committee : Artists Panel Art Galleries and Exhibitions Panel The following who are not members of the main committee serve on a Panel : Sally Mos s Craft Committee Derrick Turner Chairma n Ceti Barcla y Peter Cambridg e Professor John Eyno n Tony For d Walter Keele r Kathleen Makinson Victor Margri e Ron Stanle y David Thoma s Frank Vinin g Carolyn White Alun Williams Llion Williams Dance Committee Margaret Williams Chairma n Rosamund Davie s Margaret Evan s Shirley Stansfield (April-December ) Christine Butle r David Rees Dick Matchet t Penny Nicholas John Prior Advisory Panels and Committees Drama Committee Professor Hugh Hunt Chairma n Valerie Wynne-William s Lindsay Evan s Bernard Evan s Godfrey Evan s Maurice Jenkin s Lyn Jone s Peter Mumfor d Geoff Powel l Jill Taylo r Illtyd Lewi s Sybil Crouc h Panel of the Drama Committee : Young People's and Community Theatre Panel the following, who are not member s of the main Committee, serve on a Panel : David Adams Haydn Huw s Charmian Saville Film Committe e Aled Vaughan Chairma n Ken Hopkin s David Berry David Broo k Harry Carte r Elis Jone s John Hartley Henry Lutma n Claire Polla k Dr Allen Samuel s Medwen Robert s Michele Rya n Irene Whitehea d Norman Williams Gruffudd Robert s Multi Media Pane l (a sub-Committee of the Finance an d Policy Committee ) William B. Cleaver Chairma n Margaret William s Ken Hopkin s Literature Committee Dr Prys Morgan Chairma n Walford Davies Vice-Chairma n Professor Ellis Evan s Professor Richard Griffith s Adam Hopkins David Hughe s W . Randal Jenkins Dr R . Brinley Jone s Geraint Lewis Professor Brian Morri s Robert Nisbet Elfyn Pritchard Ifor Ree s Ann Sae r T . D . Scourfield J . P . Ward , Dr Urien Wilia m T . Arfon William s Panels of the Literature Committee : Awards to Writers Panel Grants to Publishers Panel Children's Literature Panel the following, who are not member s of the main Committee, serve on a Panel : Alun Creunant Davie s Elis Gwyn Jone s Gwerfyl Pierce Jone s I=lspeth Mitcheso n Fleri Rogers lolo Walter s Menna Lloyd William s Music Committee Professor William Mathias Chairma n Mervyn Burtc h Ann Edward s Nigel Emery Ken Evan s Professor Richard Griffith s Lady Harlech Dalwyn Henshal l Ken Hopkin s Sir Nicholas Jackso n Haydn James John Jenkin s Suzanne Murph y A . J . Heward Ree s Huw Tregelles William s Regional Committe e D . Ivor Davies Chairma n Capt H . W . Phillip s Valerie Wynne-William s Frank Evan s Gareth Evan s Ken Ibal l Joan Mill s Haydn Ree s Lt Col J . Stephenso n Hugo Perk s Tomi Scourfiel d Llion Williams 23 Staff Based at its headquarters in Piccadilly, London, the Council's staff work with its members, advisory panels an d committees to administer the Council's programmes and to advise on and execute policy and funding decisions . For the Council's work in England there are nine departments . In addition the Council administers the Hayward and Serpentine Galleries and the Wigmore Hall, in London, an d has its own shop in Covent Garden . Outside London the Council has nine marketing officers in major regiona l centres to support its touring programme . The Scottish and Welsh Arts Councils have their own staffs based in Edinburgh and Cardiff . Senior Staf f HEADQUARTERS 105 Piccadilly London W1 V OAU 01-629 9495 Secretary-General Sir Roy Shaw, D Litt, D Uni v Deputy Secretary-GeneralRichard Pulford Finance Director Anthony Field, FC A Deputy Finance Director Peter You nie, AC A Art Director Joanna Dre w Drama Director Dickon Ree d Deputy Drama Director Dennis Andrew s Music Director Richard Lawrenc e Associate Music Director Eric Thompson, OB E Dance DirectorJane Nichola s Literature Director Charles Osborn e Deputy Literature Director Josephine Fal k Regional Director David Pratle y Director of Personnel and Administration Carol Harris, FIPM Head of Secretariat Lawrence Mackintos h Accountant David Pelham, FC A SCOTLAND 19 Charlotte Square Edinburgh EH2 4DF 031-226 6051 Director Timothy Maso n Deputy Director Harry McCan n Art Director Lindsay Gordo n Music Director Christie Dunca n Drama Director Bob Palme r Literature Director Walter Cairn s Touring Director Tony Wraigh t Development Director John Murph y WALES Holst House Museum Place Cardiff CF1 3NX 0222-394711 Director Aneurin Thoma s Music Director Roy Bohana, MB E Drama Director Roger Tomlinso n Art Director Peter Jones Literature Director Meic Stephen s Director of Finance and Administration Andrew Malin (June 1983) 24 Annual accounts for the yea r ended 31 March 198 3 26 Finance Director's Note s 27 Arts Council of Great Britain account s 60 Scottish Arts Council account s 83 Welsh Arts Council account s 101 Table A Housing the Art s 103 Table B Special Funds Beneficiarie s Compton Poetry Fund Guilhermina Suggia Gift for the 'Cello H. A . Thew Fun d Henry and Lily Davis Fun d Miriam Licette Scholarship Mrs Thornton Bequest 104 Table C Subsidies to Regional Arts Association s 106 Table D Art Exhibition s 109 Table E Contemporary Music Network 110 Table F Schemes and Awards 25 Finance Director's Notes 1 The Parliamentary Grant-in-Aid of £91,300,00 0 shown in the Income and Expenditure Account for th e year ended 31st March 1983 includes the supplementary grant of L5,000,000 announced by th e Government in December 1982 to help clear pas t deficits of subsidised companies and to assist thos e clients which were likely to face the most sever e difficulties in adjusting to the implications for them o f the restriction in the level of the Council's grant the n announced as £93,500,000 for 1983/84 . This supplementary grant was broadly allocated a s follows : National Companies Regional Arts Associations Music Dance Touring Drama Art Literature Arts Centres and Community Projects Scottish Arts Council Welsh Arts Council Housing the Arts £1,750,000 480,000 200,000 50,000 405,000 381,000 162,000 10,000 45,000 3,483,000 516,000 301,000 4,300,000 700,000 £5,000,00 0 2 This is the first set of Arts,Council accounts prepare d since the accounting systems in London wer e computerised. The Council is extending thi s computerisation to its subsidy system in order t o improve efficiency in this complex area and to mak e fuller use of the data that it collects . Th e implementation of the first stage of this operation wa s undertaken in the financial year 1982/83 ; regrettabl y the pressures this imposed have led to a delay i n publishing these accounts . 3 The Touring Section of Schedule 1 lists thos e organisations which received subsidy for touring onl y Touring activities which are a part of a total annua l programme of many music, dance and dram a organisations are included in figures shown in thos e sections of Schedule 1 . 4 The subsidies listed in Schedule 1 for Regional Arts Associations comprise the basic annual subsidie s totalling £9,054,850 for 1982/83 together with th e additional funds made available by the Council for a range and variety of schemes and activities . The final 26 total of £10,616,783 is analysed in Table C on page s 104 and 105 . 5 The accounts for 1982/83 show that, with a gros s turnover of £941 million including activities at th e Hayward and Serpentine Galleries, the Oriel Booksho p and Gallery in Cardiff, the Arts Council Shop , Wigmore Hall, Art Films productions and Ar t Exhibition and Film Tours, the Arts Council ended wit h a net surplus of £350,611 representing a surplus o f £309,387 in England, a deficit of £55,070 in Scotlan d and a surplus of £96,294 in Wales . 6 Sundry income includes final receipts and royaltie s totalling £34,528 in respect of the productions of My Fair Lady and Oklahoma! 7 The increase in the General Operating Costs of over 12% was caused by the acquisition of premises at Yarmouth Place, enabling the Council subsequently t o relinquish more expensive accommodation over it s Shop in Long Acre and by the special increase in th e costs of the Counci l ' s Retirement Plan during 1982/83 . The additions to office equipment include the cost o f installing a fully computerised telephone system . This became necessary because of the deterioratin g existing equipment which could not be extended t o cover the move back to Headquarters of th e departments previously housed in Long Acre. 8 In accordance with the statement of standard accounting practice (SSAP10) laid down by th e Institute of Chartered Accountants, the Council ha s incorporated in its accounts a Statement of Sourc e and Application of Funds for 1982/83 . 9 In order to encourage subsidised organisations t o exercise greater thrift, the Council has been extendin g its use of "rolling guarantees" by which means an y uncalled part of a guarantee against loss offered in on e year can remain available for call by the sam e organisation in an ensuing year . In past accounts it ha s been the practice to treat these uncalled portions o f rolling guarantees in the Council's annual accounts i n the same way as ordinary guarantees not yet claimed ; that is, as current liabilities outstanding unti l eventually claimed in respect of the second year o f the client's operations . It has now been agreed that any uncalled elements o f rolling guarantees shall fall in as subsidy no longe r required in Year Two in which any portions o f guarantees concerned are settled . The amount which in the past would have rolled forward is now treate d as a re-commitment in Year Two. Arts Council of Great Britain Income and Expenditure Accoun t for the year ended 31 March 198 3 1982 279,416 Income Parliamentary Grant-in-Ai d Grants and guarantees provided for i n previous year not now required 271,208 1,500 7,525 17,006 Other incom e Interest receivable Donation s Proceeds on sale of fixed assets Sundry incom e £80,450,000 Note 198 3 1 £91,300,000 638,28 1 LE 264,23 0 8,01 0 9,23 5 46,870 297,239 328,34 5 92,266,626 81,026,655 62,072,793 3,266,040 9,675,800 5,009,000 80,623,63 3 15,000 1,500 262,76 6 (3,724) (77,181) Expenditure General expenditure on the art s in Englan d General operating costs in Englan d Grant to Scottish Arts Counci l Grant to Welsh Arts Counci l 2 70,307,10 0 3 3,676,20 3 10,794,60 0 6,703,00 0 91,480,90 3 Transfer to Provision for indemnit y Transfer to Provision for doubtful debts Transfer to capital account in respect o f capita l expenditure in yea r Transfer from reserve for special ar t project s Transfer to/(from) reserve fo r capita l expenditure 3,00 0 376,57 6 96,760 91,957,239 " f 204,661 Net Surplus for the Year f 309,387 27 Arts Council of Great Britain Balance Sheet at 31 March 1983 1982 f5,170,750 273,325 3,729 329,861 7,024,084 1,351,938 69,428 Note 4 198 3 £5,528,60 1 Loans 5 171,12 5 Investments 6 3,729 Fixed Assets Current Assets Stocks Amount earmarked to meet unmatured commitments Debtors and prepayments Cash 7 £ 325,284 1 8 7,474,084 2,046,732 76,560 9 .922 .660 8,775,311 7,191,363 1,332,209 Less Current Liabilitie s Grants and guarantees outstanding Creditors and accrual s /,~bS,StS S 1,593,99 1 9,159,57 4 8,523,572 251,739 Net Current Assets 208,252 Net Assets of Special Funds 763,086 9 £6,699,544 £5,907,795 £4,923,033 262,766 (15,049) 5,170,750 528,793 208,252 Represented by : Capital Account Balance at 1 April 198 2 Transfer from income an d expenditure accoun t Book value of assets f sold or written of Reserves and Provisions Special Funds Capital & Reserves £5,170,750 376,57 6 (18,725) 10 5,528,60 1 937,940 9 233 .003 tb,t)",S44 £5,907,795 Chairman : WILLIAM REES-MOG G Secretary General : LUKE RITTNER 28 233,00 3 Arts Council of Great Britain Statement of Source and Applicatio n of Funds for the year ended 31 March 198 3 Source of Funds Net surplus for the year Adjustment for items not involving the movement of fund s Transfer to capital account in respect of capital expenditure Transfer to reserve for capital expenditure Transfer to provision for doubtful debts £309,387 f376,57 6 96,76 0 3,000 476,33 6 Special funds : net surplus for the year 785,72 3 24,75 1 Total generated from operations 810,47 4 Funds from Other Source s Secured loan repaid Less: secured loan made 132,200 (30,000 ) Increase of special funds' assets 102,20 0 (24,751) 77,44 9 887,92 3 Application of Funds Purchase of fixed assets Net Source of Funds Increase/(Decrease) of Working Capita l Decrease of stocks Increase of amount earmarked to meet unmatured commitments Increase of debtors and prepayments Increase of grants and guarantees outstanding Increase of creditors and accruals (376,576) £511,34 7 £ (4,577 ) 450,000 694,794 (374,220 ) (261,782 ) 504,21 5 Movement of net liquid fund s Increase of cash balance Net Increase of Working Capital 7,13 2 f 511,347 29 Notes to the Account s 1 ACCOUNTING POLICIES The Accounts have been prepared under the historical cost convention, and on a basis which takes account of the Statement s of Standard Accounting Practice drawn up by the Consultative Committee of Accountancy Bodies, so far as these ar e appropriate to the Council . a Grant-in-Ai d The Parliamentary Grant-in-Aid is issued to meet the Council's expenditure falling due for payment during the financial yea r including payments to meet commitments incurred in a previous year . The Council may incur commitments during a financia l year in the full knowledge that they will not fall due for payment until the following financial year and will have to be me t from that year's Parliamentary Grant-in-Aid . The Income and Expenditure Account includes as expenditure the total commitments incurred during the financial year, and under income the total amount of Grant-in-Aid allocated to meet thos e commitments including a sum earmarked by the Council from the following year's Parliamentary Grant-in-Aid . This sum i s shown as an asset in the Balance Sheet . Reconciliation of Parliamentary Grant-in-Aid as shown in the Income and Expenditure Account, with the total amount vote d by Parliament in 1982/83 Amount voted by Parliament and paid in full in 1982/8 3 as published in the Parliamentary Supply Estimates £86,000,000 4,850,00 0 Additional sums provided under the Treasury's power of virement .90,850,000 Less Amount earmarked at 31 March 1982 to be met ou t of future amounts to be voted by Parliament 7,024,084 83,825,91 6 Plus Amount earmarked at 31 March 1983 to be met fro m future amounts to be voted by Parliament Parliamentary Grant-in-Aid shown in Income and Expenditure Account . This is the figure shown in the appendix to the Parliamentary Supply Estimates 7,474,084 f91,300,000 b Grants and guarantees Grants and guarantees are charged to the Income and Expenditure Account in the year for which they are undertaken as a commitment by the Council on the basis of a formal offer to and acceptance by the Council's clients . Any amounts unpaid from these commitments are shown as liabilities on the Balance Sheet and any advance payments to clients in anticipation of the grant s and guarantees to be offered for the following financial year are shown on the Balance Sheet as assets. Grants and guarantees are offered in respect of the year in which the activities commenced . c Fixed assets Expenditure on fixed assets is charged as an appropriation from the Income and Expenditure Account to the Council's capita l account. The book value of any assets sold or written off is eliminated from the Balance Sheet by a reduction in capital account. Any proceeds of sale are credited to income . Fixed assets are not depreciated . Any expenditure on renewals is charged agains t income . All works of art are included under fixed assets and form an integral part of the Council's exhibition programme . d Stocks Stocks are stated at cost on a unit cost basis, or at net realisable value if lower . e Exhibition s Expenditure incurred on an exhibition promoted by the Council is charged to the year in which that exhibition is officially opene d to the public. Expenditure incurred in a year prior to that opening is treated as a prepayment . f Consolidatio n The Arts Council of Great Britain is legally responsible for the affairs of the Scottish Arts Council and the Welsh Arts Council, whic h are by constitution committees of the Council . However in view of the powers delegated to those committees they present separat e accounts which are not consolidated with those of the Arts Council . 30 Note 2 Arts Council of Great Britain 2 GENERAL EXPENDITURE ON THE ARTS IN ENGLAN D 1982 £22,220,000 8,888,509 5,306,755 21,591 77,597 198 3 National companies Grants and guarantees £26,444,68 2 Regional Arts Association s Grants and guarantees Musi c Grants and guarantees Contemporary Music Network Scheme expenses Wigmore Hall 10,616,78 3 £6,047,11 1 31,89 1 102,35 1 5,405,943 2 ,424,502 8,61 5 F 6,181,35 3 Dance Grants and guarantees Other activities 2,706,74 1 17,39 1 2,433,117 1,637,556 _117,448 2,724,13 2 Touring Grants and guarantees Publicity, salaries and sundry expenses 5,390,15 4 145,35 8 4,755,004 10,296,964 5,691 5,535,51 2 Dram a Grants and guarantees Scheme expenses 11,501,52 9 5,47 1 10,302,655 1,339,986 1,070,562 393,019 70,488 423,401 1,195 1,273 11,507,000 Art Grants and guarantees Net cost of exhibitions Hayward Gallery Serpentine Gallery Arts films Other activities Publications and promotions 1,428,707 782,641 405,981 78,143 387,77 1 62 - 3,299,924 647,531 8,602 1,050 12,961 4,500 3,083, 30 5 Literatur e Grants and guarantees Poetry library Writers' tours Publications and promotions National Book Awards 674,644 57,979,796 720,43 3 9,25 2 3,407 14,743 747,83 5 Carried forward 66,840,602 31 Arts Council of Great Britai n Notes 2 3 1982 57,979,796 1,073,153 569,504 6,316 Arts centres and community projects Grants and guarantee s Training in the Arts Grants and guarantee s Short courses and training scheme s 25,826 Education projects and course s 12,272 Reports and surveys 25,726 Publication s £62,072,793 1,179,280 583,34 9 12,357 595,706 575,820 2,380,200 1983 66,840,602 Brought forwar d Housing the Arts Grant s Total expenditure for the yea r 37,767 5,550 35,79 5 1,612,400 f7U,3U7,1UU Details of grants and guarantees are given in Schedule 1 on pages 36 to 51 . The income and expenditure on Wigmore Hall, art exhibitions, art films and publications are given in Schedule 2 on pages 52 to 53 . 