[SWP] Re: Lot 14 (Old RAH Site)
Posted: Tue May 16, 2023 2:55 am
Completely agree with this. Literally one thing on European's minds for Australia. That is Australian culture. Our Anglo culture isn't a drawcard at all for them, and our very large Asian representation is also of little value to someone who can spend less on a ticket to Asia itself than to Adelaide. A museum like this is the unique culture that distinguishes Australia on the world stage. Additionally, it fits snugly into our development and slowly changing image as Australia's cultural capital. If we dont do something like this, what culture can we really show the world? We don't have the beaches of the east coast, the rainforest on the doorstep like Brisbane, the opera house, the harbour bridge, the metropolitan glamour of Melbourne or anything remarkable. If this wont be our landmark, what will?Algernon wrote: ↑Tue May 16, 2023 12:17 amA stadium for the unwashed masses may have more total appeal, but then the next question is of who it appeals to and what value does it bring to the table.gnrc_louis wrote: ↑Mon May 15, 2023 9:11 pmIn a state such as South Australia with a fairly small budget, how is $600m not a lot to spend? That's also ridiculous - I think many people would be saying the exact same thing if it were $600m for a contemporary gallery. It's a huge outlay and I would guess quite possibly electoral suicide for any government. Just look at the issues the proposed AFL stadium is currently causing the Tasmanian Government - and that's a far smaller sum of money on arguably something with much broader appeal.Patrick_27 wrote: ↑Mon May 15, 2023 9:03 pmHow is $600m a lot to spend? If anything $200m was nowhere near enough even as a projected price tag. No one would be saying the same if this were a contemporary gallery, which would cost the same (if not more)…
An AFL stadium may bring in some interstate dollars, but when you factor in that the same money goes straight back the other way for an away game, it's a bit of a zero sum game there.
A museum on the other hand has the potential of specifically targeting a tourist dollar that may not be captured because there is no substitute. In this case, I'd only support an Aboriginal gallery over a contemporary art gallery. In around 10 years of living in Europe, I can say I have had precisely 0 people ever say to me that they need to see an Australian contemporary art gallery before they die. On the other hand, Aboriginal/First Nations cultures do conjure some fairly strong interest. I haven't lived all around Europe, but I can say from experience that Germans and Austrians have really been proactive in seeking this info from me with the view for travel. Anecdotal of course, but I think it serves a pretty basic point that contemporary art has its substitutes and Aboriginal culture/art has none. You can only see it in Australia and if we just happen to be sitting on a vast collection in a warehouse, why not put what is there to use!
Specifically on the issue of the Tasmanian stadium proposal (as you brought it up), the ultimate spend is over 700 million and it really calls into question the priorities of a government that is addicted to federal money to solve its own problems, and when that money is there, would spend it on a 24,000 seat stadium rather than address the real issue that 51% of the state's adult population is functionally iliterate. I don't bring it up to butt heads on that topic, but rather that I think opposition may be organised around a single issue of the total spend (which indeed is high for both), but formed in quite different contexts.