This video about England is called Masterpieces from The National Gallery London.
By Conrad Landin in Britain:
Privatisation would ‘brutalise’ National Gallery, says artist Geraldine Swayne
Monday 26th January 2014
Trade unions declare five days of strike action over sudden presence of security firm CIS
PRIVATISATION would “brutalise” the National Gallery, a prolific artist warned yesterday as union stewards prepared to give notice for an unprecedented five days of strikes against the move.
Geraldine Swayne, whose work has been exhibited at the Barbican and the Saatchi Gallery, said plans to outsource visitor services and security jobs at the flagship London gallery would be a blow to workers and visitors alike.
Security firm CIS was drafted in to staff the gallery’s recent Rembrandt exhibition — and has been transferred to the gallery’s permanent exhibition since the show closed on January 18.
It is understood that the profiteer firm’s contract was extended, but the gallery has yet to put a contract out to tender for the permanent outsourcing of staff.
A union source close to the gallery — speaking anonymously following threats of disciplinary action to staff who talk to the press — said CIS was now running approximately one-third of the gallery’s rooms.
“They seemed to move seamlessly from the Rembrandt exhibition to other parts of the gallery, to keep their feet under the table,” the source said.
“There’s now a surplus of in-house staff but CIS are advertising again for new staff for the gallery. How are they finding the money for this?”
CIS advertisements have described stewarding the gallery as a “non-seated role” — despite the fact permanent staff are given chairs.
The source said CIS guards transferred elsewhere after the Rembrandt exhibition had been made to stand next to empty chairs in gallery rooms.
A demonstration against privatisation plans last week saw gallery attendants joined by anti-cuts activists, artists and art students.
Speaking exclusively to the Star yesterday, visual artist Ms Swayne said the gallery experience was being “parcelled off and sold to a stranger.”
She added: “These institutions are symbiotic with the art community in London, and a lot of art students and artists work there so they can survive.
“Everywhere is being sold off. Time and again you get private companies going into artistic spaces and brutalising them.
“To have galleries staffed by underpaid, non-unionised workers isn’t good for anyone.”
Strike dates will be announced later today.
National Gallery staff began their five-day strike yesterday against plans to privatise jobs even as managers suspended a senior union rep on the eve of the walkout. Public-sector union PCS said that the plan to switch visitor services to a private company “threatens the reputation of the country’s second most visited major attraction”: here. And here.
FILM director Ken Loach challenged fellow artists yesterday to support striking National Gallery workers as they marched on Downing Street to demand a halt to hated privatisation plans. The cinematic veteran, known for films including Kes and The Wind that Shakes the Barley, visited picket lines yesterday morning and said: “It’s a straight choice — which side are you on?” See here.
PRIVATISATION threatens the future of jobs in Britain’s creative industries, art students marching in solidarity with striking gallery workers warned yesterday: here.
How can they privatise these National Treasures, they belong to the people? It is an incredible collection. Dont let them steal it away.
Leslie
LikeLike
What the elite financiers want is the Rembrandt’s I suggest we sell off all the National art works and close the Tate and National galleries for building apartments thus costing the taxpayer less and the art works can be viewed in the comfort of their own homes on the IT, at of course a small fee, considering the art scene is now just a corporation tax scam, and this will be the out come eventually of what the capitalist structure is going to do, also we do not want the average person to become art educated, it is the rich mans game and is all for a motive of status or snobbery besides its only blobs of colored oxides and cotton, is all just a ego trip.
in any case.
LikeLike
Pingback: Greek election victory, British comment | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: New Greek government stops privatisation | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: May Day in London, report | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: OXI in Greece, no to austerity in Britain | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: French painter Eugene Delacroix exhibited in London | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: Art exhibition for South African flamingos | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: Rembrandt exhibition on film | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: Cambridge Analytica, a British Conservative scandal | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: Italian Cimabue painting sold for much money | Dear Kitty. Some blog