3 GENERAL OPERATING COSTS 32 198 2 L 1,841,282 275,565 116,803 486,236 122,245 73,360 102,804 90,071 28,545 30,524 98,605 Salaries and wages Arts Council of Great Britain Retirement Pla n Travelling and subsistenc e Rent and rate s Fuel, light and house expense s Publicity and entertainmen t Postage and telephone Stationery and printin g Professional fee s Enquiries, investigations and researc h Office and sundry expense s 198 3 L 1,958,389 341,18 4 126,04 6 545,96 2 230,78 1 90,93 4 109,18 3 101,35 6 19,81 2 39,081 113,475 f 3,266,040 Total expenditure for the year £ 3,676,203 Note 4 Arts Council of Great Britain 4 FIXED ASSETS Book value a t 1 April 1982 Freehold Property : Covent Garde n 5 Record Street Additions Items sold or Book value a t written off 31 March 198 3 f 3,150,05 8 106,69 5 £3,150,05 8 -inr_ co c 3,256,753 Freehold Property improvement : 5 Record Stree t Leasehold improvements : 105 Piccadilly Hayward Galler y Wigmore Hal l Serpentine Galler y 8 Long Acre 9 Long Acre 48 Vicarage Crescen t Equipment and vehicles: Office equipment (a) Art Exhibition equipment (b) Concert Hall equipment (b) Stores equipmen t Film equipment (a) Motor vehicle s Others : Cello (c ) Works of art Photographs In C'] 7 20,264 55,852 96,139 80,855 949 102,943 56,269 977 10,251 655 38,733 - - 66,10 3 96,794 119,58 8 94 9 102,94 3 56,26 9 97 7 393,984 49,639 - 443,62 3 437,775 73,171 84,027 3,440 43,076 78,548 176,151 5,947 1,506 3,272 14,585 £10,113 8,612 603,81 3 79,11 8 84,02 7 4,946 46,34 8 84,52 1 720,037 201,461 18,725 902,77 3 100 749,012 30,600 125,213 - - 100 874,225 30,600 779,712 125,213 - 904,925 £5,170,750 £376,576 £18,7,25 • £5,528,601 The Covent Garden property is held jointly by the Arts Council of Great Britain and Royal Opera House, Coven t Garden Limited, subject to and on the terms of a charitable trust known as the Royal Opera House Developmen t Land Trust, and the rights and interests of the Arts Council of Great Britain in such property, as set out in a trus t deed dated 27 February 1981, include a charge in excess of f3.15m over any proceeds of sale of such land . All fixed assets are stated at cost except : (a) at valuation (replacement) at 1 January 1980 or at cos t (b) at valuation (replacement) at 1 July 1980 or at cos t (c) at valuation at 31 March 1960 33 Notes 5 6 7 8 9 Arts Council of Great Britain 5 LOANS 198 2 £411,84 1 411,84 1 138 .516 1983 Secured loans Balance at 1 April 198 2 Add Loan made in yea r Less Repayments in yea r £273,32 5 30,000 303,32 5 132,20 0 £171,12 5 LL/-5, .SL .-) 6 INVESTMENTS L 64 7 3,08 2 5% Treasury Stock 1986/89 (market value £501, 1982-£480) Equities Investment Fund for Charities (5870 units) (market value £11,317, 1982-£9,806) £3,72 9 L 647 3,08 2 L3,72 9 7 STOCKS £ 9,84 5 318,58 2 1,43 4 Film s Publications and shop s Bar L 10,007 313,85 4 1,42 3 L325,284 L329,861 8 DEBTORS AND PREPAYMENT S £ 590,125 761,813 Grants and guarantees paid in advanc e Sundry debtors and prepayment s £1,351,938 L -1,182,034 864,698 f2,046,732 Sundry debtors include £1,223 outstanding under the Art Purchase Scheme . 9 SPECIAL FUND S L 49,81 7 2,92 1 6,99 3 86,63 1 26,58 1 6,688 5,89 8 22 .723 Compton Poetry Fun d Dio Fund The Guilhermina Suggia Gift Henry and Lily Davis Fund The Miriam Licette Scholarshi p H . A. Thew Fun d Mrs . Thornton Fun d Arts Council Trust for Special Funds YLU25,LS L Details of the income, expenditure and net assets of these funds are shown in Schedules 3 and 4 o n pages 54 to 59 . 34 L 59,008 3,274 7,088 96,875 25,099 5,641 5,361 30,65 7 L233,00 3 Notes 90/99 10 Arts Council of Great Britain RESERVES AND PROVISIONS Balance At 1 April Income and expenditur e account Reserve for specia l art projects Reserve for capita l expenditure Provision for indemnity Provision fo r doubtful debts Reserve for manuscripts 1982 Surplus for the year £414,652 1309,387 23,597 Transfer fro m reserves Appropriation s f Balance At 31 Marc h 198 3 - - f 724,03 9 - - - 23,59 7 67,297 20,000 - - £96,76 0 - 164,05 7 20,00 0 2,500 747 - - 3,00 0 - 5,500 747 £528,793 f309,387 - f99,760 f 937,940 f Reserve for Capital Expenditur e The appropriation is required to ensure that the balance on the reserve at the year end is sufficient to meet th e sum committed by the Council for capital items ordered but not delivered at that date . Certificate of Comptroller and Auditor Genera l I have examined the foregoing Income and Expenditure Account, Balance Sheet and the supporting informatio n set out in the Statement of Source and Application of Funds and the Notes . In my opinion these give, unde r the historical cost convention, a true and fair view of the state of affairs of the Arts Council of Great Britain a t 31 March 1983 and of its surplus and the Source and Application of its funds for the year ended on that date . G. R . L . Osborne Director of Audit for Comptroller and Auditor General Exchequer and Audit Departmen t 30 September 1983 35 Arts Council of Great Britain Schedules to the Account s 31 March 1983 1 GRANTS AND GUARANTEES (including subsidies offered but not paid at that date ) National Companies English National Opera National Theatre Board Royal Opera House, Covent Garden Limited Royal Shakespeare Theatre £ 5,440,00 0 6,550,000 10,379,682 4,075,000 Total as Note 2 (page 31) £26,444,682 Regional Arts Associations Eastern Arts Association East Midlands Arts Association Greater London Arts Association Lincolnshire and Humberside Arts Merseyside Arts Northern Arts North West Arts Southern Arts Association South East Arts Association South West Arts West Midlands Arts Yorkshire Arts Association £ 690,48 3 824,944 1,464,08 7 523,048 497,41 9 1,733,236 864,849 850,41 8 540,35 3 876,13 3 1,034,81 1 717,002 Total as Note 2 (page 31) £10,616,78 3 Musi c Opera Handel Opera Society Regional Opera Trust Limited (Kent Opera) £ 43,000 600,000 £ 643,000 Orchestral and other concerts Actual Music Almeida Theatre Company Limited Azimuth Capricorn Concerts Trust CBSO Society Limited Compatible Recording and Publishing (Promotions) Limited Contemporary Concerts Co-ordination Early Music Centre Limited Eastern Authorities Orchestral Association Electronic Music Now Elms Concerts Limited English Sinfonia Limited 16,691 8,000 4,884 1,150 475,000 4,500 4,000 29,400 110,000 9,79 3 5,000 42,000 Carried forward 710,418 36 643,000 Schedule 9 Brought forward Gemini Gordon Beck Nonet Halle Concerts Society Haydn-Mozart Society Jazz Centre Society Limited John Alldis Choir Johnny Rondo Duo L .A .B London Jazz Composers' Orchestra London Music Productions London Musicians' Collective Limited London Orchestral Concert Board Limited Matchless Music Mornington Trust Music Projects/London Trust Nexus National Federation of Music Societies National Youth Jazz Orchestra Limited New Macnaghten Concerts Limited New Music Formation Northern Sinfonia Concert Society Limited Park Lane Group Limited Piano 40 Pulp Music Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Society Seven Dials Jazz Club Sinfonietta Productions Limited Society for the Promotion of New Music Songmakers' Almanac Limited Steve Lacy Sextet and Keith Tippett Suoraan Western Orchestral Society Limited Arts Council of Great Britain f 710,418 f 643,000 2,500 13,63 3 485,000 27,000 141,000 16,39 0 1,80 0 1,50 0 2,50 0 1,10 0 14,75 0 1,307,00 0 430 3,000 1,700 21,686 413,00 0 9,00 0 11,00 0 75 0 210,000 9,000 6,91 2 1,000 480,31 7 1,47 1 47,37 6 8,20 0 17,41 0 12,73 1 50 0 780,408 4,760,48 2 Festival s Aldeburgh Festival - Snape Maltings Foundation Limited Bath Festival Society Limited Brighton Festival Society Limited Cheltenham Arts Festivals Limited Harrogate Festival of Arts and Sciences Limited King's Lynn : St George's Guildhall Limited London : Camden Borough Council English Bach Festival Trust Sanskritik Centre of Indian Arts Limited Malvern Festival Society Limited Norfolk and Norwich Triennial Festival Limited Stroud Festival Limited Three Choirs Festival Association Limited York Early Music Festivals Limited 50,00 0 34,88 7 24,00 0 37,000 37,00 0 21,00 0 18,000 34,000 8,000 13,000 20,000 7,750 20,000 11,000 335,63 7 Carried forward 5,739,11 9 37 Arts Council of Great Britain Schedule 7 f 5,739,11 9 Brought forward Other activities Awards to Artists Contac t Music Information Centre Trus t National Music Council of Great Britai n Sadler 's Wells Trust Limite d Southern Rag Youth and Music Limite d Pianos: London Borough of Havering Northampton Borough Counci l Queens Hall Arts Centre South Hill Park Trust Limite d Wakefield Metropolitan District Counci l Wells Centre Limited £143,21 2 5,200 17,000 78 2 25,000 1,200 46,900 f 2,000 3,000 6,500 4,00 0 1,23 9 1,00 0 17,739 Recordings : Hyperion Records Limited Impetus Records Matchless Recordings Nimbus Records Limite d Sweet Folk All Recordings Limite d Taa Mole Record Productions Limited Tapegames Limited Tsafrika Records Unicorn Records Limited 18,49 5 3,000 3,284 3,780 2,000 3,000 2,400 3,000 12,000 50,959 307,992 £6,047,11 1 Total as Note 2 (page 31 ) Dance and Mim e Chisenhale Dance Spac e Contemporary Dance Trust Limite d Dance Umbrella Limited Dancewor k Extemporary Dance Company Limited Giselle Enterprises Intriplicate Mime Company Janet Smith and Dancer s The Kos h London Borough of Hammersmith and Fulham : Allsorts-A Young Festival 198 2 London City Ballet Trust Limited London Festival Ballet Trust Limited Maedee Dupre s Manti s Mary Fulkerso n Carried forward 38 L 7,50 0 525,00 0 24,000 2,100 80,000 4,000 5,35 0 35,17 0 5,000 1,000 10,500 930,000 2,30 0 9,100 1,500 £1,642,52 0 Schedule 1 Brought forward Mercury Theatre Trust Limited (Ballet Rambert ) Mime and Movement Trust (Moving Picture Mime Show) Nola Rae, London Mime Theatr e Northern Ballet Theatre Limite d Second Stride Dance Compan y Tamara McLor g Theatre Whispers Limite d Trickster Theatre Compan y Arts Council of Great Britai n L1,642,52 0 569,583 23,648 1,80 0 370,00 0 27,90 0 2,75 0 3,500 2,000 Awards to Artist s £2,643,70 1 63,040 Total as Note 2 (page 31 ) £2,706,74 1 Touring Opera Glyndebourne Productions Limite d Opera 80 Limite d Opera North Limite d Scottish Opera Limited Welsh National Opera Limited L 348,000 198,00 9 1,800,000 275,00 0 2,000,00 0 £4,621,00 9 Dance Basic Space Dance Theatre Limited Midlands Dance Company Limite d Scottish Ballet Limited 5,00 0 8,00 0 40,00 0 53,000 Dram a Century Theatre Limite d Channel Theatre Compan y Cheek by Jowl Theatre Compan y Cliff Hanger Theatre Compan y E & B Productions (Theatre) Limited The Flying Tortoise Theatre Company Limite d Full Steam Ahead Production s The Grand Unio n Lancaster Orbit Limited New Shakespeare Company Limited The New Vic Theatre Triumph Apollo Productions Limite d WSG Productions Limite d 71,14 5 10,000 10,000 18,500 45,000 16,250 60,000 29,150 38,000 21,000 46,600 145,00 0 38,000 548,64 5 British Council : Visiting Arts Uni t The Theatres Trus t Theatre Investment Fund Limite d 55,000 50,000 62,500 167,50 0 Total as Note 2 (page 31) f 5,390,154 39 Schedule 7 Arts Council of Great Britain Dram a Building-based companie s Basingstoke : Horseshoe Theatre Company Limited Birmingham Repertory Theatre Limited Bolton : Octagon Theatre Trust Limited Bristol Old Vic Trust Limited Cheltenham : Gloucestershire Everyman Theatre Company Limited Chester : Gateway Theatre Trust Limited Colchester Mercury Theatre Limited Coventry : Belgrade Theatre Trust (Coventry) Limited Derby Playhouse Limited Exeter: Northcott Devon Theatre and Arts Centre Farnham Repertory Company Limited Guildford : Yvonne Arnaud Theatre Management Limited Harrogate (White Rose) Theatre Trust Limited Ipswich : Wolsey Theatre Company Limited Lancaster: The Duke's Playhouse Limited Leatherhead : Thorndike Theatre (Leatherhead) Limited Leeds Theatre Trust Limited Leicester Theatre Trust Limited Liverpool : Merseyside Everyman Theatre Company Limited Liverpool Repertory Theatre Limited London : Alternative Theatre Company Limited Caryl Jenner Productions Limited Churchill Theatre Trust Limited Croydon Alternatives Theatre Company Limited English Stage Company Limited Greenwich Theatre Limited Half Moon Theatre Limited Hampstead Theatre Limited Hornchurch Theatre Trust Limited King's Head Theatre Productions Limited Oval House Pioneer Theatres Limited Polka Children's Theatre Limited Richmond Fringe Limited Soho Theatre Company Limited Wakefield Tricycle Company Limited Young Vic Company Limited Manchester : Royal Exchange Theatre Company Limited Manchester Young People's Theatre Limited Newcastle : Tyne and Wear Theatre Trust Limited Northampton Repertory Players Limited Nottingham Theatre Trust Limited Oldham Coliseum Theatre Limited Oxford : Anvil Productions Limited Plymouth : Theatre Royal (Plymouth) Limited Salisbury Arts Theatre Limited Scarborough Theatre Trust Limited Sheffield : Crucible Theatre Trust Limited Southend : Palace Theatre Trust (Southend-on-Sea) Limited Stoke-on-Trent and North Staffordshire Theatre Trust Limited Carried forward 40 £ 57,500 450,000 115,00 0 400,00 0 94,00 0 81,00 0 173,50 0 181,25 0 158,00 0 195,000 126,000 124,75 0 118,00 0 136,60 0 127,59 0 161,00 0 209,15 0 290,00 0 155,00 0 292,80 0 95,00 0 208,80 0 83,00 0 69,85 0 453,00 0 132,00 0 99,000 96,800 132,00 0 38,000 51,47 5 177,27 0 82,000 56,000 51,000 87,000 232,00 0 405,00 0 101,00 0 176,300 86,000 407,800 100,01 0 245,000 200,000 135,91 6 101,000 548,600 78,000 151,000 8,525,96 1 Schedule 7 Brought forward Watford Civic Theatre Trust Limited Worcester Arts Association (SAMA) Limited Worthing and District Connaught Theatre Trust Limited York Citizens' Theatre Trust Limited Arts Council of Great Britain £8,525,96 1 87,00 0 80,19 5 68,00 0 192,632 £ 8,953,788 Touring companies Avon Touring Theatre Co-operative Limited Cambridge Theatre Company Limited Cast Presentations Limited The Common Stock Theatre Company Limited Covent Garden Community Theatre Limited Eastend Abbreviated Soap-box Theatre Foco Novo Limited Galactic Smallholdings Limited Hull Truck Theatre Company Limited Interplay Trust IOU Limited joint Stock Productions Limited Lumiere and Son Theatre Company Limited M6 Theatre Company Limited Major Road Theatre Company Mikron Theatre Company Limited Monstrous Regiment Limited Natural Theatre Company North West Spanner Theatre Paines Plough Limited The People Show Society Perspectives Theatre Co-operative Limited The Red Ladder Theatre Company Limited 7:84 Theatre Company (England) Limited Shared Experience Limited Spectrum Theatre Trust Limited Temba Theatre Company Limited Theatre Centre Limited Women's Theatre Group Limited 65,00 0 232,00 0 42,00 0 48,000 37,000 33,000 75,886 85,41 8 66,000 40,75 6 48,00 0 85,98 9 57,50 0 44,20 8 49,40 0 24,00 0 62,00 0 35,00 0 22,00 0 62,20 5 35,00 0 42,00 0 69,00 0 92,50 0 53,91 0 30,00 0 72,00 0 131,00 0 53,40 0 1,794,17 2 Project s Actors Touring Company (London) Limited Artfarmers Limited Black Theatre Co-operative Bristol Express Theatre Company British Events Bronte Brothers Bucket Theatre Company Limited Carib Theatre Productions Limited Carried forward 35,500 10,000 32,85 0 16,57 5 6,000 4,50 0 5,40 0 5,500 116,325 10,747,96 0 41 Schedule l Brought forward DAC Theatre Compan y DET Enterprises Limited East-West Theatre Compan y Extraordinary Productions Limited Mike Figgis Forkbeard Fantas y Graeae Theatre Company Limite d Hesitate and Demonstrate Limite d Impact Theatre Co-operativ e Incubus Theatrd Company Limite d Kaboodle Productions Limited The Medieval Players Limite d Moving Parts Theatre Compan y Mrs Worthington's Daughters National Theatre of Bren t The New Theatr e Northern Studio Theatre Potheinos Limited (Little Angel Marionette Theatre) Rational Theatre Science Fiction Theatre of Liverpoo l Snap People's Theatre Trust Limite d Staunch Poets and Players Stirabout Theatre Compan y That's Not I t Theatre Kit Limited Theatre of Puppet s Theatre of Thelema Limite d Theatro Technis Top Floor Production s Yorkshire Actors Company Arts Council of Great Britain £116,325 £10,747,960 20,900 10,000 1,150 20,000 6,000 16,400 5,000 15,600 22,000 43,760 37,000 42,72 5 21,900 22,000 29,25 0 5,500 15,000 1,300 25,100 8,000 1,500 9,000 3,81 4 26,000 33,000 2,500 24,60 0 25,00 0 12,00 0 10,400 632,724 Theatre Writing Belt and Braces Road Show Company Limited Bubble Theatre Compan y The Cherub Compan y Colway Theatre Trust Limited The Combination Limited The Dog Compan y Disrepertory Theatr e Durham Theatre Compan y The Factory Harlow Theatre Va n Haruspex Inner City Theatre Company Live Theatre Company Lyric Theatre Hammersmith Trus t Merseyside Young People's Theatre Company Limite d National Youth Theatre of Great Britai n New Moon Theatre Company Northern Black Light Theatre Compan y Carried forward 42 1,375 1,800 150 350 1,800 250 500 650 1,800 750 1,080 800 3,600 1,000 700 400 800 80 0 18,605 11,380,684 Schedule 1 Brought forward Northumberland Theatre Company Nuffield Theatre Company Playwrights Co-operative Playwrights Company Pocket Theatre, Cumbria Solent People's Theatre Limited Theatre Foundry Theatre Venture Touring Theatre London Yorkshire Arts Circus Bursaries Royalty Supplement Guarantees Arts Council of Great Britain f 18,605 £11,380,684 3,600 2,40 0 50 0 75 0 47 5 2,55 0 1,800 1,100 250 300 40,925 6,590 79,845 Other subsidies Arts Administration Limited Association of British Theatre Technicians British Theatre Association Fringe Box Office Puppet Centre Trust Society of British Theatre Designers Windsor Theatre Company (Capoco) Limited 5,000 8,000 12,000 2,000 5,000 4,000 5,000 41,00 0 Total as Note 2 (page 31) £11,501,52 9 Art Visual Arts Birmingham : Ikon Gallery Limited Bristol : Arnolfini Gallery Limited Cambridge : Kettle's Yard Gallery London : Acme Housing Association Limited Art Services Grants Limited Half Moon Photography Workshop Limited The Photographers' Gallery Limited Whitechapel Art Gallery Newlyn : Newlyn Orion Galleries Limited Nottingham : Midland Art and Community Centre Limited Oxford : Museum of Modern Art Limited Southampton : John Hansard Gallery York : Impressions Gallery of Photography Limited f 88,00 0 179,90 6 45,00 0 22,000 67,00 0 50,00 0 150,00 0 160,00 0 40,700 82,250 131,000 40,000 47,000 f 1,102,85 6 Grants and guarantees towards exhibition s Bath: Royal Photographic Society : Alvin Langdon Coburn Bradford Art Galleries and Museums : 7th International Print Biennale Carried forward 700 9,500 10,200 1,102,85 6 43 Schedule 1 Arts Council of Great Britai n Brought forward L10,200 Cambridge: Fitzwilliam Museu m John Linnel l Carlisle Museum and An Galler y Cumbrian Landscap e Durham : DLI Museum and Arts Centr e Henry Moore : Head-Helmet Grasmere : Dove Cottage The Discovery of the Lake Distric t Hull : College of Higher Educatio n Humberside Print Competition 198 2 Knutsford : Tatton Park Sculpture For A Garden Leeds City Art Gallery Henry Moore Early Carving s Dutch 17th Century Painting s Liverpool : Walker Art Gallery Peter Phillips London : Committee of Associations and Artists resident in U K Festival of India in Britai n Geffrye Museu m George Elgar Hicks London Grou p London Group Exhibitio n National Museum of Labour History Sylvia Pankhurst Centenary New Contemporaries Associatio n New Contemporaries 198 2 Polytechnic of Central Londo n Vernacular Architecture of Brittan y Royal Academy Allan Gwynne Jones Elizabeth Blackadder Middlesbrough Art Galler y Ardizzone and the Se a Milton Keynes Development Corporatio n Exhibition Officer and Programm e Norwich: Sainsbury Centre Sculpture from the Stockwell Depot Nottingham: Castle Museu m The Women's Art Show 1550-197 0 University of Nottingha m Drawing in the Renaissance Worksho p Rochdale Art Gallery Dave King Drawings Sheffield : Graves Art Gallery Mayakovsky Grants for gallery improvements and equipment London : Goldsmiths College Holography equipmen t Carried forward 44 L1,102,856 5,00 0 7,50 0 4,00 0 3,00 0 1,00 0 5,00 0 3,00 0 2,000 12,000 3,000 2,000 2,500 1,690 2,500 1,000 6,000 6,000 1,500 7,500 1,500 4,600 5,000 1,800 2,500 2,300 104,090 1,600 1,208,546 Schedule 7 Arts Council of Great Britain f 1,208, 54 6 Brought forward Artists-in-Residence Graham Ashton : Walker Art Gallery, Liverpoo l Philippa Beale: Southampton Art Galler y Graham Crowley : Museum of Modern Art, Oxford David Medalla : South Hill Park Arts Centre, Bracknel l Deanna Petherbridge : Manchester City Art Gallery Michael Porter : National Gallery, Londo n Paul Waplington : Mappin Art Gallery, Sheffiel d £ 4,00 0 5,00 0 6,00 0 1,50 0 2,50 0 2,00 0 1,000 22,000 Art in Public Sites Liverpool : Royal Liverpool Hospita l London : Contemporary Art Societ y Redditch : Redditch Development Corporatio n 2,37 5 5,500 7,500 15,37 5 Provision of Studios and Darkroom s Acme Housing Association Limite d Art Services Grants Limite d 11,21 5 6,000 17,21 5 Incentive Grants Ian Birksted : Series of Prints John Walker : The London Suite'8 2 2,50 0 5,000 7,500 Art Magazines 'Afterimage' 'Artery' 'Art Language ' 'Art Monthly' 'Artscribe' 'Audio Arts ' 'Block' 'Control' 'Creative Camera' 'Screen' 'Ten 8 ' 'Undercut ' 3,00 0 1,50 0 1,20 0 9,00 0 l 10,50 0 2,20 0 1,33 5 40 0 15,00 0 3,60 0 9,00 0 3,500 60,23 5 Grants for Publishing Artic Producers Publishing Company : 'Galleries and Exhibition Spaces' Carlisle Museum and Art Gallery: 'Presences of Nature ' Coracle Press : 'Sisters of Menon ' Paul Graham : 'Al-The Great North Road ' Carried forward 1,00 0 3,000 600 5,88 5 10,485 1,330,871 45 Schedule 1 Brought forward Jonathan Cape Limited : 'Byker' Michael Newman : 'Simulacra ' Open University Press : 'Survival Programmes' Pluto Press Limited : 'Committing Photography' A Zwemmer Limited : 'Bad Weather' Artists Film and Video Awards to Film Makers/Video Artists Circles East Anglian Independent Film Makers Association London Film Makers' Co-op Limited London Video Arts Northampton's Arts Centre North by North West Film Society Arts Council of Great Britai n £ 10,485 £1,330,87 1 3,52 3 75 0 4,65 0 1,05 0 5,520 25,97 8 51,41 5 3,200 284 3,474 12,79 5 25 5 435 20,44 3 Total as Note 2 (page 31) f1,428,707 Literature Arvon Foundation Limited Book Marketing Council English Centre of International PEN London Library National Book League New Fiction Society Limited The Poetry Book Society The Poetry Society University of Reading Worker Writers and Community Publishers f 37,000 8,000 6,600 8,000 89,500 458 10,000 80,000 15,000 1,500 256,05 8 Literary Magazine s 'Agenda' 'Books for Your Children' The Children's Good Book Guide' 'Encounter' The Fiction Magazine' 'Index on Censorship' 'Interzone' 'London Magazine ' 'London Review of Books' 'Modern Poetry in Translation' Carried forward 46 14,00 0 2,75 0 10,00 0 30,00 0 3,00 0 16,50 0 2,00 0 39,00 0 29,50 0 7,00 0 153,750 256,058 Schedule 1 Arts Council of Great Britain Brought forward £153,750 'PN Review ' 'Quarto ' 'Thames Poetr y' 18,000 10,00 0 2,500 £256,05 8 184,250 Grants to Publishers Agenda and Editions Charitable Trust Limited : 'Too Much of Water' by Peter Dal e 'The Mystery of the Charity of Charles Peguy' by Geoffrey Hil l Alan Ross Limited : 'Home and Dry' by Roy Fulle r 'An Umbrella from Piccadilly' by Jaroslav Seifer t Anvil Press Poetry Limited : Binnacle Press: 'Riverside Interviews 6 : Tom McGrath ' Calder Educational Trust Limited : Carcanet New Press Limited : Chatto and Windus Limited : 'Samuel Johnson' by Walter Jackson Bat e 'A Rift in Time' by Patric Dickinso n 'New and Selected Poems' by James Michi e Enitharmon Press : Faber and Faber Limited : 'Introduction 8' 'Literature in the Market Place' by Per Gedi n 'Giacomo Joyce' by James Joyc e 'The Selected Letters of Ezra Pound 1907-1941 ' Harry Chambers/Peterloo Poets Hippopotamus Press : 'The Banned Man'. by Shaun McCarth y Jonathan Cape Limited : 'Colours of War' by Alan Ros s Marion Boyars Publishers Limited : 'Lament for Rastafari and Other Plays' by Edgar Whit e Michael Russell (Publishing) Limited : 'A Perception of India' by Richard Terrel l Oxford University Press : 'First Childhood' and 'Far from the Madding War' by Lord Berners Routledge & Kegan Paul plc : 'King Horn' by Michael Baldwi n Secker & Warburg Limited : in respect of seven poetry title s Virago Press Limited : 'Travels in West Africa' by Mary Kingsle y 'A Captive Spirit' by Marina Tsvetaeva 600 600 1,500 750 33,000 50 0 35,00 0 41,940 1,000 600 75 0 6,500 1,200 1,000 800 800 16,400 1,000 2,800 2,000 1,500 82 5 800 7,000 2,000 1,800 162,665 Writers' Fellowship s Chester : The Tattenhall Centre (Liz Lochhead ) Lancaster: St Martin's College (David Cook) Loughborough College of Art and Design (Alexis Lykiard) Carried forward 5,62 5 6,39 0 7,500 19,515 602,97 3 47 Schedule 1 Brought forward Northampton : Nene College (Dick Davis) Oxford Polytechnic (Jan Mark) Sheffield City Polytechnic (Barry Hines) Sudbury: Great Cornard Upper School (Rodney Pybus) Sunderland Polytechnic (Peter Reading) Winchester School of Art (Kevin Crossley-Holland) Arts Council of Great Britain f 19,515 £602,97 3 7,500 7,50 0 5,91 4 6,25 0 1,00 2 6,364 54,045 Bookshops and Book Ordering Point s Aldeburgh Bookshop Limited City of Bradford Metropolitan Council Durham County Council Gateshead Metropolitan Borough Council London Borough of Hackney 1,10 0 1,42 0 1,00 0 1,65 0 3,00 0 8,170 Augmentation of Prizes The Authors Club : Sir Bannister Fletcher Award and First Novel Award The Children's Book Circle Faber and Faber Limited : Geoffrey Faber Memorial Prize Society of Authors Limited : John Florio Prize, Schlegel-Tieck Prize, Scott Moncrieff Prize, Tom Gallon Trust Award English Centre of International PEN : Silver PEN Award an d Jo Ackerley Prize National Book League : John Llewelyn Rhys Memorial Prize The Poetry Society : Alice Hunt Bartlett Award 50 0 650 500 2,23 5 1,450 650 710 6,69 5 Manuscripts University of Leeds : manuscript material of Tom Paulin King's College, London : manuscript collection of B S Johnson University College, London : literary magazines and little press poetry 35 0 400 800 1,550 47,000 Awards to writers and translators Total as Note 2 (page 31) £720,43 3 Arts Centres and Community Project s Buckinghamshire Arts Federation Arts Centres Birmingham : Cannon Hill Trust Limited Bracknell : South Hill Park Trust Limited London : Hammersmith Riverside Arts Trust Limited Institute of Contemporary Arts Limited Round House Trust Limited f 20,400 £187,75 0 112,25 0 80,000 365,000 57,045 802,045 Carried forward 48 822,44 5 Schedule 1 Arts Council of Great Britain Brought forward Community Projects Aklowa Association Arts and Technology Laboratory Limited Charivari Ekome Dance Company Fantasy Factory Video Limited Free Form Arts Trust Limited Major Mustard's Travelling Show National Association for Asian Youth Shelton Trust Limited Steel an' Skin (Arts) Limited Tara Arts Group Word and Action (Dorset) Limited f 822,44 5 £13,000 19,500 13,500 20,500 13,400 83,700 7,000 15,500 3,200 33,93 0 23,43 5 11,00 0 257,66 5 Special applications/Experimental project s Academy of Indian Dance Action Space Mobile Blood Group Committee of Associations and Artists resident in UK Centre Ocean Stream Concord Horse and Bamboo Minorities Arts Advisory Service Limited Performance Magazine Shape Limited 2,000 1,02 5 1,25 0 5,00 0 10,40 0 1,00 0 6,95 0 15,00 0 10,94 5 15,60 0 69,170 Carnival Carnival Industrial Project Chaconia Revellers Cocoyea Dominica Carnival Arts in UK Ebony Steel Band Elimu Factory Carnival Project Finsbury Park Carnival Committee 510 United Carnival Club Genesis Hackney United Club Hippos . Lion Youth Band London All Stars Steel Band Metronomes Steel Orchestra Notting Hill Carnival and Arts Committee Paddington Youth Steel Band People's War Sound System Perpetual Beauty Carnival Club Quintessence Renegades Players Starland United Club Carried forward 70 0 50 0 1,25 0 45 0 1,85 0 1,50 0 1,40 0 2,60 0 500 1,400 900 800 1,400 500 600 4,000 600 300 1,50 0 1,00 0 2,25 0 450 26,450 1,149,28 0 49 Schedule 7 Brought forward Starlite Mas Association Twelfth Century West Indian Development Organisation Arts Council or Great Britai n £ 26,450 £1,149,280 1,650 1,400 500 30,000 £1,179,280 Total as Note 2 (page 32) Trainin g Benesh Institute of Choreology Limited National Opera Studio Training Scheme s Administrators : Diploma Course Bursaries Practical Training Schemes Bursaries In-Service Bursaries City University Designers Directors Joint Training Fund Performers (Bursaries) : Advanced Training for Musicians National Centre for Orchestral Studies National Opera Studio Puppeteer Royal Northern College of Music Sinfonia Theatre Performers Technicians : Association of British Theatre Technicians Bursaries Piano Tuner £ 68,79 1 155,000 L 223,79 1 31,901 20,73 0 23,55 1 44,000 20,70 1 29,750 13,49 1 4,776 21,000 27,100 4,000 20,000 13,20 7 77,50 0 3,35 1 4,500 359,55 8 f 583,34 9 Total as Note 2 (page 32) Housing the Arts National Companies English National Opera National Theatre Board Royal Opera House, Covent Garden Limited Music Huddersfield : Kirklees Metropolitan Council (Town Hall) London : Friends of Domus Jazz Centre Society Limited Manchester : Jazz Centre Society Limited Nottingham City Council (Concert Hall) Carried forward 50 f 30,000 120,10 0 150,000 L 300,100 20,00 0 1,00 0 75,00 0 15,00 0 211,500 322,500 622,60 0 Schedule 9 Arts Council of Great Britai n Brought forward Danc e London : Art Place Trust (Chisenhale Dance Space) f 622,60 0 f 1,500 1,50 0 Tourin g Bath : Theatre Royal Bath Limited 350,000 350,00 0 Dram a Colchester Mercury Theatre Limited Liverpool : Galactic Smallholdings Limited London : Caryl Jenner Productions Limited Croydon Alternatives Theatre Company Limited Pioneer Theatres Limited Manchester : Royal Exchange Theatre Company Limited (Touring Module) Plymouth City Council (Theatre Royal) Salisbury Arts Theatre Limited 20,00 0 1,80 0 50,00 0 1,500 10,000 5,000 70,000 10,000 168,300 Art Leeds City Council (City Art Gallery) London : Half Moon Photography Workshop Limited Newport (Isle of Wight) : IOW Visual Arts Centre Limited Ramsgate: Kent County Council (Library Art Gallery) 20,00 0 10,000 2,000 7,500 39,50 0 Regiona l Banbury : Spiceball Arts and Community Association Limited Bracknell : South Hill Park Trust Limited Chipping Norton : The Theatre (Chipping Norton) Limited Grantham : South Kesteven District Council (Leisure Centre) Hexham : Northumberland County Council (Queen's Hall Complex) Hull : New Theatre Company Limited Leeds Grand Theatre and Opera House Limited Lincoln City Council (Theatre Royal) Liverpool : Bluecoat Society of Arts Great Georges Community Cultural Project Limited Radio Doom London : The Deptford Fund (Albany) Free Form Arts Trust Limited Luton Community Arts Trust Limited Norwich Arts Centre Limited Oxford : Apollo Leisure (UK) Limited Oxford Area Arts Council (Old Fire Station Arts Centre) Stafford Borough Council (Borough Hall) Sunderland Arts Centre Limited Swindon : Thamesdown Borough Council (Wyvern Arts Centre) Wells-next-the-Sea : The Wells Centre Limited 10,00 0 120,00 0 2,000 5,000 25,000 15,000 30,000 20,000 10,000 70,000 3,000 38,000 2,000 1,50 0 5,00 0 10,00 0 4,00 0 20,00 0 20,00 0 10,00 0 10,000 430,500 Total as Note 2 (page 32) £1,612,400 51 Arts Council of Great Britain Schedule 2 2 DIRECTLY PROMOTED ACTIVITIE S 198 3 1982 £ 166,014 83,727 2,336 a Music : Wigmore Hal l Expenditure Income Less VAT £ 201,898 £ 95,29 7 2,65 2 92,64 5 81,391 £ 84,623 7,028 Less surplus on Wigmore Hall Catering 77,595 Net expenditure for the year as Note 2 (page 31) £ 312,332 1 1 032,912 242,661 148,903 b Art: Art Exhibitions Expenditure Transport Organising Insurance Catalogues Publicity 109,25 3 6,902 £ 102,35 1 £219,33 3 684,500 1,23 6 139,42 3 150,33 4 £1,194,82 6 1,736,808 430,466 56,099 Incom e Admissions Less VAT 221,42 4 28,881 374,367 231,989 Catalogue Sales 192,543 162,877 22,499 2,935 Exhibition fees Less VAT 30,138 3,931 19,564 40,326 Donations 26,20 7 30,558 412,185 666,246 £1,070,562 52 Net expenditure for the year as Note 2 (page 31) £ 782,641 Schedule 2 Arts Council of Great Britain 1982 £567,870 160,704 198 3 c Art : Arts Film s Production Expenditure Less Production Contributions £349,31 3 49,335 407,166 100,306 92,256 8,185 f 299,97 8 Other Activities : Expenditure 189,81 3 Income Less VAT 109,88 7 7, 86 7 84,071 102,02 0 16,235 87,79 3 £423,401 Net expenditure for the year as note 2 (page 31) f259,71ti 59,660 167,622 d Publication s Incom e Arts Council Shop 105 Piccadilly Gallery Bookstalls £387,77 1 f355,20 9 80,10 5 118,43 6 486,998 26,618 Less VAT 460,380 328,782 Less Expenditure 532,789 414,487 (131,598) 157,324 Operating Costs (118,302) 154,09 7 f 25,726 Net expenditure for the year as note 2 (page 32) f 553,750 20,96 1 f 35,795 53 Arts Council of Great Britain Schedule 3 3 SPECIAL FUNDS NET ASSETS Market Value Boo k Valu e £24,725 £25,382 4,494 4,199 2,596 416 5,700 4,040 7,686 6,331 2,537 168 1,154 2,68 5 500 1,024 764 9,120 4,690 4,277 2,079 4,15 1 3,58 1 Nominal Value 1982 Compton Poetry Fun d Investments : £25,490 11% Exchequer Stock 1991 Rio Tinto-Zinc plc 9 1 % Convertibl e 3,977 Unsecured Loan 1995/2000 Automated Security Holdings Limite d 8% Convertible Unsecured Loa n 1990/95 General Electric Company plc Dowty Group plc Beecham Group plc Shell Transport and Trading Company plc Standard Chartered Bank plc Hepworth Ceramic Holdings plc L37,134 1,621 11,972 50,727 910 1,500 100 45,936 1,45 5 11,61 7 Debtor s Cash at Ban k 59,008 Less Creditor s f 59,00 8 49,817 2,005 25 891 Dio Fun d Investments : Equities Investment Fund fo r Charities (1,467 Units) Debtors Cash at Ban k 2,828 2,00 5 24 1,245 3,274 2,921 The Guilhermina Suggia Gif t Investments : 12 1 % Treasury Stock 1993 Equities Investment Fund fo r Charities (2,926 Units) 4,429 3,884 - 5,641 3,01 4 Debtor s Cash at Ban k 6,898 154 786 6,99 3 - Less Creditor s 7,838 750 7,088 6,993 54 4,072 6,898 156 (61) 59,731 198 3 Carried forward 69,37 0 Schedule 3 Arts Council of Great Britain 198 2 £59,731 198 3 f 69,37 0 Brought forward Henry and Lily Davis Fun d Investments : 11% Exchequer Stock 1991 £45,800 Rio Tinto-Zinc plc 9 1 O/b Convertibl e Unsecured Loan 1995/2000 3,356 General Electric Company plc 137 John Brown and Company plc 1,662 Vickers plc 2,256 Grand Metropolitan plc 1,300 J . Sainsbury plc 450 Beecham Group plc 700 British Petroleum Company plc 300 Hambro Life Assurance plc 80 Land Securities-Investment Trust plc 1,375 Standard Chartered Bank plc 816 Cadbury Schweppes plc 718 Shell Transport and Tradin g Company plc 182 £44,426 £45,580 3,792 5,555 1,663 3,046 8,375 6,660 10,640 3,960 5,248 4,263 3,737 3,249 3,545 2,871 4,509 3,01 2 4,32 8 2,13 6 4,54 5 4,364 4,68 5 4,159 3,680 3,01 8 3,329 2,99 1 80,364 93,42 3 Accumulated Income Investments : Equities Investment Fund fo r Charities (1,500 Units) Vickers plc Grand Metropolitan plc 2,862 563 185 2,892 760 1,192 1,99 1 74 9 64 6 3,38 6 83,226 2,327 1,603 Debtors Cash at Bank 96,809 1,878 38 87,156 525 Less Creditors 98,725 1,850 86,631 146,362 96,875 Carried forward 166,24 5 55 Arts Council of Great Britain Schedule 3 198 2 £146,362 198 3 £166,24 5 Brought forwar d The Miriam Licette Scholarshi p Investments : 13 1 % Exchequer Stock 1996 121 % Treasury Stock 1993 Equities Investment Fund fo r Charities (9,330 Units ) £7,279 7,200 f 8,626 7,830 £7,08 1 6,85 9 - 17,988 9,487 23,427 900 2,754 Debtors Cash at Ban k 23,42 7 1,12 2 1,875 27,081 500 Less Creditors 26,42 4 1,32 5 25,09 9 26,581 H. A. Thew Fun d Investments : 12 1 % Treasury Stock 199 3 Equities Investment Fund for Charities (5,844 Units) 5,33 3 127 1,528 Debtors Cash at Ban k 6,98 8 300 Less Creditors 2,374 2,582 2,26 6 - 11,267 3,06 7 96 27 5 5,70 4 63 5,64 1 6,688 Mrs Thornton Fund Investments : 12 111 % Treasury Stock 199 3 Equities Investment Fund for Charities (4,595 Units ) 1,837 1,61 3 - 8,859 2,60 5 4,21 8 130 2,303 Debtors Cash at Ban k 4,21 8 12 0 2,89 8 6,65 1 753 Less Creditors 7,23 6 1,875 5,36 1 5,89 8 185,529 56 1,689 Carried forward 202,34 6 Arts Council of Great Britain Schedule 3/Schedule 4 1982 £185,529 Arts Council Trust for Special Fund s Investments : 12% Treasury Stock 1995 B .A .T . Industries plc Imperial Chemical Industries plc Shell Transport and Tradin g Company plc Unilever plc Standard Chartered Bank plc 2,252 20,471 198 3 f202,34 6 Brought forward £6,425 102 630 £6,811 2,665 2,507 f 6,001 1,99 8 1,99 1 121 81 465 2,212 2,763 2,130 1,99 7 2,01 7 1,99 1 15,99 5 49 7 14,16 5 Debtors Cash 30,65 7 22,723 £208,252 Total as Balance Sheet £233,00 3 4 SPECIAL FUNDS CAPITAL AND RESERVE S 1982 £37,183 (30) 198 3 Compton Poetry Fund Capital Account : Balance at 1 April 1982 Add Surplus on realisation of investments (1982 : Deficit) £37,153 8,80 4 45,95 7 37,153 10,854 5,470 Income Account : Balance at 1 April 1982 Add Income during year 12,664 4,99 4 16,324 3,660 Less Expenditure during year 17,65 8 4,60 7 13,05 1 12,664 f 59,008 49,817 2,000 576 345 Dio Fun d Capital Account Income Account : Balance at 1 April 1982 Add Income during year 921 2,00 0 92 1 35 3 1,274 2,921 52,738 - 3,274 Carried forward 62,282 57 Arts Council of Great Britain Schedule d 1982 f 52,738 198 3 f 62,28 2 Brought forward 6,900 The Guilhermina Suggia Gif t Capital Account 739 1,071 Income Account: Balance at 1 April 1982 Add Income during year 93 1,805 1,810 1,717 Less Expenditure during year 1,89 8 1,71 0 f 6,900 18 8 93 7,08 8 6,993 80,289 76 Henry and Lily Davis Fun d Capital Account : Balance at 1 April 1982 Add Surplus on realisation of investments 93,32 7 80,36 5 5,890 8,027 13,91 7 7,651 80,36 5 12,96 2 Income Account : Balance at 1 April 1982 Add Income during year Less Expenditure during year 6,26 6 6,67 7 12,94 3 9,39 5 3,548 6,266 96,87 5 86,631 23,478 51 The Miriam Licette Scholarship ' Capital Account : Balance at 1 April 1982 Less Deficit on realisation of investments 23,42 7 23,427 5,294 3,431 Income Account: Balance at 1 April 1982 Add Income during year 3,15 4 3,770 8,72 5 5,571 Less Expenditure during year 6,92 4 5,25 2 1,672 3,154 25,09 9 26,581 172,943 58 23,42 7 Carried forward 191,34 4 Arts Council of Great Britain Schedule 4 1982 £172,943 198 3 £191,34 4 Brought forward 5,334 H. A. Thew Fun d Capital Account: Balance at 1 April 1982 5,33 4 1,177 1,452 Income Account : Balance at 'l April 1982 Add Income during year 1,35 4 1,45 3 2,629 1,275 Less Expenditure during year 2,80 7 2,50 0 30 7 1,354 5,64 1 6,688 4,220 Mrs Thornton Fun d Capital Accoun t 4,22 0 984 1,344 Income Account : Balance at 1 April 1982 Add Income during year 1,678 1,56 3 2,32 8 650 Less Expenditure during year 3,24 1 2,100 1,141 1,67 8 5,36 1 5,898 20,471 - Arts Council Trust for Special Fund s Capital Account : Balance at 1 April 1982 Add Donations Legacies 26,27 8 20,471 2,252 20,47 1 51 5,75 6 Income Account : Balance at 1 April 1982 Add Income during year 2,25 2 2,12 7 4,37 9 22 , 723 f208,252 30,65 7 Total as Balance Sheet £233,003 59 Scottish Council Income and Expenditure Accoun t Arts for the year ended 31 March 1983 198 2 Note 76,869 Incom e Grant from the Arts Council of Great Britai n Grants and guarantees provided for i n previous year not now required 45,490 8,290 600 1,113 Other income Interest receivabl e Donation s Proceeds on sale of fixed assets Sundry income £9,675,800 1983 L10,794,600 71,241 L 46,00 3 6,270 2,809 5,377 60,45 9 55,49 3 l 10,926,30 0 9,8ua, bL 9,037,228 588,804 Expenditure General expenditure on the art s in Scotlan d General operating costs in Scotlan d 40,636 10,206,297 680,25 0 10,886,547 9,626,032 79,497 2 3 Transfer to capital account in respect of capital expenditure in yea r Transfer to (from) reserve for capita l expenditure 135,01 9 (40,196) 9,746,165 L 60 61,997 10,981,370 Net Surplus/(Deficit) for the yea r c (ss mn) Scottish Arts Council Balance Shee t at 31 March 1983 f 198 2 657,577 1,382,574 20,414 Fixed Asset s Current Assets Debtors and prepayment s Cas h Note 4 5 1,402,988 1,075,274 63,824 f f Less Current Liabilitie s Grants and guarantees outstandin g Creditor s 1,241,30 7 97,554 1,338,861 Net Current Assets 168,62 4 921,467 582,810 79,497 (4,730) £952,78 4 Represented by : Capital Accoun t Balance at 1 April 1982 Transfer from income and expenditur e accoun t Book value of assets sold or written off £657,57 7 135,01 9 (8,436) b5/,~/ / 263,890 47 Q')1 1,500,35 1 7,13 4 1,507,48 5 1,139,098 263,890 198 3 £784,16 0 /04, I bu Reserves nC,7 6 168,624 £952,784 Chairman of the Scottish Arts Council : GERALD ELLIOTT Secretary General : LUKE RITTNER 61 Scottish Council Arts Statement of Source and Application o f Funds for the year ended 31 March 198 3 Source of Funds f (55,070) Net deficit for the year Adjustment for items not involving the movement of fund s Transfer to capital account in respect of capital expenditure Transfer from reserve for capital expenditure £135,01 9 (40,196) 94,82 3 Total absorbed from operation s 39,753 Application of Fund s Purchase of fixed asset s Net Application of Fund s (135,019 ) f (95,266 ) Increase/(Decrease) of Working Capital increase of debtors and prepayment s increase of grants and guarantees outstandin g Increase of creditors £117,777 (166,033 ) (33,730) (81,986) Movement of net liquid fund s Decrease of cash balanc e Net Decrease of Working Capital 62 (13,280) f (95,266) Notes to the Accounts 1 ACCOUNTING POLICIES The Accounts have been prepared under the historical cost convention and on a basis which takes account of the Statement s of Standard Accounting Practice drawn up by the Consultative Committee of Accountancy Bodies, so far as these ar e appropriate to the Council . a Grants and guarantees Grants and guarantees are charged to the Income and Expenditure Account in the year for which they are undertaken a s a commitment by the Council on the basis of a formal offer to and acceptance by the Council's clients . Any amounts unpaid from these commitments are shown as liabilities on the Balance Sheet and any. advance payments to clients in anticipatio n of the grants and guarantees to be offered for the following financial year are shown in the Balance Sheet as assets . Grants and guarantees are offered in respect of the year in which the activities commenced . b Fixed assets Expenditure on fixed assets is charged as an appropriation from the Income and Expenditure Account to the Council's capita l account . The book value of any assets sold or written off is eliminated from the Balance Sheet by a reduction in capita l account . Any proceeds of sale are credited to income . Fixed assets are not depreciated . Any expenditure on renewals i s charged against income . All works of art are included under fixed assets and form an integral part of the Council's exhibition programme. c Exhibition s Expenditure incurred on an exhibition promoted by the Council is charged to the year in which that exhibition is officiall y opened to the public . Expenditure incurred in a year prior to that opening is treated as a prepayment . d Consolidatio n The Arts Council of Great Britain is legally responsible for the affairs of the Scottish Arts Council and the Welsh Arts Council , which are by constitution committees of the Council . However in view of the powers delegated to those committees they present separate accounts which are not consolidated with those of the Arts Council . 2 GENERAL EXPENDITURE ON THE ART S 1982 £3,540,350 933,672 4,211 937,883 4,478,233 198 3 Musi c Grants and guarantees £4,307,076 Dance and Mime Grants and guarantees Mime Schoo l 1,052,58 5 Carried forward 5,359,66 1 63 ,%'ote 2 Scottish Arts Council 1982 £4,478,233 326,985 1983 £5,359,661 Brought forward Touring Grants and guarantees 405,70 1 Less Local Authority Contributions 26,539 29,840 6,472 5,000 27,616 1,731 Aberdeen District Council Edinburgh District Council Glasgow District Council Kirkcaldy District Council Kyle and Carrick District Council Strathclyde Regional Council Tayside Regional Council (97,198) 35,198 27,000 30,000 4,704 804 30,000 127,706 229,787 1,763,205 307 100 277,99 5 Drama Grants and guarantees International Exchange Young Directors Workshop 2,019,18 7 2,02 1 2,021,208 1,763,612 499,705 155,420 15,904 1,692 581 11,214 12,857 Art Grants and guarantees Net cost of exhibitions Fruit Market Gallery Provision of Studio - Amsterdam Costs of maintaining the Collection Art Film Tours Lectures Scheme Stenhouse Warehouse 849,754 697,373 100,281 7,269,286 64 616,66 7 149,15 1 23,72 1 3,56 2 14,05 8 11,24 7 14,40 9 16,93 9 Fil m Grants and guarantees Carried forward 75,650 8,584,268 Notes 213 Scottish Arts Counci l 1982 f7,269,286 313,044 3,044 19,322 152 3,104 5,308 77 3,11 .1 2,675 679 -- 198 3 f8,584,268 Brought forward Literature Grants and guarantees Poetry Readings Writers in Schools and in Public Writers' accommodation Other activities Neil Gunn Fellowship Writers' exchanges Scottish/Canadian Writers Fellowship Scottish/Australian Writers Fellowship Magazines to Libraries scheme Poetry Posters 350,516 351,77 4 3,83 6 29,984 9,21 2 3,836 4,592 1,29 4 2,37 4 406,90 2 442,408 Festival s Grants and guarantees 480,59 6 704,356 Projects, Arts Centres and Club s Grants and guarantees 646,94 2 8,862 261,800 Reports, Surveys and Seminars 8,98 9 Housing the Arts Grants f9,037,228 78,600 £10,206,297 Details of grants and guarantees are given in Schedule 1 on pages 68 to 81 . The income and expenditure o n Art Exhibitions, Art Film Tours, Lectures, Writers in Schools and in Public are given in Schedule 2 on pages 8 1 to 82 . 3 GENERAL OPERATING COSTS 1982 £324,557 40,419 39,239 17,465 23,438 46,008 32,052 17,829 2,401 45,396 £588,804 Salaries and wages Arts Council of Great Britain Retirement Plan Travelling and subsistence Rent and rates Fuel, light and house expenses Publicity and entertainment Postage and telephone Stationery and printing Professional fees Office and sundry expenses 198 3 £376,73 3 38,224 48,95 0 54,064 40,75 0 37,77 3 33,780 21,23 5 1,734 27,007 £680,250 65 Scottish Arts Council Totes 4 S 6 4 FIXED ASSET S Book value at 1 April 1982 Freehold property : 336, 346 & 350 Sauchiehal l Street, Glasgow £166,943 Leasehold property improvement : 19/20 Charlotte Square, Edinburgh 29 Market Street, Edinburgh Stenhouse, Edinburgh Equipment and vehicles : Office equipment Art exhibition equipment Mobile Gallery (1) Mobile Gallery (2) Motor vehicles Works of art Film Additions £ 337 Items sold or Book value a t written off 31 March 1983 £ - £167,280 114,143 46,070 31,226 31,131 - - 145 ;27 4 46,07 0 31,22 6 191,439 31,131 - 222,57 0 42,944 17,623 13,293 1,843 33,728 17,246 3,427 28,508 4,879 8,436 60,19 0 21,05 0 13,29 3 30,35 1 30,17 1 109,431 54,060 8,436 155,05 5 189,764 - 40,491 9,000 - 230,25 5 9,000 189,764 49,491 - 239,25 5 £657,577 £135,019 £8,436 £784,160 All fixed assets are stated at cos t 5 DEBTORS AND PREPAYMENT S 1982 £ 659,851 722,723 198 3 £ 549,500 950,85 1 Grants and guarantees paid in advance Sundry debtors and prepayments £1,382,574 £1,500,35 1 6 RESERVES At 1 April 1982 Income and expenditure account Reserve for capita l expenditure 66 At Deficit for Transfer from the year reserves Appropriations 31 March 198 3 £182,414 £(55,070) 81,476 £263,890 £ - £- £127,344 - (40,196) - 41,28 0 £(55,070) £(40,196) £- £168,62 4 Notes 6/7 Scottish Arts Council Reserve for capital expenditure The appropriation is required to ensure that the balance on the reserve at the year end is sufficient to meet th e sum committed by the Council for capital items ordered but not delivered at that date . 7 CONTINGENT LIABILITIE S Indemnities entered into by the Council in respect of objects borrowed for exhibition purposes totalled not mor e than £312,580 at 31 March 1983 (1982-£1,396,050) . Certificate of Comptroller and Auditor Genera l I have examined the foregoing Income and Expenditure Account, Balance Sheet and the supporting informatio n set out in the Statement of Source and Application of Funds and the Notes . In my opinion these give, unde r the historical cost convention, a true and fair view of the state of affairs of the Scottish Arts Council at 31 March 1983 and of its deficit and the Source and Application of its funds for the year ended on that date . G . R . L. Osborn e Director of Audi t for Comptroller and Auditor Genera l Exchequer and Audit Department 30 September 1983 67 Scottish Arts Council Schedules to the Account s 31 March 1983 1 GRANTS AND GUARANTEE S (including subsidies offered but not paid at that date ) Music Opera Ayr: Ayr Intimate Opera Dundee : Tayside Opera Edinburgh : Edinburgh Grand Opera Glasgow : Glasgow Grand Opera Society Glasgow University Cecilian Society Kirkcaldy : Fife Opera Scottish Opera Limited f 1,500 1,900 2,00 0 2,300 50 0 50 0 2,609,50 0 f2,618,200 Concerts Aberdeen : Aberdeen Chamber Music Club Aberdeen District Council Haddo House Choral and Operatic Society Platform Aberdeen University of Aberdeen Achiltibuie Village Hall Argyll Folk Club Ayr: Ayr Arts Guild Ayr Music Club Badenoch Arts Club Banffshire Arts Guild Bearsden and Miingavie Arts Guild Beith Arts Club Berneray Community Council Biggar Music Club Black Isle Arts Society Brechin Arts Guild Bridge of Allan and District Music Club Bute Arts Society _ Carnoustie Music Club Clydebank : Braidfield High School Cowal Music Club Cumbernauld Arts Guild Cumnock Music Club Dalkeith and District Arts Guild Deeside Musical Society Dingwall Folk Club Dollar Music Society Dounreay Folk Club ' 69 Dumfries : The Guild of Players Dumfries Folksong Club Dumfries Music Club Dunblane Cathedral Arts Guild Dundee : Dundee Chamber Music Club Dundee University Concerts Platform Dundee University of Dundee Musical Society Carried forward 68 1,30 0 2,00 0 1,20 0 3,00 0 20 0 17 0 37 5 25 0 90 0 2,40 0 1,85 0 45 0 67 5 250 1,200 1,300 100 1,500 600 600 56 1,400 1,100 1,200 750 806 200 32 5 75 2,52 3 180 1,100 1,900 1,800 1,500 2,200 400 37,835 2,618,200 Schedule 9 Brought forwar d Dunfermline Arts Guil d Durness Community Counci l East Kilbride Music Clu b Eastwood Music Societ y Edinburgh : Edinburgh Chamber Music Trus t Edinburgh Contemporary Arts Trus t Edinburgh District Counci l The Edinburgh Early Music Centre Edinburgh Hindu Mandir and Sanskritik Kendra Edinburgh Indian Associatio n Edinburgh Organ Recitals Committe e Georgian Concert Societ y Heriot-Watt Music Societ y New Town Concerts Society Limited Platform Edinburgh Scottish Finnish Societ y Scottish Philharmonic Clu b University of Edinburg h Forfar Arts Guil d Forres Entertainments Committe e Fort Augustus : Clarsach Society (Highland Branch ) Gadie Folk Clu b Galashiels Arts Associatio n Gatehouse Musical Societ y Girvan Arts Guil d Glasgow: Asian Artists Associatio n Cathedral Church of St Mary the Virgi n John Currie Singers Limite d Glasgow International Folk Festiva l New Academy Concerts Society of Scotlan d New Glasgow Music Societ y Platform Glasgo w Strathkelvin Arts Associatio n Glenkens and District Music Clu b Gordonstoun Concerts Societ y Greenock : Greenock Arts Guil d Greenock Chamber Music Clu b Hamilton District Arts Guil d Harris Mutual Improvement Associatio n Hawick Music Clu b Helensburgh Music Societ y Invergordon Arts Societ y Irvine Burns Clu b Inverness : St Andrews Cathedra l Platform Invernes s Isle of Arran Music Societ y Kelso Music Societ y Edenside Primary Schoo l Platform Borders Kilmardinny Music Circl e Kintyre Music Clu b Carried forward Scottish Arts Council f 37,83 5 E2,618,200 77 5 100 660 2,100 14,200 3,000 "x,00 0 65 0 28 5 50 0 25 0 2,30 0 10 0 4,30 0 5,50 0 25 0 40 0 35 0 1,25 0 47 5 10 0 "16 0 - 1,60 0 50 0 20 0 1,10 0 10 0 12,00 0 10 0 "1,00 0 1,60 0 4,900 45 900 550 85 0 1,000 1,100 175 1,000 1,05 0 1,600 75 0 75 2,30 0 88 2 1,60 0 25 87 5 1,70 0 1,60 0 118,717 2,618,200 69 Schedule 1 Brought forward Kirkcaldy: Platform Fife Kirkcudbright Audience Clu b Lanark Arts Guild Music Clu b Lewis and Harris Piping Society Linlithgow Arts Guild Lochaber Music Clu b Lockerbie Musical Societ y Melrose Music Societ y Miingavie Music Clu b Moffat and District Musical Society Monklands District Counci l Moray Arts Clu b Music in Peebles Newton Stewart and District Music Clu b Oban Music Societ y Orkney Arts Societ y Penicuik Community Arts Associatio n Perth Chamber Music Societ y Prestwick Arts Guil d Renfrew District Arts Guil d St Andrews: St Andrews Jazz Societ y St Andrews Music Clu b Shetland Arts Society Skye Arts Guild South West Ross Arts Society Stonehaven Music Clu b Stranraer Music Associatio n Strathearn Arts Guil d Sutherland Arts Committe e Tain and District Arts Society Thurso: Miller Academy Primary School Thurso Live Music Associatio n Troon Arts Guil d Ullapool Folk Clu b West Linton Music Societ y Wick Arts Clu b French Institute of Scotland John MacFadyen Memorial Trust National Federation of Music Societie s National Youth Orchestra of Scotland Limite d Platform (Music Societies) Limite d Rehearsal Orchestra Royal Scottish Pipers Societ y The Saltire Society Scottish Baroque Ensemble Limite d Scottish Chamber Orchestra Limite d Scottish Early Music Associatio n Scottish National Orchestra Society Limited Scottish Arts Council £118,71 7 £2,618,200 40 0 1,50 0 70 0 65 0 1,55 0 50 0 34 0 70 0 1,15 0 1,40 0 25 0 1,35 0 70 0 1,00 0 1,01 1 1,80 0 50 42 5 25 0 2,90 0 40 0 1,30 0 1,80 0 1,00 0 75 0 85 0 1,50 0 1,55 0 1,640 85 0 100 3,200 775 300 80 1,100 475 1,000 25,000 17,000 15,000 2,000 80 165 103,10 0 399,696 5,000 870,500 1,593,554 Carried forward 70 4,211,754 Scottish Arts Council Schedule 1 £4,211,75 4 Brought forward Scottish Contemporary Music Networ k Ayr Music Club Bearsden and Miingavie Arts Guild Dundee University Concerts Hamilton District Arts Guild Miingavie Music Club Platform Aberdeen Platform Dundee Platform Edinburgh Platform Glasgow St Andrews Festival University of Aberdeen University of Edinburgh University of Glasgow Other Activities Awards Commissions and Performing Material £ 19 2 11 2 27 6 21 6 11 2 1,08 0 1,04 0 1,00 0 2,12 0 62 5 66 5 66 5 1,302 9,40 5 - 13,73 0 19,267 32,99 7 Pianos: Thurso Live Music Association Recording : The Finzi Trust Scottish Chamber Orchestra Limited Scottish Council for Arts and Disability Temple Records 6,00 0 2,50 0 7,000 . 85 0 5,000 15,35 0 Capita l Queen's Hall (Edinburgh) Limited Scottish Music Archive 8,000 2,070 10,07 0 7,00 0 14,00 0 50 0 Queen's Hall (Edinburgh) Limited Scottish Music Archive YMCA Wind Orchestra Total as Note 2 (page 63) £4,307,07 6 Dance and Mim e Dundee : Dundee Dance Group Edinburgh : Basic Space Dance Theatre Limited Dancescapers Dance Connection Edinburgh Chinese Dance Group Expo Dance Khoros Dance Theatre Next Step Dance Theatre Carried forward £ 35 0 65,59 5 35 0 25 0 15 0 27 5 22 5 260 67,45 5 71 Schedule 1 Brought forward Scottish Arts Counci l f 67,45 5 Fife Regional Council Glenrothes : Glenrothes High School Dance Club Lomond Dance Theatre Mid Argyll Community Dance Group Paisley : Peg Dance Theatre St Andrews : Area One Dance Theatre Company St Andrews University Modern Dance Society 5,30 0 22 5 35 0 17 0 350 330 250 British Summer School of Mime Theatre Creative Dance Artists Limited The Scottish Ballet Limited Scottish Council for Dance Scottish Mime Theatre Limited 2,250 1,980 932,350 100 24,000 15,32 5 Bursaries : Mime 2,150 Commissions : Dance Total as Note 2 (page 63) £1,052,58 5 Touring Aberdeen Art Gallery and Museum Bonar Hall-University of Dundee The Crucible Theatre Trust Limited E & B Productions (Theatre) Limited Flying Tortoise Theatre Company Limited London Contemporary Dance Theatre London Contemporary Dance Trust Limited The National Theatre Board Limited Perth Repertory Theatre Limited Royal Lyceum Theatre Company Limited Royal Opera House Covent Garden Limited Royal Shakespeare Company Scottish Theatre Trust Limited Theatre PKF The Touring Office-New Vic Theatre Tynewear Theatre Company Visiting Arts Unit of Great Britain Winged Horse Touring Productions (Edinburgh) Limited f 17 0 1,40 6 19,51 8 28,12 5 9,88 1 300 30,11 8 97,540 5,250 14,31 4 16,43 1 1,608 133,377 15,40 1 8,500 6,500 5,000 12,262 Total as Note 2 (page 64)--where local authority contributions of f127,706 are detailed f 405,70 1 Dram a Aberdeen : Guizer Theatre Company Dervaig Arts Theatre Limited Carried forward 72 f 24,22 0 19,75 0 43,97 0 Schedule 7 Brought forward Dundee Repertory Theatre Limited Edinburgh : Royal Lyceum Theatre Company Limited Traverse Theatre (Scotland) Limited Fife Regional Council Glasgow: Citizens' Theatre Limited Strathclyde Theatre Group Tron Theatre Limited Irvine : Borderline Theatre Company Limited Musselburgh : East Lothian District Council Perth Repertory Theatre Limited Pitlochry Festival Society Limited St Andrews : Byre Theatre of St Andrews Limited Actors Touring Company London Limited Asian Artistes Limited Attick Theatre Blackbox Puppets Broadbay Drama Group CAST Presentations Limited Channel Five Theatre Cheek by Jowl Theatre Company Communicado Theatre Confederacy of Fools Andrew Dallmeyer Ettrick Bridge Theatre Group Foco Novo Limited Glasgow University Players The Graeae Theatre Company The Grand Union Joint Stock Productions Limited The Medieval Players Limited Monklands District Council Mother Hen Theatre Company Natural Theatre Company Northumberland Theatre Company Limited Orkney Community Youth Theatre The Red Ladder Theatre Company Limited St Joseph's Hospital, Rosewell Saline School 7 :84 Theatre Company Limited Peter Simpson Skin and Bones Theatre Company Tayside Regional Council Theatre PKF Tony and Derek Alastair Turnbull Whisper and Shout Puppets Wildcat Stage Productions Limited Winged Horse Touring Productions (Edinburgh) Limited Pitlochry Festival Society Limited/Perth Repertory Theatre Limited : Marketing Theatre Royal/Citizens' Theatre Limited : Marketing Carried forward Scottish Arts Council f 43,97 0 155,10 0 322,00 0 222,63 6 2,03 4 324,84 2 37 5 65,13 2 104,20 1 14,50 0 156,34 0 149,19 4 52,80 0 1,74 8 800 750 1,500 770 800 83 2 1,11 2 10,000 300 4,840 .15 0 37 0 10 0 1,07 0 1,00 0 2,06 5 7,59 3 61 57 0 10 3 2,584 780 1,739 39 170 120,14 5 9,000 600 2,034 1,300 2,120 15 0 1,160 124,800 7,578 2,000 4,000 1,929,857 73 Schedule 7 Scottish Arts Council L1,929,857 Brought forward 4,867 3,000 2,61 6 600 2,500 15,000 565 3,928 32,000 21,65 4 600 2,000 Bursaries Dumfries and Galloway Regional Council Edinburgh Playwrights Workshop Highland Regional Council His Majesty's Theatre, Aberdeen Mayfest Scottish Community Drama Association The Scottish Puppet Festival Limited Scottish Society of Playwrights Scottish Youth Theatre Limited Scottish Student Drama Festival Scottish Theatre Archive Total as Note 2 (page 64) f2,019,18 7 Art Aberdeen : Aberdeen Art Gallery and Museum Artspace Galleries (Aberdeen) Limited Peacock Printmakers (Aberdeen) Limited Angus District Council Banff : Banff Art Club Dollar Summer School in the Arts Dundee : Broughty Ferry Art Society Cleghorn Housing Association Duncan of )ordanstone College of Art Dundee Art Society Dundee Group (Artists) Limited / Dundee Printmakers Workshop Limited Dundee Group (Artists) Limited Dundee Museums and Art Galleries Dundee Printmakers Workshop Limited Dunfermline : Fife (Dunfermline) Print Workshop Edinburgh : Compass Four Centre Richard Demarco Gallery Limited City of Edinburgh District Council Edinburgh Sketching Club Henderson's Gallery New 57 Gallery Association Limited Printmakers Workshop Limited Royal Edinburgh Hospital The Shore Gallery Talbot Rice Art Centre Tartar Gallery The 369 Gallery Limited Traverse Theatre (Scotland) Limited f 7,35 8 31,485 44,01 1 1,75 0 19 35 0 98 75 0 75 20 Carried forward 266,42 6 74 4,474 20,675 597 21,12 0 1,000 23 6 26,500 8,000 22 441 35,561 29,300 82 5 89 1 11,65 0 1,280 17,11 2 826 Schedule 9 Brought forward Glasgow : Camus Place Users Group Compass Gallery Limited Dolphin Arts Centre Glasgow Group Glasgow Print Studio Limited Glasgow School of Art Glasgow Society of Women Artists Third Eye Centre (Glasgow) Limited University of Glasgow University of Strathclyde Whitevale Unemployed Workers Centre Haddington : Primrose Gallery Hawick Art Club Helensburgh Music Society Innerleithen : Traquair House Inverness : Art Society of Inverness Inverness District Council Inverclyde District Council Isle of Skye : Sabhal Mor Ostaig Jedburgh : Lothian Estates Kellas : Moray Arts Club Kirkcaldy Museums and Art Gallery Kirkwall : Soulisquoy Printmakers Limited Kyle and Carrick District Council Motherwell District Council Oban Arts Society Perth : Fair Maids House Gallery Stirling : The Stirling Gallery Limited Strathclyde Regional Council Stromness : Pier Arts Centre Trust Western Isles Islands Council Artic Producers Publishing Company Art Monthly Balbirnie Editions Britain Salutes New York 1983 The Contemporary Art Society English Speaking Union of the Commonwealth Scottish National Committee Stuart MacDonald and Alan Lawson John Nelson, Ronald Forbes and Cameron Shaw Phillips Petroleum Company Europe Africa Limited Royal Incorporation of Architects in Scotland Saltire Society Scottish Photography Group Limited Scottish Sculpture Trust Scottish Trades Union Congress Society of Scottish Artists Workshop and Artists' Studio Provisio n Scotland Limited Scottish Arts Counci l f266,426 60 20,00 0 164 4,98 3 49,350 1,450 1,500 31 2 1,180 2,560 12 5 38 20 200 1,200 69 489 75 25 0 687 168 69 3,00 0 58 4 1,50 0 75 30 0 25,00 0 1,00 0 13,00 0 72 1 50 0 1,250 1,450 1,000 3,500 700 750 2,000 1,500 350 500 33,500 15,000 75 1,000 54,700 L514,330 Carried forward 514,330 75 Schedule 1 Scottish Arts Council Brought forward £514,33 0 Artists in Residence Amsterdam Studio: Calum Fraser Gavin Scobie Cranhill Community Arts Project: Alastair McCallum Irvine Development Corporation : Susan Bradbury Orkney Field and Arts Centre : James Cursitor St Margaret's School, Newington, Limited : Dave Williams Woodside Secondary School, Glasgow : Alan Dimmick 4,640 3,20 6 6,60 0 6,16 9 1,21 6 3,500 500 25,83 1 Awards Commissions 38,478 38,028 76,506 Total as Note 2 (page 64) £616,66 7 Fil m Association for Film and Television in the Celtic Countries Persistent Vision Animation Limited Scottish Film Production Fund Limited Scottish Film Training Trust f 4,650 16,000 50,000 5,000 Total as Note 2 (page 64) f 75,650 Literature Association for Scottish Literary Studies Dictionary of the Older Scottish Tongue Edinburgh Book Fair Limited Edinburgh Children's Book Group The Federation of Children's Book Groups The Gaelic Books Council Meet the Author Motherwell District Council National Book League Renfrew District Council Scottish Publishers Association University of Edinburgh f 5,50 0 17,00 0 15,000 39 5 61 5 16,500 1,250 5,500 15,500 650 24,000 1,000 £102,91 0 Publication s 'Akros' 'Books in Scotland' 'Cencrastus' 'Chapman' 'Gairm' 'Lallans' 'Leopard Magazine' Carried forward 76 3,700 2,500 6,000 2,200 7,70 0 70 0 2,500 25,300 102,91 0 Schedule 9 Brought forwar d Scottish Arts Council £25,300 'Lines Review' 'New Edinburgh Review ' The Scottish Review ' 'Short Story Monthly ' 'Tocher £102,91 0 4,40 0 6,22 0 5,90 0 6,00 0 1,100 48,92 0 Literary Events An Comann Gaidhealac h Comhdhail na Seanachaid h Glasgow Arts Centre Glasgow Writers Clu b Polygon Book s Saltire Societ y Strathkelvin District Librarie s Jackson Web b Wick Festiva l 33 0 1,50 0 80 80 15 0 22 5 20 0 35 0 2,000 4,91 5 Grants to Publishers Aberdeen University Pres s 'Scotland and the Lowland Tongue' edited by J Derrick McClure 'David Rorie, Poems and Prose' edited by William Donaldson 'Regency Editor : A Life of John Scott' by Patrick O'Leary 'Literature of the North' edited by David Hewitt and M R G Spiller 'Common Denominators in Art and Science' edited by Martin Pollock and Margaret Marsh The Printed Word : An Instrument of Popularity' by Christopher Small The Greig-Duncan Folk Song Collection Volume 2' Acair Limite d 'Ris a Bhruthaich-Criticism and Prose Writings' by Sorley Maclean Acquila Publishing Compan y 'Rooms' by Hamish Whyte B T Batsford Limited 'All the Queen's Men' by Professor Gordon Donaldson William Blackwood and Sons Limite d 'Robert and Gabriella Cunninghame Graham' by Alexander Maitland 'Fair Isle-A Pictorial History' by George Waterston and Jean Jones Marion Boyars Limite d 'Not by Bread Alone' by Naomi Mitchison Byway Book s 'Circuit Journeys' by Henry, Lord Cockburn Canongate Publishing Limite d 'Seneca at the Court of Nero' by Villy Sorensen The Channering Worm' by J P McCondach 'Compulsive Kaleidoscope' by Ruth Michaelis-Jena 'Balloonatics' by Peter Rush The New Testament in Scots' by W L Lorimer Chatto and Windus Limite d Three Plays' by George Mackay Brown 'A World of Difference' by Norman MacCaig Carried forward 2,00 0 750 1,750 1,000 1,000 1,500 2,000 1,500 150 750 650 2,900 1,000 1,500 1,500 1,250 1,500 1,250 4,000 1,500 350 29,80 0 156,745 77 Scottish Arts Council Schedule 7 Brought forward £29,800 William Collins Sons and Company Limite d 1983 Volume of Short Stories Croom Helm Limited The Historical Geography of Glasgow' by Dr A Gib b Dangeroo Pres s 'Malin, Hebrides, Minches' by Ian Stephen and Sam Maynar d John Donald Publishers Limited The Legend of Red Clydeside' by lain McLea n 'Vernacular Houses in North Yorkshire and Cleveland' by Barbara Hutton an d Barry Harriso n The Final Campaign: The Jacobite Army in England, 1745' by F J McLyn n The Management of Scottish Society 1704-1764' by John Stewart Sha w The Decline of the Celtic Language' by Victor Edward Durkac z Richard Drew Publishing Limite d 'Rob Roy MacGregor : His Life and Times' by W H Harve y Edinburgh University Pres s The Poetry of Hugh MacDiarmid' by Harvey Oxenhor n Ferret Press 'Gallus, did you say? and Other Stories' by Alex Hamilton Galloping Dog Press 'Intimate Voices: Selected Work 1965-1982' by Tom Leonard Garron Publications 'Four Scottish Poets' by Duncan Glen, Raymond Falconer, Raymond Vettese an d Geddes Thomson Victor Gollancz Limite d 'Scottish Fiddlers and Their Music' by Mary Anne Alburger Robert Hale Limited Thank you for Having Me-A Personal Memoir by Maurice Lindsay 'A Book of Scottish Verse' edited by Maurice Lindsay and R L Mackie Paul Harris Publishin g 'Sour Hearts' by Alan Jamieson 'Dream Days' by Kenneth Grahame The Golden Age' by Kenneth Grahame 'Shepherd's Calendar' by Ian MacPherson 'James Clerk Maxwell : The Demon in the Ether' by Martin Goldman Kahn and Averil l The Folk Song Revival in Scotland' by Ailsa Munro Macdonald Publishers 'Juan in America' by Eric Linklater 'White Maa's Saga' by Eric Linklater 'Brond' by Frederic Lindsay 'In this Corner : Selected Poems 1963-1983' by Alan Bold 'Five Centuries of Flats' by Peter Robinson Mainstream Publishing Company (Edinburgh) Limited The Government of Scotland' edited by Michael Keating and Arthur Midwinter 'Roof of the World-Man's First Flight Over Everest' by Lord James Douglas Hamilton 'Another Street, Another Dance' by Cliff Hanley 'Docherty' by William Mcllvanney 'Order in Space and Society : Architectural Form and its Context in the Scottish Enlightenment' edited by Thomas A Markus 'Death Before Dishonour by Trevor Royle Carried forward 78 £156,745 3,450 500 750 1,800 2,500 2,000 1,500 1,500 1,000 1,250 840 1,100 260 1,500 500 500 1,200 700 75 0 1,25 0 1,50 0 1,00 0 2,50 0 1,50 0 2,00 0 1,000 1,500 2,000 1,000 1,000 1,32 5 75 0 750 72,475 156,745 Schedule 1 Brought forward John Murray (Publishers) Limite d 'Eric Linklater-His Life and Work' by Michael Parnell Jill Norman and Hobhous e 'The Whisky Roads of Scotland' by Derek Cooper and Fay Godwin The Orkney Press Limite d 'Kelp-Making in Orkney' by William P L Thomson Polygon Books 'A Brighter Sunshine' by Donald Campbell 'Scott and Scotland' by Edwin Muir 'Not Not While the Giro' by James Kelman 'New Edinburgh Review Anthology' edited by James Campbell Prontaprin t 'Poems' by Kirkpatrick Dobie The Ramsay Head Pres s 'Poems' by Janet Caird Routledge and Kegan Paul Limite d 'Scottish Folk Literature' edited by David Buchan The Salamander Pres s 'Commedia' by Marcella Evaristi 'The Traverse Plays' by Rona Munro, Alan Spence, Liz Lochhead, Tom Leonard & Stanley Eveling 'Flying to Nowhere' by John Fuller 'The Memory of War (Poems 1968-1982)' by James Fenton 'The Traverse Plays' by Alan Spence, John Byrne, Liz Lochhead and Robert Dallmeyer 'Black Spiders' by Kathleen Jamie Saltire Societ y 'State of the Controversy betwixt United or Separate Parliaments (1706)' by Andrew Fletcher Souvenir Press Limited 'Sun Circle' by Neil Gunn Third Eye Centre (Glasgow) Limite d 'A Moment in Time' by John Hannavy 'The Blessed Apple Tree' edited by Edwin Morgan Scottish Arts Council £72,475 £156,745 2,50 0 50 0 1,50 0 3,00 0 1,22 5 1,00 0 1,20 0 75 35 0 1,50 0 55 0 2,75 0 1,00 0 1,80 0 2,85 0 39 0 400 1,000 2,500 416 98,98 1 Writers in Residenc e lain Crichton Smith : University of Glasgow and Strathclyde James Kelman : Renfrew District Library Kent Thompson : Scottish Canadian Fellowship at Edinburgh University Allan Massie : University of Edinburgh Dumbarton District Library (not yet appointed) 3,900 3,500 7,12 5 5,750 6,600 26,87 5 Book Awards Bursaries Special Awards Travel Grants Total as Note 2 (page 65) 7,20 0 50,500 75 0 10,72 3 £351,774 79 Schedule 1 Scottish Arts Counci l Festival s 150 1,497 3,900 300 256 21,132 1,242 2,200 390,01 9 5,000 1,000 14,000 6,500 300 400 25 0 9,500 12,00 0 1,00 0 5,60 0 3,80 0 40 0 15 0 Aberdeen Festival Society Barra Festival Society Dumfries and Galloway Arts Festival Dunfermline Abbey Festival Society Dunkeld and Birnam Arts Festival Easterhouse Festival Society East Kilbride Festival Edinburgh : Craigmillar Festival Society Edinburgh Festival Society Limited Edinburgh Folk Festival Edinburgh Harp Festival Festival Fringe Society Limited Wester Hailes Festival Association Girvan Folk Festival Inverness Folk Song Club Kirkwall : Orkney Folk Festival Society St Magnus Festival Perth Festival of the Arts Renfrew District Council St Andrews Festival Stirling District Festival Thurso Folk Festival Traditional Music and Song Association of Scotland (Tayside Branch) f Total as Note 2 (page 65) f 480,59 6 Projects, Arts Centres and Club s Aberdeen Arts Centre Association Cumbernauld Theatre Trust Limited Edinburgh : Craigmillar Festival Society Arts Resource Centre Pilton Central Association Theatre Workshop Edinburgh Limited Fife Regional Council/Arts in Fife Glasgow : Third Eye Centre (Glasgow) Limited Streets Ahead Publications Haddington : Lamp of Lothian Collegiate Centre Inverness: Arts Hive Association Eden Court Theatre Merkinch Arts Workshop Project Iona Community Irvine : Harbour Arts Centre Lothian Play Forum Rosyth Community Festival Shotts Arts Guild Stirling : Stirling District Council University of Stirling: MacRobert Centre Strathaven Arts Guild University of St Andrews : Crawford Arts Centre West Dumbarton Community Festival Carried forward 80 £ 2,400 50,000 11,000 2,25 0 67,54 5 13,03 6 196,000 1,50 0 7,50 0 1,60 0 129,540 60 0 1,10 0 2,20 0 3,50 0 52 0 30 0 50 0 107,00 0 1,00 0 31,00 0 100 630,19 1 Scottish Arts Counci l Schedule 115chedule 2 Brought forward £630,19 1 Wick : Lyth Arts Centre 3,50 0 An Comann Gaidhealach Association of Arts Centres in Scotland Scottish Council on Disability Scottish Institute of Adult Education Scottish Performing Arts Centre Training Bursaries 5,96 0 94 5,21 7 48 0 40 0 1,10 0 f.646,94 2 Total as Note 2 (page 65) Housing the Arts Dram a Glasgow Theatre Club 50,000 Art Peacock Printmakers (Aberdeen) Limited 16,000 Projects, Arts Centres and Clubs ' Eden Court Theatre 12,600 f Total as Note 2 (page 65) 78,600 2 DIRECTLY PROMOTED ACTIVITIE S 198 3 1982 f100 £181,519 30,705 4,606 a Drama : Young Directors Worksho p Net expenditure for the year b Art: Art Exhibition s Expenditure Income Less VAT f- £184,262 L36,720 1,60 9 35,11 1 26,099 £155,420 £715 158 24 Net expenditure for the year as Note 2 (page 64) c Art: Art Film Tours Expenditure Income Less VAT 134 £581 £149,151 £ 11,31 6 79 10 69 Net expenditure for the year as Note 2 (page 64) £ 11,247 81 Schedule 2 Scottish Arts Council 1982 82 198 3 £11,214 d Art: Lectures Expenditure for the year as Note 2 (page 64) f 14,409 £19,322 e Literature: Writers in Schools and in Publi c Expenditure for the year as Note 2 (page 65) £29,984 Welsh Arts Council Income and Expenditure Account for the year ended 31 March 198 3 1982 £5,609,000 9,729 Note 198 3 Incom e Grant from Arts Council o f Great Britai n Grants and guarantees provided for i n previous year not now require d E6,703,00 0 24,12 2 Other incom e 62,439 2,000 538 f Interest receivabl e Proceeds on sale of fixed asset s Sundry incom e 72,35 0 1,200 6,293 64,97 7 79,84 3 5,683,706 6,806,96 5 Expenditure 5,174,121 , 504,123 General expenditure on the arts in Wale s General operating costs in Wale s Transfer to capital account in respec t of capital expenditure in yea r Transfer to reserve for capital expenditure f (27,859) 34,06 3 9,909 6,710,67 1 5,711,56 5 i 6,084,62 0 582,07 9 6,666,69 9 5,678,244 24,060 9,261 2 3 Net Surplus/(Deficit) for the Yea r f 96,294 83 Welsh Arts Council Balance Sheet at 31 March 1983 1982 £338,310 33,775 491,442 6,813 Fixed Assets Current Assets Stocks Debtors and prepayments Cash Note 4 5 6 532,030 198 3 £365,360 £ 38,51 3 568,45 0 9,705 616,66 8 Less Current Liabilities 346,699 136,088 Grants and guarantees outstanding Creditors 377,39 1 83,83 1 482,787 49,243 461,22 2 Net Current Assets 155,446 £387,553 £317,727 24,060 (3,477) £520,806 Represented by : Capital Account Balance at 31 March 1982 Transfer from income and expenditur e account Book value of assets sold or written off £338,31 0 34,063 (7,013) 338,310 49,243 365,360 Reserves £387,553 155,446 £520,806 Chairman of the Welsh Arts Council : HYWEL EVAN S Secretary General : LUKE RITTNER 84 7 Welsh Arts Council Statement of Source and Application of Funds for the year ended 31 March 198 3 Source of Fund s f 96,294 Net surplus for the yea r Adjustment for items not involving the movement of fund s Transfer to capital account in respect of capital expenditur e Transfer to reserve for capital expenditure f 34,06 3 9,909 43,97 2 140,26 6 Total generated from operation s Application of Funds (34,063 ) Purchase of fixed assets Net Source of Fund s L106,20 3 Increase/(Decrease) in Working Capita l Increase of stocks Increase of debtors and prepayments Increase of grants and guarantees outstandin g Decrease of creditors f 4,738 77,008 (30,692) 52,257 103,31 1 Movement of net liquid fund s increase of cash balance Net Increase of Working Capital 2,89 2 f 106,203 85 Notes to the Account s 1 ACCOUNTING POLICIE S The Accounts have been prepared under the historical cost convention and on a basis which takes account of the Statement s of Standard Accounting Practice drawn up by the Consultative Committee of Accountancy Bodies, so far as these ar e appropriate to the Council . a Grants and guarantees Grants and guarantees are charged to the Income and Expenditure Account in the year for which they are undertaken as a commitment by the Council on the basis of a formal offer to and acceptance by the Council's clients . Any amounts unpaid from these commitments are shown as liabilities on the Balance Sheet and any advance payments to clients in anticipatio n of the grants and guarantees to be offered for the following financial year are shown in the Balance Sheet as assets . Grants and guarantees are offered in respect of the year in which the activities commenced . b Fixed assets Expenditure on fixed assets is charged as an appropriation from the Income and Expenditure Account to the Council's Capita l Account . The book value of any assets sold or written off is eliminated from the Balance Sheet by a reduction in capita l account . Any proceeds of sale are credited to income. Fixed assets are not depreciated . Any expenditure on renewals i s charged against income . All works of art are included under fixed assets and form an integral part of the Council's exhibition programm e c Stocks Stocks are stated at cost on a unit cost basis, or at net realisable value if lower . d Exhibitions Expenditure incurred on an exhibition promoted by the Council is charged to the year in which . that exhibition is officiall y opened to the public . Expenditure incurred in a year prior to that opening is treated as a prepayment . e Consolidation The Arts Council of Great Britain is legally responsible for the affairs of the Scottish Arts Council and the Welsh Arts Council , which are by constitution committees of the Council . However in view of the powers delegated to those committees the y present separate accounts which are not consolidated with those of the Arts Council . 2 GENERAL EXPENDITURE ON THE ART S 1982 1983 Regional Arts Associations £ 351,200 Grants and guarantees £ 408,800 Music 1,579,28 5 1,055 158,371 700 (475) 1,047 Grants and guarantees Scheme expenses Concert programme Young Welsh singers competition Recording of Welsh music-net expenditure / (income) Young Welsh composers forum 86 (601 ) 1,992,37 2 1,739,983 2,091,183 £1,838,457 1,61 4 149,41 5 3,487 Carried forward 2,401,17 2 Welsh Arts Counci l Note 2 1982 £2,091,183 198 3 £2,401,17 2 Brought forward Danc e 171,962 1,548 Grants and guarantees Scheme expenses Training f 109,73 9 16 7 3,21 6 173,510 113,12 2 Dram a 1,512,722 483 150 Grants and guarantees Scheme expenses Training 1,776,527 830 1,777,35 7 1,513,355 Art 251,006 133,737 4,737 6,359 2,683 4,146 4,037 Grants and guarantees Exhibitions Publications Visual art development scheme Maintenance of Welsh collection Other activities Scheme expenses 310,374 74,82 6 1,267 15,006 3,45 6 (1,872 ) 5,138 408,19 5 406,705 Fil m 92,072 1,109 Grants and guarantees Other activities 77,30 4 2,21 6 93,181 39,000 Less Grant from British Film Institute 79,52 0 44,85 0 34,670 54,181 Literatur e 432,480 842 30,323 2,385 179 Grants and guarantees Scheme expenses Publications Competitions and events Other activities 486,40 0 1,200 13,490 7,43 1 2,239 510,76 0 466,209 Festival s 104,144 4,809,287 Grants and guarantees Carried forward 125,850 5,371,126 87 Vote+ 2 3 l Velsh Arts Council 1982 £4,809,287 198 3 £5,371,126 Brought forward Regiona l 130,500 Grants and guarantees 156,200 Projects 34,250 5,384 Grants and guarantees Presence at the Royal National Eisteddfo d of Wales £19,480 85 39,634 19,565 Craft 38,036 770 14,662 6,720 4,833 65,021 57,000 Grants and guarantees Scheme expenses Exhibitions Publications and records Conference Other activities Less Grant from Crafts Council 39,11 7 720 9,48 3 5,587 199 55,106 61,500 (6,394) 8,021 128,679 58,000 £5,174,121 Oriel Bookshop and Gallery 135,12 3 Housing the Art s Grants 409,00 0 Total expenditure for the year £6,084,620 Details of Grants and Guarantees are given in Schedule 1 on pages 91 to 99 . The Income and Expenditure o f art exhibitions, the concert programme and Oriel bookshop and gallery are given on Schedule 2 on pages 99 to 100. 3 GENERAL OPERATING COST S £305,566 45,445 47,553 24,003 15,167 6,376 29,591 7,564 7,155 416 15,287 £504,123 88 Salaries and wages Arts Council of Great Britain Retirement Plan Travelling and subsistence Rent and rates Fuel, light and house expenses Publicity and entertainment Postage and telephone Stationery and printing Professional fees Enquiries, investigations and research Office and sundry expenses £350,44 1 49,21 8 62,75 1 36,56 6 11,29 4 11,63 8 29,85 1 12,59 2 2,41 2 15,316 £582,07 9 Notes 4/5/6 Welsh Arts Council 4 FIXED ASSET S Freehold property : Casson Theatre at 1978 valuatio n Freehold propert y Improvement : Casson Theatre Leasehold improvements : 9 Museum Place 31 Charles Street Unit 2 Herbert Street Equipment and vehicles : Office equipment Art exhibition equipmen t Film equipmen t Motor vehicles Works of art Craft collection Tota l Book value at 1 April 1982 Additions £ 8,500 £ - £ - £ 8,50 0 2,815 - - 2,81 5 8,053 35,072 10,508 2,629 311 - - 10,68 2 35,38 3 10,50 8 53,633 2,940 - 56,57 3 49,090 19,781 34,138 50,414 5,591 704 933 16,537 450 6,561 54,23 1 20,48 5 35,07 1 60,390 153,423 23,765 7,011 170,177 118,826 1,113 7,318 40 2 - 126,142 1,153 119,939 7,358 2 127,29 5 £338,310 £34,063 £7,013 £365,360 Items sold or Book value at . written off 31 March 198 3 All fixed assets are stated at cost, or at specifie d valuation . 5 STOCK 1982 £33,775 Bookshop 1983 L38,51 3 6 DEBTORS AND PREPAYMENTS £133,000 358,442 £491,442 Grants and guarantees paid in advance Sundry debtors and prepayments £205,75 0 362,700 £568,45 0 89 ,N'otes 7 8 Welsh Arts Council 7 RESERVE S Income an d expenditure account Reserve fo r capital expenditure Balance at 1 April 1982 Surplus for the year Transfe r to/from reserves £39,982 £96,294 £ - 9,261 - £49,243 £96,294 Balance a t Appropriation 31 March 1983 £ - £136,276 - 9,909 19,170 £ - £9,909 £155,446 Reserve for capital expenditure: The appropriation is required to ensure that the balance on the reserve at the year end is sufficient to meet th e sum committed by the Council for capital items ordered but not delivered at that date . 8 CONTINGENT LIABILITIE S Indemnities entered into by the Council in respect of objects borrowed for exhibition purposes totalled not more than £467,594 at 31 March 1983 (1982-£235,855) . Certificate of Comptroller and Auditor Genera l I have examined the foregoing Income and Expenditure Account, Balance Sheet and the supporting informatio n set out in the Statement of Source and Application of Funds and the Notes . In my opinion these give, under the historical cost convention, a true and fair view of the state of affairs of the Welsh Arts Council at 31 Marc h 1983 and of its surplus and the Source and Application of its funds for the year ended on that date . G . R . L . OSBORN E Director of Audi t for COMPTROLLER AND AUDITOR GENERA L Exchequer and Audit Departmen t 30 September 1983 90 Welsh Arts Council Schedules to the Account s 31 March 198 3 1 GRANTS AND GUARANTEE S (including subsidies offered but not paid at that date) Regional Arts Association s North Wales Arts Association South-East Wales Arts Association West Wales Arts Association £117,100 168,25 0 123,45 0 f 408,80 0 Total as Note 2 (page 86) Musi c Opera Welsh National Opera Limited Other Activitie s BBC Welsh Symphony Orchestra Gwent Youth Big Band Merlin Music Society St David's Hall, Cardiff University College of North Wales, Bangor University College, Swansea Welsh Amateur Music Federation Welsh Jazz Society Welsh Music Archive £1,410,00 0 £226,48 7 70 0 4,00 0 60,00 0 3,90 0 50 0 71,30 0 5,00 0 8,120 380,00 7 Recordings of Welsh Musi c Chandos Records Welsh Music Information Centre 5,000 6,500 11,50 0 5,20 0 14,35 0 13,60 0 3,80 0 Contemporary Music Network Commissions to composers Bursaries for advanced study Publications : Guild for Promotion of Welsh Music £1,838,45 7 Total as Note 2 (page 86) Danc e Dance Wales North Wales Arts Association South-East Wales Arts Association Theatr Powys (Footloose) Welsh Dance Theatre Trust West Glamorgan Theatre in Education Awards to Individuals £ . 1,00 0 1,000 400 28,300 31,800 2,300 110 £ Carried forward 64,910 64,91 0 91 IVelsh Arts Council Schedule 1 Brought forward Small Scale Dance Touring Scheme Bloomfield Community Association Hawthorne Comprehensive School Clwyd Dance Project Clwyd County Council South-East Wales Arts Association South Glamorgan Institute of Higher Education Vale of Glamorgan Community Arts Team West Wales Arts Association f 64,91 0 £ 96 90 2,500 106 2,342 16 1 2,13 5 2,357 9,787 Projects Dance Wales Ekome's Children Howard and Eberle Dance Theatre Jumpers Limited Jumpers Dance Theatre South-East Wales Arts Association Vale of Glamorgan Festival West Glamorgan Education Authority Awards to Individuals 3,300 2,000 2,800 8,79 2 11,440 1,00 0 80 0 1,50 0 2,060 33,69 2 250 1,100 Bursaries and awards Training courses Total as Note 2 (page 87) £109,73 9 Dram a Receiving Theatres and Arts Centre s Aberystwyth Arts Centre Bangor: Theatr Gwynedd Cardiff: Chapter Arts Centre Sherman Theatre f 60,570 46,000 253,000 78,318 £437,88 8 Drama Companies Action Pie Brith Gof Cardiff Laboratory Theatre Caricature Theatre Clwyd County Council-Theatr Clwyd Outreach Gwent Theatre in Education Moving Being Paupers Carnival Spectacle Theatre Theatr Bara Caws Theatr Clwyd 27,500 25,000 62,600 87,900 33,000 24,000 80,437 20,000 26,97 1 40,000 170,000 Carried forward 597,408 92 437,888 Schedule 7 Brought forward Theatr Crwban Theatr Cymru Theatr Powys Torch Theatre West Glamorgan Theatre in Education Welsh Arts Council f597,408 f 437,88 8 17,500 170,000 37,50 0 132,00 0 27,100 981,50 8 Theatre Projects Aberystwyth Arts Centre Aberystwyth Fringe Company Yr Academi Gymreig-Playwriting projects Atlantic Union British Summer School of Mime Cardiff Circus School Cardiff Laboratory Theatre-Grotowski Workshop Common Knowledge Trust Coracle Theatre in Education Cwmni Cyfri Tri Cwmni Hwyl a Fflag Cwrs Drama Gymreig, Bangor Frank n' Sime Fresh Claims Hijinx Theatre Eirwen Hopkins and Helen Roberts (How to be a Lady) Made in Wales Masquerade Theatre National Youth Theatre of Wales Sqwar Un Swansea City Council-Grand Theatre Theatre Wales Theatr Ystwyth Torch Theatre Unity Too Wales Association of the Performing Arts Welsh National Youth Drama Festival 3,000 400 5,850 6,000 2,62 5 1,500 1,500 13,33 1 1,300 15,000 6,50 0 78 5 5,00 0 8,97 3 6,00 0 6,50 0 18,78 9 8,00 0 5,50 0 7,500 10,00 0 50,00 0 5,00 0 7,50 0 3,50 0 50 0 900 201,45 3 Drama Touring Schem e Cardiff Laboratory Theatre Caricature Theatre Jumpers Dance Theatre Made in Wales Paupers Carnival Theatre Camel Theatr Clwyd Theatr Cymru Theatr Powys 1,99 1 1,800 507 8,15 0 22 9 15 0 39,00 0 8,80 0 17,365 77,992 Carried forward 1,698,841 93 l t elsh Arts Council Schedule 7 f1,698,841 Brought forward Amateur Theatre Drama Association of Wales Training awards to individuals Playwriting Commission Scheme 27,500 14,907 35,279 77,68 6 Total as Note 2 (page 87) £1,776,52 7 Art Grants and guarantees towards exhibition s Aberystwyth Arts Centre Association of Photographers in Wales Bethesda Community Arts Children's Literature Centre Clwyd County Council Cowbridge Arts Group Dyfed County Council Gwynedd County Council LLanelli Festival Llantarnam Grange Arts Centre Monmouth District Council Mostyn Art Gallery National Library of Wales Pioneers Travelling Art Circus Royal National Eisteddfod of Wales St Donat's Arts Centre South Glamorgan Institute of Higher Education South West Arts Association Swansea City Council Torch Theatre University College of North Wales, Bangor University College, Cardiff University College, Swansea Welsh Books Council The Welsh Group West Wales Arts Association Wyeside Arts Centre Grants for Gallery Staffing Improvements Clwyd County Council West Wales Arts Association £ 5,700 33,32 5 2,70 0 1,68 2 11,35 0 300 27 5 500 700 5,100 200 77,22 5 3,000 1,500 1,000 200 55 0 800 4,900 600 4,400 700 50 0 3,90 0 2,88 7 2,50 0 900 f 167,394 2,60 0 3,700 6,300 Aid to Artists Organisation s Artic Producers Artlaw Services Association of Artists and Designers in Wales 500 2,000 34,300 Carried forward 36,800 94 173,694 Schedule 7 Brought forward Contemporary Art Society for Wales 56 Group Wales Pioneers Travelling Circus U-Print Community Printmaking Welsh Sculpture Trust Welsh Arts Council £36,800 f 173,694 3,000 2,000 2,500 8,000 13,350 65,65 0 Grant Aid for Commission s British Rail Carmarthen District Council Contemporary Art Society for Wales St David's Convent, Brecon University Hospital of Wales University of Wales Institute of Science and Technology 2,900 16,682 490 45 5 980 300 21,80 7 Artists in Residence Llanover Hall Arts Centre Swansea City Council Young Artists Grants Special Project Grants Loans to Artists Less: amounts repaid 4,00 0 5,000 9,000 4,700 8,500 27,10 0 (8,053) 19,047 Publications University College, Aberystwyth University of Wales Press 4,00 0 3,976 7,97 6 Total as Note 2 (page 87) f 310,37 4 Fil m f 9,60 0 Bwrdd Ffilmiau Cymraeg Film Worksho p Boadicea Films Cardiff Cine Society Chapter Arts Centre Mostyn Gallery National Film School South Wales Women's Film Group Welsh Women's Aid Women for Life on Earth f 580 600 39 1 500 1,41 1 594 2,47 5 1,000 Film Making Grants All Wales Video Project 7,55 1 32,66 7 14,200 Carried forward 64,01 8 95 I t elsh Arts Council Schedule 1 f 64,01 8 Brought forward Training and Educatio n Association for Film and TV in the Celtic Countries Celtic Film Festival Chapter Film Workshop Polytechnic of Wales South Wales Women ' s Film Group University College, Cardiff Welsh Women's Aid Awards to individuals 400 686 1,500 6,100 2,75 0 25 0 400 1,000 13,08 6 20 0 Welsh Group of BFFS f 77,30 4 Total as Note 2 (page 87) Literature £163,000 72,500 1,87 5 Welsh Books Council Yr Academi Gymreig Tir na n-og Festival Grants to Publisher s Yr Academi Gymreig Christopher Davies Gwasg Comer Gwasg Gregynog Gwasg Prifysgol Cymru Gwasg y Dref Wen Poetry Wales Press Rampart Press £ 3,70 0 1,40 0 18,15 0 5,000 2,000 8,000 22,74 5 2,700 63,695 Children's Literatur e Alun Books National Centre for Children's Literature Book Production Grants 4,800 14,000 6,800 25,600 Periodical s 'Anglo Welsh Review' 'Barddas' 'Barn' 'Poetry Wales' 'Pori' The Powys Review' 'Spondonics' Taliesin' Traethodydd' 'Y Casglwr' 'Y Faner' 10,000 2,000 16,000 8,400 1,450 2,200 5,000 3,500 3,500 780 55,000 107,830 Carried forward 96 434,500 Schedule 9 Welsh Arts Council Brought forward f434,500 Readings and Other Activities Cymdeithas Cerdd Dafod Gwasg Gee North Wales Arts Association South-East Wales Arts Association University College, Cardiff University of Wales Press West Wales Arts Association f 2,30 0 4,000 2,000 2,000 10 0 6,00 0 2,000 18,40 0 33,50 0 Prizes and Bursaries Total as Note 2 (page 87) £486,40 0 Festival s Cardiff Festival Ely Festival Fishguard Festival Gower Festival Llandaff Festival Llangollen International Music Eisteddfod Llantilio Crosenny Festival Lower Machen Festival North Wales Music Festival St David's Cathedral Bach Festival Swansea Festival Vale of Glamorgan Festival Welsh Jazz Festival f 17,00 0 1,220 13,53323 22,000 25,000 2,450 1,75 0 6,390 1,85 0 21,52 5 8,000 5,100 - Total as Note 2 (page 87) £125,850 Regiona l Regional Theatres Grand Theatre, Swansea New Theatre, Cardiff £18,00 0 20,000 f 38,000 Rural Arts Centres Coleg Harlech Arts Centre Wyeside Arts Centre 24,80 0 - 25,900 50,700 Royal National Eisteddfod Total as Note 2 (page 88) 67,50 0 f156,200 97 WeAh arts Counci l Schedule 7 Projects Children's Literature Centre Cynefin St Donat's Arts Centre Swansea Festival Fringe Triple Lantern Limited University of Wales, Gregynog Visiting Arts Unit of Great Britain f 1,280 2,000 200 2,00 0 4,00 0 5,00 0 5,00 0 Total as Note 2 (page 88) f19,48 0 Craf t Commission Aid Clwyd Health Authority Mid Glamorgan Education Authority Newport Borough Council Parochial Church, Margam Abbey Powys County Council St Augustine's Church, Penarth St Illtyd's Church, Ilston Swansea Design Partnership University College, Aberystwyth Welsh Miners Museum f1,70 0 100 140 2,200 50 0 35 0 32 5 2,00 0 10 0 750 L 8,16 5 Exhibitions and Workshop s Clwyd County Council Projects British Artists in Glass Ceredigion Guild of Weavers, Spinners and Dyers Llanelli Festival North Wales Arts Association North Wales Potters Royal Welsh Agricultural Show South-East Wales Arts Association South Glamorgan Institute of Higher Education South Wales Potters Swansea City Council University College, Aberystwyth University of Wales, Gwasg Gregynog West Wales Arts Association Awards to Craftsmen 600 15 0 200 500 2,000 340 15 0 2,000 15 0 63 2 6,000 1,75 0 6,03 5 2,000 3,745 25,65 2 Craftsmen in Residence Ceramic Research Award Total as Note 2 (page 88) 98 3,500 1,200 £39,117 Schedule 7/Schedule 2 Welsh Arts Council Housing the Arts Dylan Thomas Theatre, Swanse a Grand Theatre, Swanse a Moving Bein g Triple Lantern Limited University College, Swansea-Taliesi n f 15,000 300,000 17,000 7,000 70,000 Total as Note 2 (page 88 ) £409,000 2 DIRECTLY PROMOTED ACTIVITIE S 1982 £224,906 70,250 3,715 198 3 a Music: Concert Programm e Expenditur e Incom e Less VA T L196,388 L50,65 5 3,682 46,97 3 66,535 f158,371 Net expenditure for the year as Note 2 (page 86 ) f 53,389 63,277 18,285 996 11,200 b Art : Art Exhibitions Expenditur e Transpor t Organisin g Catalogues Publicit y Warehouse and workshop £149 .41 5 L 45,51 5 19,22 5 1,204 94 1 11,960 78,845 147,147 14,336 926 Incom e Less VAT 13,41 0 L1 33,737 L 4,23 7 218 4,01 9 Net expenditure for the year as Note 2 (page 87) L 74,82 6 99 LVelsh Arts Council Schedule 2 £115,227 3,803 111,424 84,042 c Oriel Bookshop and Galler y Bookshop sales Less VAT Less Expenditure f115,886 4,092 111,794 80,28 2 f (31,512 ) (27,382) F 5,627 734 Commission on gallery sales Less VAT (4,893) (32,275) 24,748 1,169 135,037 f 128,679 100 1,94 5 25 4 (1,691 ) Cost of exhibitions Cost of literary events Operating costs Net expenditure for the year as Note 2 (page 88) (33,203 ) 22,69 3 2,676 142,95 7 L135,123 TableA Housing the Arts Outstandin g Commitments In 1982/83 the Arts Council's Grant-in-Aid of £91,500,000 included £2,100,000 for Housing the Arts . The detail s of how this was spent can be found at the end of schedules 1, where £1,612,400 is accounted for in England ; £78,600 in Scotland and f409,000 in Wales . The sum of f120,100 has been paid to the National Theatre Boar d out of the special grant of £350,000 earmarked in 1980/81 for the cost of completing the South Bank Theatr e complex; the sum of £150,000 has been paid to the Royal Opera House as a further contribution towards th e Covent Garden Development Fund ; and a further (30,000 has been paid to English National Opera out of a special grant of f500,000 earmarked in 1981/82 towards the cost of rehearsal facilities and improvements to th e London Coliseum . The Arts Council was also empowered to enter into commitments during 1982/83 to make provision for Housin g the Arts up to a total of (1,815,000 . At 31st March 1983, ±1,631,900 had been committed out of the total o f £1,815,000 . The details are set out below . England National Companies National Theatre Board f 89,400 f 89,400 Musi c London-Westminster : The Friends of St John's 7,500 7,500 Drama Bath Arts Workshop Limited Cheltenham : Gloucestershire Everyman Theatre Company Limited London : Pioneer Theatres Limited Young Vic Company Limited Northampton Repertory Players Limited Rochdale : M6 Theatre Company Limited 1,50 0 225,00 0 10,00 0 5,00 0 70,00 0 1,000 312,500 Tourin g Liverpool : Empire Theatre (Liverpool) Trust Limited 2,000 2,00 0 Art Bradford City Council (National Museum of Photography) Darlington Arts Centre Trust London-Tower Hamlets : Whitechapel Art Gallery 50,000 4,000 200,000 254,00 0 Regiona l Aldershot : West End Centre Birmingham : Cannon Hill Trust Limited Gainsborough Area Arts Association (Trinity Church) Kidderminster: Wyre Forest District Council (Old School Arts Centre) Luton Community Arts Trust Limited Newcastle : Live Theatre Company Oxford Area Arts Council (St Paul's Project) Stafford Borough Council (Borough Hall) 14,000 5,000 30,000 5,000 50 0 3,00 0 5,00 0 10,000 72,500 Carried forward 737,900 10 1 !,3h,r a Brought fonkard £ 737,900 Scotlan d Aberdeen : His Majesty's Theatre Edinburgh Theatre Trust Limited Glasgow : Citizen's Theatre Limited Glasgow : Scottish Ballet Limited £ 100,00 0 148,000 193,000 50,000 491,00 0 Wales Brecon Guildhall Cardiff New Theatre Trust Limited Swansea : Grand Theatre Swansea : University College Arts Centre Swansea : Welsh Dance Theatre Trust Limited 10,00 0 70,00 0 300,00 0 20,00 0 3,000 403,000 £1,631,90 0 102 Table B Special Fund s Beneficiaries during the year ended 31 March 198 3 f Compton Poetry Fun d British American Arts Associatio n 4,50 0 Guilhermina Suggia Gift for the'Cell o Liam Abramso n Eva Bucke r Dare Fitzgeral d Jonathan Manson Emma-Jane Murph y Jacqueline Phillip s Ursula Smit h 17 5 150 62 5 100 100 50 15 0 H . A . Thew Fund Pamela Benso n Mark Dave r Gerard Doyl e Andrew Greena n Christopher Lewi s Liverpool Wind Orchestra Liverpool Youth Music Committe e Margaret McMilla n Melos Trus t James Norri s Peter O'Conno r Jill Samue l Spiral Contemporary Dance (Merseyside) Limited University of Liverpoo l 15 0 200 15 0 "15 0 15 0 50 37 5 100 30 0 20 0 50 17 5 20 0 25 0 Henry and Lily Davis Fun d Nancy Argent a Una Barry Gerard Brook s Faye Clinto n Gary Coward Lydia Flet t John Goug h John Key s Jacqueline Langford Danielle Perret t Rowland Sidwel l W o 35 0 60 0 600 600 450 500 500 500 350 3,000 Miriam Licette Scholarshi p Christine Bote s Janine Roebuc k Lorna Windso r 1,650 500 2,000 Mrs Thornton Beques t William Pye Ken Turner 1,55 0 300 103 Table C Subsidies to Regional Arts Association s An analysis of funds made available by the Council during the year ended 31 March 1983 Music £ 1,546 1,95 0 Dance £ - TouringDance £ 6,000 TouringDrama £ 11,05 0 Eastern a b c East Midlands a b c 703,000 3,100 1,812 - 3,893 13,504 Greater London a 6 c 1,233,000 - - - 550 750 6,419 - 15,378 - a b c 471,000 - a b c 444,000 385 - - 1,404 1,70 5 - a b c 1,564,85 0 - 1,145 2,700 2,937 16,35 1 a b c 775,000 - 5,939 9,47 5 - 1,380 2,900 a b c 740,000 - 28,500 1,673 4,000 1,650 2,610 - 13,38 5 a b c 444,000 - 1,493 1,200 - 3,063 South West a b c 635,000 - 1,756 1,000 3,170 3,937 - 21,09 5 West Midlands a b c 915,500 - 1,021 - - 14,650 40,690 Yorkshire a b c 588,000 - 1,553 4,000 5,506 - 15,49 3 - £9,054,850 £57,200 £12,270 £60,233 £187,150 Lincolnshire & Humberside Merseyside Northern North West Southern South East Totals £ Basic Subsidv 541,500 - 236 - 3,875 - 17,61 2 - - 11,41 2 a Basic subsidies and additional funds for organisations and events in their areas for which the Regional Art s Associations are expected to make provision in future years . b Subsidies made available for standard schemes or areas of activity for which the Regional Arts Association s undertake all administration and monitoring on behalf of the Arts Council . 104 Table C Drama £ - Art f 2,000 5,000 26,310 Literature f 5,000 - Other* f 50,610 39,517 Sub-totals f 599,11 0 23,596 67,77 7 - 3,500 1,500 48,335 5,300 10,000 31,000 714,900 20,709 89,33 5 824,94 4 - 3,500 7,550 41,440 5,000 2,000 90,000 58,500 1,331,50 0 29,347 103,24 0 1,464,08 7 - 500 1,825 6,000 2,000 - 20,000 473,50 0 23,548 26,000 523,048 - 400 4,525 3,500 1,500 - 15,000 25,000 460,900 8,019 28,500 497,41 9 - 2,000 15,050 60,203 8,000 - 60,000 1,574,850 35,483 122,903 1,733,23 6 - 2,000 4,000 21,405 4,250 - 38,500 781,25 0 20,794 62,80 5 - 3,000 1,800 10,250 5,800 - 37,750 777,300 19,468 53,650 - 2,000 3,125 3,400 2,500 500 42,660 25,000 491,16 0 19,093 30,100 540,35 3 - , 7,000 6,900 10,375 2,900 - 113,000 70,000 757,900 33,688 84,545 876,13 3 1,800 1,200 4,650 10,800 3,500 1,000 40,000 920,200 61,011 53,60 0 1,034,81 1 - 13,250 6,200 8,250 4,750 10,000 60,000 606,00 0 28,752 82,25 0 717,00 2 £1,800 £352,743 £74,000 f816,537 f10,616,783 £10,616,783 Total s £ 690,48 3 864,84 9 _ 850,41 8 c Subsidies made available to the Regional Arts Associations with no commitment on their part to mak e provision in future years . * Other : includes subsidy offered for community arts and for other purposes not classifiable under particula r headings including general supplementary funds . 105 Table D Exhibitions held in Great Britai n during 1982/83 Arts Council of Great Britai n R Craigie Aitchison, paintings 1953-198 1 RL Alive to it Al l L Arte Italiana 1960-8 2 RSW Big Prints R Books and Folios : Screenprints by Derrick Greaves, Robert Medley and Edward Middleditc h RSW Brancusi Photograph s R Bill Brandt, retrospective (organised by the Royal Photographic Society ) LR The British Worker : photographs of working life 1839-193 9 R Bronze Vessels from Ancient Chin a RW Anthony Caro : five sculptures from the Arts Council Collectio n L Tony Carter : images of subject object dualit y LRW Coal : British Mining in Art 1680-198 0 RSW Constructed Images : Approaches to Modern Art II I L Contemporary Choice 1979-81 : The Contemporary Art Society's recent acquisitions for publi c collection s LR John Sell Cotman 1782-184 2 L Francis Davison, paper collage s RS The Sculptures of Dega s RW Sonia Delaunay : illustrations to Arthur Rimbaud's 'Illuminations ' LRSW Marcel Duchamp's Travelling Bo x L Eureka! Artists from Australi a RW Experimental Photography 1920-4 0 R Five Modern Paintings from the Tate Galler y R Fragments against Ruin, a journey through modern art : works selected and purchased for the Art s Council Collection by Julian Spaldin g RS From Object to Object : an Arts Council Collection exhibitio n L Martin Froy, paintings ; constructions, drawings 1968-8 2 RW George Fullard, drawing s R Giacometti's Paris : lithographs from Alberto Giacometti's 'Paris sans Fin ' L Harold Gilman 1876 191 9 L Lawrence Gowing, retrospectiv e L Hayward Annual 1982 : British Drawing selected from an open submissio n L In the Image of Man : The Indian perception of the universe through 2,000 years of painting and sculptur e L Indian Drawing : selected by Howard Hodgki n R Inner Worlds : an Arts Council Collection exhibition of sculptures, paintings and drawings selected b y Paul Over y R The Isle of Man : photographs by Christopher Killip (organised by the Side Gallery, Newcastle ) L Landscape in Britain 1850-195 0 R Late Sickert : paintings 1927-42 R Leaves never grow on trees : Max Ernst's'Histoire Naturelle ' LRSW The Living Arts of India : craftsmen working in the classical and folk tradition s LR Lubetkin and Tecton : Architecture and Social Commitmen t RW A Mansion of Many Chambers : 'Beauty' and other works . An Arts Council Collection exhibition selecte d by Dr David Brow n LR Raymond Mason, sculpture, watercolours and drawings 1952-8 2 LRW Raymond Moore, photograph s R The National Gallery Lends : Paintings of the Warm South by foreign painters in Italy in the Seventeent h Centur y R Painter as Photographe r Paper as image : new works in pape r R L Photographer as Printmake r Private Views : an Arts Council Collection exhibitio n R RSW Reality and Artifice : Approaches to Modern Art I I 106 Table D LRS Bridget Riley Screenprints 1965-197 8 RS Romanticism Continued : Approaches to Modern Art I V S Room for Thought : eight works from the Arts Council Collectio n L Serpentine Summer Shows I, II, II I R Sounds of Colou r L Chaim Soutine 1893-194 3 R Stanley Spencer in the Shipyard : Drawings and Photograph s LR Adrian Stokes 1902-197 2 R Homer Sykes : Traditional British Calendar Customs (organised by the Arnolfini Gallery, Bristol) LRSW Ten 20th Century Houses : documentary . RS Through Children's Eyes; a fresh look at contemporary art LR Timber Framed Buildings : documentar y R Ger Van Elk, recent painting and sculpture and a selection of earlier wor k RL The Village Green : documentary RS Andy Warhol, Portrait Screenprints 1965-8 0 R Carel Weight R A RS What is Abstract Art? Approaches to Modern Ar t L Victor Willing, paintings since 1978 Sixty-eight exhibitions were held in 179 separate galleries in 122 different places (274 showings including 30 hel d in London at the Arts Council's Hayward Gallery and Serpentine Gallery, and other galleries including the Roya l . Academy and Victoria and Albert Museum) . A number of exhibitions received showings prior to the .year unde r review and are already listed in the annual report of 1981/82 . Scottish Arts Counci l Ed Big Prints (ACGB ) E Elizabeth Blackadder-retrospective exhibitio n Ed British Drawings : A selection from the Hayward Annual 198 2 T Keith Brockie-wildlife sketches TE Contemporary Art from Scotland (Scottish Gallery, Edinburgh ) Ed David Evans Retrospective (New 57 Gallery, Edinburgh ) Ed Grease and Water : An insight into the art and technique of lithograph y T Henry Moore Sculptur e Ed Peter Moores Liverpool Project 6 : Art into the 80s (Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool ) T News From The Thirties-photojournalism between the war s T Nijinsky 1912-photographs by De Meye r Ed Objects and Figures : New Sculpture in Britai n Ed Peter Phillips retroVISION : Paintings 1960-1982 (Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool) T Picasso Print s T Pictures of Ourselves-contemporary Scottish portrait s Ed Polish Modern Tapestry (Polish Cultural Institute/Lodz Bureau of Exhibitions/Richard Demarco Gallery/SAC ) Ed Scottish Art No w T Screenprints and how they are mad e Ed Sixty Seasons : David Nash (Mostyn Art Gallery, Llandudno/Third Eye Centre, Glasgow) Nineteen exhibitions were held in Scotland (23 venues in 17 centres, 45 showings in all) and in England (3 centres , 3 showings) . Travelling Gallery About Grampia n Keith Brockie-wildlife sketche s Objects and Figures : New Sculpture in Britai n Out of this World-The Art of Science Fiction (Brighton Museum ) Pictures of Ourselves : contemporary Scottish portraits Rail, Steam, Speed-art and the railways 107 Tabe D Welsh Arts Counci l OTW O TWE O TWE Roy Abel l The Art of Givin g An Artist in the Quarrie s The Assembling of Part s A Centenary Celebration (organised by the Royal Cambrian Academy of Art in association with th e Williamson Art Gallery & Museum, Birkenhead ) A Child's Christmas in Wales (organised by the Welsh National Centre for Children's Literature ) TW Contemporary Art Society for Wales . Recently purchased work s O Family, Some Chairs, A Number of Tables and Mary Queen of Scot s O Peter Grimes and Urban Frontiers O O Jon Groo m Allan Gwynne-Jones (organised by the National Museum of Wales in association with the Royal Nationa l TWE Eisteddfod of Wales, 1982) TWE Barbara Hepworth-a Sculptor's Landscape 1934-1974 (organised by Swansea Museums Service ) TW Maskreys Printmaking Awards 1982 (organised by the Association of Artists & Designers in Wales ' National Print Workshop ) Occasions, Portraits, Head s O O Perfect Moment s Thomas Rathmell (organised by Oriel : continued from previous year ) OTW1 TW Sculpture at Margam (organised by the Welsh Sculpture Trust in collaboration with West Glamorga n County Council ) Sixties and Seventies . Prints and drawings by Barry Flanagan (organised by the Mostyn Art Gallery , TWE Llandudno) Some Miraculous Promised Land (organised by the Mostyn Art Gallery, Llandudno ) TWE Twenty-seven exhibitions including 16 from England were toured in Wales to 12 centres, in 18 different buildings , giving 42 showings in all . In addition 9 new exhibitions were originated at Oriel of which one toured as above . Welsh Arts Council exhibitions had 8 showings in England . Note E Exhibited in Englan d Ed Exhibited in Edinburg h L Exhibited in Londo n O Oriel Exhibition (Welsh Arts Council Bookshop and Gallery, Cardiff ) Exhibited in the Region s R S Exhibited in Scotlan d T Tour in Scotlan d TW Tour in Wale s W Exhibited in Wale s 1 One showing only in Wale s 108 Table E Contemporary Music Networ k 1982/83 Tours Azimuth/Gordon Beck Nonet : Birmingham, Brighton, Bristol, Coventry, Darlington, Kendal, Leeds , Leicester, London, Manchester, Sheffiel d Electronic Music Now : Bristol, Cardiff, Darlington, Durham, Keele, Leeds, Leicester, Liverpool, London, Manchester, Nottingham, Sheffield, Well s John Alldis Choir : Birmingham, Bristol, Cheltenham, Darlington, Durham, Leeds, London , Manchester, Nottingham, Whitehave n Nexus (Canada) : Abbotsholme, Birmingham, Bristol, Cardiff, Darlington, Leicester , Liverpool, London, Manchester, Nottingham, Sheffield, Wells, Yor k Piano 40 : Birmingham, Coventry, Leicester, Llantwit Major, London, Manchester, Sinfonietta Productions Limited : Coventry, Darlington, Exeter, Huddersfield, Leeds, London, Milton Keynes , Oxford, Whitehave n Songmakers' Almanac Limited : Boston, Halifax, Hull, Lancaster, Liverpool, London, Luton, Sheffield, Yor k Steve Lacy Sextet and Keith Tippett : Birmingham, Bristol, Coventry, Darlington, Kendal, Leeds, Leicester, Llantwit Major, London, Manchester, Newcastle, Sheffield 109 Table F Schemes and Award s Theatre Writing Scheme s Bursaries Karim Ahvari Bruce Bedford Edward Bond Penny Casdagli Chris Challis David Clough Nick Darke Leslie Davidof f David Dran e Seamus Finnega n Patrick Galvi n Nigel Gearin g Paul Goetze e Noel Grei g Wilson John Haire Contract Writers Award s Organisatio n Belt and Braces Roadshow Company Limite d Black Theatre Co-operative Bristol Express Theatre Compan y The Cherub Compan y Colway Theatre Trust Limite d DAC Theatre Compan y Disrepertory Theatre The Dog Compan y Durham Theatre Compan y Flying Tortoise Theatre Company Limite d The Grand Unio n Harlow Theatre Va n Haruspex Incubus Theatre Company Limite d Inner City Theatre Compan y Lyric Theatre Hammersmith Trus t The Medieval Players Limited Merseyside Young People's Theatre Company Limite d National Theatre of Bren t National Youth Theatre of Great Britai n New Moon Theatr e The New Theatre New Vic Theatre Compan y Northern Black Light Theatre Compan y Nuffield Theatre Compan y Pocket Theatre Cumbri a Solent People's Theatre Limited Tara Arts Grou p Theatre of Thelema Limited Theatre Venture Touring Theatre Londo n Yorkshire Actors Compan y Yorkshire Arts Circus Resident Dramatist Attachment s Writer Stephen Wyat t Adrian Mitchel l Rony Robinso n Stephen Faga n Tom Hadaway Bill Morriso n Gary Lyons Shaun Prendergas t Frances McNei l Steve Gooc h John Turne r Tony Denni s Les Smith 11 0 Julia Kearsle v Hanif Kureish i Tonv ti1archan t Mustapha Matur a Natasha Morga n Kate Phelp s Brenda Ra y Colin Sel l Jeremy James Taylo r Write r Gavin Richard s Edgar White David Mowa t Angela Lanyo n John Downi e Ron Rose Alan Drur y Andrew Woo d John Sansic k John Cooper, Stephen Wyat t John Cumming, Keith Morri s Graham Luca s Alan Drury, Stephen Jeffreys, David Pownal l Paddy Fletche r Les Davidoff, Les Mille r Richard Maher, Roger Michell, Caryl Phillip s Edwin Morga n Mike Ka y Patrick Barlo w Peter Terson Peter Co x Phil Smit h Phil Wood s John Bon d Susan Hagan, Bob Mason, Mike Stot t Stephen Jeffrey s Louise Pag e Jatinder Verm a Shirley Barri e Peta Masters, Andy Armitage, Steve Gooch, Geraldine Griffith s Jonathan Myerso n John Godbe r Berlie Doherty Organisatio n Bubble Theatre Compan y Caryl Jenner Productions Limite d Crucible Theatre Trust Limite d Hampstead Theatre Limite d Live Theatre Compan y Liverpool Repertory Theatre Limite d Major Road Theatre Compan y Northumberland Theatre Compan y Nottingham Theatre Trust Limited Solent People's Theatre Trust Limite d The Combination Limite d The Factory Theatre Foundr y Table F Royalty Supplement Guarantees Writer Yemi Ajibade Shirley Barrie Jean Binnie John Chambers Keith Dorland Sandra Freeman Berta Freistadt Susan Hagan Debbie Horsfield John Robert King Bryony Lavery Roger Stennett Carol Williams Trainingg Schemes Administrators Diploma Course Andrew Eaton Rowena Gardiner Sarah Hase Sarah Hill Roula Konzotis Gillian Levick Joanna Littlejohns Helen Marriage Jennifer Waldman Practical Training Scheme Christine Barton Graham Bennett Stella Hall Paula Hughes Sharon Kean Richard Sharland In- .Service Bursaries Barrington Anderson Ned Arnold Jonathan Bailey Sandra Bailey Helen Bass Chris Belcher Keith Bennett Stuart Blackwood Robin Carlyle Sylvia Carter Elizabeth Collett Timothy Cullen Andrew Dawson Rosalind Dodd Brian Donovan Margaret Douglas Susan Dowsett Julie Eaglen Joan Ewert Play Fingers Only Riders Of The Sea Just A Tick Away From Home Jimmy Was Here Family Engagement Poor Silly Bad Dragon's Teeth Away From It All King Arthur The Black Hole of Calcutta Out Of The Sun All Things Nice Organisation Black Theatre Co-operativ e Theatre of Thelema Limited Elephant Theatre Compan y Pan Theatre Company Active Alliance Theatre Co . Brighton Actors Worksho p Theatre Venture Brighton Actors Worksho p Theatre Venture Shiva Theatre Company National Theatre of Bren t Solent People's Theatre Ltd . Old Red Lio n Christopher Faulkne r Irene Fawkes Jennifer Ferguson David Fraser Thomas Gardner Michael George John Gillett Fiona Godfrey-Fausett Peter Gray Annu Gupta Pete Hackett Wilfred Hall Christine Hanley Jessica Harris Arlene Heron Cathy Hunt Rachel Ireland Dave Jeffrey Anna Jones Simon Jones Thomas Jones Charlotte Kelly Michael Kelly Heather Knight Pauline Landau Helen Lannaghan Geoffrey Locker Fiona Lohoar Jill Low Mark Lumley Moira McCarthy Brod Maso n Sally Masterman Penny Mayes Frances Middlestorb Carin Mistry Rapitse Montsho Steve Murphy Lucy Neal Alan Nield Kieron P . O'Connor Sally O'Donnell Fiona Pilkingto n Rekha Prasha r Penelope Ra e Alison Redwood Sally Reeves Michael Russel l Julian Satterthwaite Barbara Savage Alan Seymou r Madhav Sharm a Collin Shi m Bob Sim s Micheline Steinber g Thelma Stuar t David Stuttard Alison Summer s Chitra Sundaram Julia Szok a Kann Taylor Helena Tomli n Roger Tuk e Katie Venne r Sheena Wagstaff Angela Wal l Jan Welto n Rob Whit e Sarah Wicks Myra Witter Andrew Wood David Wood s Madeline Worral l Designer s Jan Blak e Tom Cairn s Anne Curry Sara Easby Maria Fernand o Sarah Greenwoo d Jacqueline Gun n Nigel Lower y John Murchison 11 1 Table F Kate Owen Magdalen Rubalcava Leanne Sayer Gregory Smith John Williams Directors Celia Bannerman Michael Boyd Peter Fieldson Marilyn Floyde Roger Hill Boris Howarth Jeremy Howe Gwenda Hughes Richard Jones Trevor Laird Caroline Raphael Performers Advanced Training for Musicians Stephanie Cant Gemini Susan Heath Graeme Matheson-Bruc e Clare Sutherland Sioned Williams National Centre for Orchestral Studies Peter Bunzs Caroline Collier Catherine Dendy Claire Harmsworth Neil Martin Deborah Neath Leon Ogden National Opera Studio Kim Begley Nancy Cooley Christopher Gillett Murray Hipkin Paul Hodges Alice Hyde Jeremy Munro Joan Rodgers Janine Roebuck Alma Sheehan Donald Stephenson Linda Strachan Jane Turner Alexander Winterson Royal Northern College of Music Sinfonia David Baker Simon Beesley Judith Bowles Alison Carver 11 2 Philip Cesa r David Her d Nichola Hunte r Christopher Lewi s Diane Martindal e David Pagett Nicholas Pendlebury Helen Rowland s Mark Sherida n Monica Wilkinso n Organisations Action Space Mobil e Hesitate and Demonstrate Intriplicate Mime Compan y Leeds Playhouse Theatre-in-Education Merseyside Young People's Theatre Company Limited Mime and Movement Trus t Rational Theatre Riverside Theatre Studi o Shared Experience Limite d Tara Arts Grou p Trickster Theatre Company Tyne and Wear Theatre Trust Limite d Puppeteer Stephen Mottra m Theatre Performers Richard Albrecht Linda-Jean Barry Bronwyn Bau d Steve Bel l Joan Campion Sandra Carrie r Robert Cavendis h Elizabeth Counsel l David Creedo n Helen Crocke r Julia Deaki n Andrew de la Tou r Maedee Dupres Shreela Ghos h Steven Giles David Glass Mark Hard y Nola Hayne s Didi Hopkin s Barbara Horne Nigel Hughe s Susie John s Darlene Johnso n Michael Jones Philip Josep h Joy Launor Heye s Jenny Lee Joy Lemoine Julianne Maso n Marsha Milla r Veronica Nelson Lloyd Newson Cindy O'Callagha n Ann O'Conno r Owen John O'Mahon y Philip Osment Rosie Pattiso n Kate Perciva l Peter Polycarpou Frances Quin n Selwa Raja a Alison Ros e Richard Seymou r Mala Sikk a Christopher Snel l Barry Stear n Carola Stewart Carol Summers Caroline Swift Sally Syke s Frances Thomso n Michelle Tod d Mick Wal l John Watt s Clare Welc h Technician s Individuals Trevor Allan Nick Bloo m Geoffrey Locker Alan Niel d Ann Pooley Hugh Vanston e Giles Vaudrey-Favel l Piano Tuner Christopher Farthing Joint Training Fun d Anthony Bailey The Cultural Centre Handswort h Prabhu Guptar a Sally O'Donnel l John Phillip s Steelband Association of Great Britai n Tai-Shen Chinese Play Associatio n Taffy Thoma s West Midlands Ethnic Minorities Art s Servic e Table F Awards Englan d Musi c Commission s Malcolm Arnold The King's Singers Simon Bainbridge Sinfonietta Productions Limite d Whispering Wind Ban d David Bedfor d English Sinfonia Limited (2) Richard Rodney Bennett Susan Mila n Syrinx Ensemble Michael Berkeley Milton Keynes February Festiva l New London Singers Gilbert Biberian Clive Conway-Gwilliam Judith Bingham Christine Batt y Hugh Hetherington Derek Bourgeoi s British Youth Wind Orchestr a Christopher Brown London Bach Society Geoffrey Burgo n National Federation of Musi c Societies Charles Camiller i Gretta Barrow and Edmund Rei d Jack Bryme r Gary Carpenter Lontan o Omega Guitar Quartet Graham Collie r South Hill Park Trust Limited Edward Cowi e Royal Liverpool Philharmoni c Societ y Lyell Cresswel l Lontan o Gordon Cross e Alexander Baillie an d Kathron Sturrock Adrian Cruf t City of Bath Bach Choi r Regional Opera Trust Limited (Kent Opera ) Royal Military School of Musi c Martin Dalby Allan Schiller Carl Davi s Greenwich Festiva l Patric Dickinso n The King's Singer s John Duarte Alice Artzt Amsterdams Gitaartri o Gil Evans Jazz Centre Society Limited Corey Fiel d Melissa Phelps Rolf Gehlhaa r Haroutune Bedelia n Janet Graha m Ondine Ensemble (2) Pawlu Grec h Ondine Ensembl e Edward Gregso n Boosey & Hawkes Band Festival s Limite d Equale Bras s Barry Gu y City of London Sinfoni a Jonty Harriso n Gemin i Jonathan Harvey Collegium Musicum of London Anthony Hedge s Kirklees Metropolitan Counci l John Howard Albany Brass Ensembl e Vic Hoylan d Vocem Wilfred Joseph s Lionel Tertis International Viol a Competitio n Locke Brass Consor t John Joubert Vivaldi Chamber Ensembl e Oliver Knusse n Nash Ensemble Production s Nicola LeFan u Gemin i Girl Guides Associatio n Malcolm Lipki n John Turner (2) Jonathan Lloyd Jan Latham-Koeni g John McCab e Boosey & Hawkes Band Festival s Limite d Edward McGuire Locrian String Quarte t John Marlow Rhy s Lionel Friend David Matthews Lorraine McAslan Stephen Montagu e Academy of Londo n Elms Concerts Limited Dominic Muldowney Endymion Ensemble Sinfonietta Productions Limite d George Nicholson Latham-Koenig Ensemble Wessex Opera and Orpheu s Ensembl e Renee Rezne k Alfred Niema n Gilbert Biberia n Vogelstein Foundation Trus t Arne Nordhei m Electric Phoeni x Michael Nyma n English Gamelan Orchestr a Buxton Or r Bureau Piano Tri o Johanna Platt Regional Opera Trust Limited (Kent Opera) Anthony Powers Paul Roberts Peter Racine Fricke r Three Choirs Festival Associatio n Limite d Stephen Reev e Rohan de Saram Francis Rout h Robin Cante r Robert Saxto n Fires of London Limited Francis Sha w Diana Ambache Roger Smalley Fires of London Limited Naresh Soha l London Gabrieli Brass Ensembl e Tim Souste r Nash Ensemble Production s Roger Stepto e Albany Brass Ensembl e John Tavene r Little Missenden Festiva l Stan Trace y Richmond Festiva l Alejandro Vinao Elms Concerts Limite d David Ward London Festival Orchestr a Judith Wei r William Howard Nash Ensemble Production s Mike Westbrook Aldeburgh Festival-Snape Malting s Foundation Limited John White Yvar Mikhashoff Thomas Wilson Richard Deering Hugh Woo d Parikian-Fleming-Roberts Trio 113 Table F Bursarie s Brian Abraham s Kenneth Baldoc k Alan Bel k Max Brittai n Christopher Brown Arthur Butterwort h Ian Car r Geoffrey Castle Peter Cusack Raymon d'Invern o Hugh Davie s Michael Garric k Brian Goddin g Michael Hame s Christopher Hodgkin s Peter Hurt Alexander Kolkowsk i Peter Lemer Peter McPhai l Roger Mars h Colin Matthew s David Matthews Marcio Matto s Maggie Nicol s Nigel Osborn e Frank Perr y Howard Riley Paul Rogers Daryl Runswick Keith Tippett David Too p Andrew Vores Phil Wachsman n Raymond-Warleig h Trevor Watt s John Woolric h Dance Choreographers Richard Alsto n Maedee Dupre s Barrington Anderso n Ekome Dance Compan y Stewart Arnold Frank Maraschiello and Dancer s Christopher Bannerma n Midlands Dance Company Limite d Micha Bergese Manti s Darshan Bhuller London Youth Dance Theatre Phoenix Dance Compan y Laurie Booth Mara Ya Pil i Christopher Bruc e Janet Smith and Dancers 114 Jonathan Burrow s Spiral Contemporary Danc e (Merseyside) Limite d Tamara McLorg Paul Dougla s London Contemporary Danc e Experienc e Rex Doyl e David Glass George Dzikun u Nome Dance Compan y Donald Edward s Phoenix Dance Compan y Terence Etheridg e Genee Theatre Projects Limite d Beyhan Fowkes Lynx Danc e Anna Furs e Tamara McLor g Patience Gibb s Ekome Dance Compan y David Glass English Dance Theatr e Tamara McLor g Philip Grosse r Ilana Snyder Matthew Hawkin s Manti s Celia Hulto n London Contemporary Danc e Experienc e Desmond Jones Intriplicate Mime Compan y Jacky Lansle y Giselle Enterprise s Jayne Lee London Contemporary Dance Experienc e Susan Littl e English Dance Theatr e Ingegerd Lonnrot h English Dance Theatr e Focus On Contemporary Dance Grou p Tamara McLorg Tamara McLor g Lynx Dance Royston Maldoo m Basic Space Dance Theatre Limite d English Dance Theatre Tamara McLorg Charlotte Milner London Contemporary Dance Experienc e Namron London Contemporary Dance Experienc e Elliot Nguban e Lanzel Co-operative Robert Nort h Janet Smith and Dancers Sally Owe n Tamara .ti1cLorg Sally Potte r fvlaedee Dupre s Michael Quaintanc e Thamesdown Contemporary Yout h Danc e Ian Spin k The Networ k Basil Wanzir a Aklowa Associatio n Lenny Westerdij k Direct Dance Compan y Composers Neil Arthu r Manti s Charles Barbe r Lynx Danc e Alan Bel k Midlands Dance Company Limited Christopher Benstead Crazy Balance Youth Danc e Grou p Janet Smith and Dancers Gavin Bryar s Dancewor k Lindsay Coope r Maedee Dupres Judith Earl y Sue Westo n Michael Finnissy Second Stride Dance Company James Fulkerso n Second Stride Dance Company Gabriel Gabla h Ekome Dance Company David Heat h Phoenix Dance Compn y Alan Lis k Cipher Dance Compan y Direct Dance Company London Contemporary Danc e Experience (2 ) Stephen Luscomb e Manti s Barrington Pheloun g London Youth Dance Theatre Jane Well s Ludus Dance in Educatio n Peter Wes t Nola Rae, London Mime Theatr e Jeffrey Wilso n Spiral Contemporary Dance (Merseyside) Limite d Designers Nadine Bayli s Midlands Dance Company Limite d Table F Jan Blak e Manti s David Buckland Second Stride Dance Compan y Sue Carpente r London Contemporary Danc e Experienc e Carmel Collin s Manti s Candida Coo k Janet Smith and Dancers Lee Dean Genee Theatre Projects Limited Tom Donnella n Dancework Alison Jone s Ludus Dance in Educatio n Andrew Klunde r Spiral Contemporary .Dance (Merseyside) Limite d Anna Lowther-Harri s Ekome Dance Compan y Alison McCa w Trickster Theatre Compan y Antony McDonal d The Networ k Second Stride Dance Compan y Peter Mumfor d Maedee Dupres Second Stride Dance Compan y Janet Newto n Tamara McLor g Christine Orvi s Basic Space Dance Theatre Limite d Heinz Dieter Pietsc h Rosemary Butche r Ginette Ruthven • . Theatre Whisper s Andrew Store r Midlands Dance Company Limite d Isobel Warrende r Intriplicate Mime Company (2 ) Tessa Schneidema n Alpana Sengupta Annie Staine r Chitra Sundara m Miranda Tufnel l International Dance Course fo r Choreographers and Composer s (Dance Bursaries ) Alan Bel k Jayne Lee Paul Robinso n Peter Roysto n Garry Trinder Tom Williams James Forste r Rob Gawthrop (3) Peter Gida l Ken Gil l Vicky Gordon-Jones/Chris Andrew s Richard Grayson Nicky Hamlyn (2 ) Steve Hawley Judith Higginbotto m Derek Jarma n Tina Kean e Claire Keatin g John Kippi n Ron Lane (2 ) Richard Layzel l Mike Leggett (2 ) Mark Limbrick Deborah Lowensberg Michael Mazier e Lucy Pantel i Jayne Parker (2) Zoe Redma n Alan Rento n Joanna Savory/Andrew Scot t Martin Sercombe (2) Tony Sinde n Susan Stein (2 ) Janusz Szczerek (2 ) Anna Thew Kerry Trengove Marion Urch (2) Katie Web b Penelope Web b Chris Welsb y Jeremy Welsh Belinda William s Fionna Wire Liz Yeat s Visual Arts Literatur e Dance Bursaries Christopher Bannerma n Christopher Benstea d Laurie Boot h Rosemary Butche r William Dashwoo d Harriet Devli n Jane Dudle y David Glas s Dennis Greenwoo d Matthew Hawkin s Peta Lil y John Mowa t Pratap Pawa r Edward Pillinge r Claudia Prietze l Tara Rajkumar Film-makers and Video Artist s John Adam s Neil Armstrong (2 ) Lesli-An Barret t Anne Bea n Jane Beec h John Bewley Tom Castl e Tim Cawkwel l John Davies Greg Daville Malcolm Elli s Catherine Elwes (2) Steve Farrie r lain Faulkner (2 ) Bob Fearn s David Finch Rose Finn-Kelcey Writers and Translators Fleur Adcoc k Peter Bren t A . S . Byat t J. L . Carr Aidan Higgins Christopher Hop e John Peter Peter Redgrove Carol Rumen s Graham Swif t Lorna Trac y British Summer School of Mime Theatre (Dance Bursaries) Denise Armo n Rachel Ashto n Geoffrey Atwel l Mandy Budge Gabrielle Cowbur n Andrew Dawso n Zena Dilk e Simon Elliot t Ross Fole y Adrian Hedle y Nigel Jamieso n Jonathan Ka y Howard Lee John Lee Bim Maso n Michael Mulkerri n Sally Owe n John Trampe r Peter Wea r Sue Westo n 115 Tahq, T Scotland MUSIC S P~ Awards Special Bryan Anderson John Bevan-Baker David Durward Stephen Ferguson Peter Innes Geoffrey King John McLeod Raymond Monelle Wilma Paterson William Sweeney Commissions JJohn Bevan-Bake r William Conway" Hamilton District Arts Guild' Francis Cowan The Edinburgh Early Music Consort ' Gordon Crosse Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama* Martin Dalby Dunbartonshire Win d Ensemble' Peter Maxwell Davies Scottish Chamber Orchestra Limited' David Durward Paragon Ensemble' Charles Duncan Scottish Opera Limited* John Maxwell Geddes Bryden Thomson* University of Glasgow* lain Hamilto n Scottish Chamber Orchestra Limited* Kenneth Leighton Edinburgh Symphony Orchestra' Martin Lennon Wester Hailes Festival Association ' John Lunn Paul Hindmarsh* William Sweeney* Joe McGinley Citizens' Theatre Limited* John McLeod Scottish Chamber Orchestra Limited* Peter Nelson Richard Beauchamp* Kenneth Platts Elspeth Mack' 116 Bernard Shaw The Scottish Youth Theatre Limited' Ronald Stevenson Roger Quin' Bramwell Tovey Christopher Griffiths' Philip Wilby Cunninghame Choir' Thomas Wilson Bryden Thomson' Annie Lacev Margo McLaughli n Alastair Macmilla n Una MacNa b Martin Miln e Chrissie Or r John Ramag e Michael Robert s Colin Scot t Alenka Souku p Douglas Stive n Bursaries Bryan Anderso n Catriona Bell Marilyn de Blieck Ian Burnside Elizabeth Charleson Lyell Cresswell Linda Emslie Philip Greene Eric Ibler Pamela Marks Gillian Matthews Mary Mute Jonathon Phillips David Rowland Dram a Bursaries Michael Alderdice Bill Cleghorn Ross Corbet t Joyce Dean s Jacinta Fahe y Michael Hammon d Angus Hirs t Rosalind Little Terry Neaso n Cordelia Olive r Fay Prendergas t Leon Sinde n David Smit h Danc e Commissions Pierre Altof f Basic Space Dance Theatre Limited' Craig Givens Basic Space Dance Theatre Limited* Shelley Lee Basic Space Dance Theatre Limited* Pat MacKenzie Basic Space Dance Theatre Limited" Tamara McLorg Dance Antics Danc eAntics Company' Chris Orvi s Basic Space Dance Theatre Limited' Peter Royston The Scottish Ballet Limited' Mime Bursaries William Armour Clare Brennan David Barclay Joanna Chapman Catriona Clayton Jules Cranfield Art Bursaries and Award s Samantha Ainsle y Elise Alla n Muriel Bank s Robin Bank s Neil Dallas Brow n Fred Bush e Alfons Bytautu s Rosie Calde r James Cram b Peter Darac h Philip Duthi e Gareth Fishe r Peter Flynn Paul Grim e Rob Hellya r Allan Henderso n Moira Inne s Erika Kin g Robert Leishma n Kaye Lync h Malcolm McCoi g Dominic McIve r Les Macka y Sandra McNeilanc e John McPhe e Ronald Marti n Eric Marwic k Alec Mui r Timothy Nea t Table F Glen Onwin Frank Pottinger June Redfern Alistair Ross Bill Scott Anne Skinner David Smith Derek Soutar Norma Starzakowna Telfer Stokes Douglas Thomson Andrew Williams George Wyllie Commissions Bob McGilvray Cumbernauld Development Corporation* Dundee District Council* Glasgow District Council* Royal Edinburgh Hospital* Artists' Collective (Timothy Chalk, Paul Grime and David Wilkinson) Strathclyde Regional Council* University of Glasgow* North of Scotland Hydro Electric Board* Morrison Construction Group* Literature Bursaries lain Bamforth Moira Burgess Donald Campbell John Clifford Ronald Frame John Greening John Herdma n Archie Hind Carl MacDougal l Lorn Macintyre Finlay MacLeod Aonghas MacNeacail Freny Obrich Special Award Valerie Bierman Travel Grants Alan Bold Daniel Gree n Alastair Hardie Seamus MacNeill' Walter Perrie Trevor Royle James Shaw Gran t Alasdair Simpso n Book Awards Ron Butlin Ian Cowan Eileen Dunlop Geoffrey Finlayson Kathleen Jamie Bernard MacLaverty Tom McNab Edwin Morgan Eric Richards Trevor Royle lain Crichton Smith William Watson Administration Training Bursaries Fergus Muir Annie Reddick In these cases payment is made to the organisation shown Wales Musi c Awards for Advanced Stud y Eleri Davie s Janet Edwards Huw Evans Vaughan Howell s Iwan Llewellyn-Jone s Stephen Merrima n Caryl Thoma s Jane Watt s Mari Williams Helen Willi s Commissions to Composers Derek Bourgeoi s Mervyn Burtch Lyn Davie s Martin Davies David Harrie s Alun Hoddinott Arwel Hughe s Richard Flfyn Jone s Richard Roderick Jones Cyril W Lloy d William Mathia s David Neven s David Neville Paul Patterso n Trevor Roberts Michael F Robinso n Denzil Stephen s St David's'Cathedral Bach Festival * Jean Langlai s John Taylo r Timothy Taylo r Howard Wat t Adrian Williams Jeffrey Wilso n David Wynne Danc e Award s lain Ferguso n Anna Holmes Bronwen Judg e Training Bursarie s Dylan Davies Geraldine Hurl Drama Playwriting Commission s Action Pie * Carl Tighe 11 7 Table F Chvd County Council' Sion Eirian Jonathan Petherbridge C mni Cyfri Tri' y Christine Watkins Gwent Theatre in Education' Charles Way Made in Wales' [wart Alexander Graham Allen Nigel Baldwin Richard Edwards Sion Eirian Alan Osbourne Radio Cymru' Alun Jones William Jones Gruffydd Parry Dayfan Roberts and Valmai Jones Dafydd How Williams Ifor Wyn Williams Norman Williams Royal National Eisteddfod' William Lewis Spectacle Theatre' Frank Vickery Theatr Bara Caws' Myrddin Jones Theatre Camel' Jonathan Petherbridge Theatr Crwban' Emyr Morgan Evans Theatr Powys" Christopher Hawes Charles Way Theatre Wales' Roger Stennett Dorien Thomas Torch Theatre" Tom McGrath West Glamorgan Theatre in Education' Tim Baker Les Smith Training Awards Action Pie' Artfarmers Limited' Peter Brooks Rosamund Shelley Caricature Theatre" Caron Drucker Michael Chubb Clwyd County Council' Eirwen Hopkins Phil Cope Dick Downing 118 Terry Enright Ron Hale Hijinx Theatre' Dick Berry Gaynor Loughe r Llio Silo Huws Made in Wales' Gilly Adams Joan Mills John North Adrian Ord Helen Roberts Lesley Rooney Frank Rozelaar-Green Theatr Bara Caws' Elinor Roberts Theatr Cymru" Ceri Sherlock Theatr Powys Jaimie Garven Harriet Lansdown Jonathan Morgan Torch Theatre" Christine Daymon Lesley Jones Wendy Wright Art Young Artists Nicholas Berry Sebastian Boyesen Brigitte Doxsey Jenny Fel l John Howard Griffith s Claire Grov e Robert Harding Anne Myfanwy John s Martyn Jone s David King Susan Lovell Philip Nicol Ian Parker Chris Partridge James Rielly Paul Storey Rosemary Warnock Martyn Wilkie Emrys Williams Special Project Grants Paul Beauchamp Susan Butler Clyde Holmes Ray Howard-Jones Peter Jone s John Roger s Tony Steele- .Morga n Rosemary Waite Loans to Artists Christopher Burnha m Christopher Colclough Joneal Coulse n Erica Dabor n Elizabeth Ann Edmundsen Ramon Elliot t Dale Edna Evan s Christopher John Griffi n Ben Jone s Berwyn Jone s Catrin Jone s Royston Kneat h Carolyn Littl e George Littl e Ian McCulloug h Lydia Marou f Malcolm Morri s Philip Muirde n John Nesbitt Annie Nichola s David Pett s Alan David Price Gwilym Prichar d John Michael Redhea d Peter Rensha w John Roger s Catherine Shearo n Dave Smitha m Tony Steele-Morga n Frank Watkins Wally Waygoo d Terence John WetheriI t Alex William s Krystyna Zientwic z Fil m Film-making Grants Frances Bowye r David Cohe n Roland Denning Timothy Diggle s Lutz Dill e Mali Evan s Timothy Exto n Steve Goug h Catrin Hughes Angela Jackso n Caroline Limme r Les Mill s Dick Powel l Michael Stubb s Tim Thornicroft Table F Award s Frances Bowye r Liz Forde r Susan Hora n Claire Polla k Eileen Smit h Mike Sweet Susan Twizz y John Emyr Nigel Jenkins R Tudur Jones Alan Llwycl Dafydd Rowlands Carl Tighe . Nigel Wells Robin Williams Literatur e International Writers Prize Margaret Atwood Book Production Grants Bedwyr Lewis Jone s Eluned Ellis Jone s Jac Jones Margaret D Jone s R Brinley Jone s Maldwyn Thoma s Prizes and Bursaries Rachel Bromwich Marian Eames Alice Thomas Ellis Craft Awards to Craftsmen Alan Barret-Danes Ruth Barret-Danes Jackie Care y Maurice Care y Adrian Child s John Davies Claude Frere-Smith Derek Krelle Trefor Owe n Philip Rogers Christian Savage ' Ceramic Research Awar d Maggie Andrews Zel Osborn e Craftsmen in Residence South East Wales Arts Association ' Geraldine France s West Glamorgan County Council ' Mark Hun t West Wales Arts Association ' Gudrun Jones . 'In these cases payment is mad e to the organisation shown 11 9