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issue 73

10 March 2011

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'Truth: lies open to all'

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Every fortnight during term-time.

All editorial correspondence to: subtext-editors [at] lancaster.ac.uk.

Please delete as soon as possible after receipt. Back issues and subscription details can be found at http://www.lancs.ac.uk/subtext.

The editors welcome letters, comments, suggestions and opinions from readers. subtext reserves the right to edit submissions.

subtext does not publish material that is submitted anonymously, but is willing to consider without obligation requests for publication with the name withheld.

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CONTENTS: editorial, news in brief, redundancies, council report, senate report, wellbeing at work, university in crisis, David Willetts and the humanities, live at LICA, all classical music explained, letters

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EDITORIAL

Any temptation among academics elsewhere to indulge in schadenfreude at the spectacle of the London School of Economics' embarrassment at, among other things, having accepted substantial funds from the government of Libya should certainly be resisted. Few if any British universities can be wholly sure that similar skeletons might not at some time fall out of their funding cupboards - and for the few which need not worry on that account, the reason is more likely to be lack of opportunity than lack of will. For most, a more appropriate reaction would be 'There but for the grace of God ...'

Because the government (not just the present one, but see the report below on David Willetts' recent speech to the British Academy) is increasingly unwilling to fund universities, and has therefore encouraged them to seek funding from elsewhere, it is no wonder if some of the sources of that funding should turn out to be morally dubious or politically embarrassing. The US model, in which private universities are heavily dependent on support from rich alumni, is one which British universities have been urged to follow - and have tried to do so, with varying degrees of success. The LSE, with 60% of its student body from overseas, has been particularly well placed to secure such support - from Saif Gaddafi among others. Wealthy people in Britain, as Richard Sennett remarked in a piece in 'The Guardian', don't have the same inclination to support their alma maters, having long assumed that this was the responsibility of the state.

In this connection, the tenor of the discussion in the last Senate meeting, reported below, provides modest grounds for encouragement. While the pressure to raise external funds will certainly not diminish, senators do seem to have served notice that the source of those funds will be subject to some critical scrutiny, and that not all sources of income are equally acceptable. This is an example of the kind of critical spirit that Howard Davies in his resignation letter regrets was not more in evidence at the LSE.

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NEWS IN BRIEF

UCU ballots

The results of the UCU ballots on industrial action as a response to the proposed changes in USS and the one in support of the 2010 annual pay claim were announced on 2 March. On a low turnout (attributed by UCU to the shortness of the time allowed for voting), there was a substantial majority in favour of strike action on the proposed changes in USS and a small majority in favour of strike action on pay. In both ballots there were bigger majorities in support of 'action short of a strike'. At the time of writing it looks as if Lancaster UCU members will be asked to come out on one-day strikes on 22 and 24 March. In the meantime, UCU officials are still trying to engage the USS Trustees in further dialogue.

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The REF panels and Lancaster

Congratulations (or commiserations?) to Rachel Cooper (LICA), Kevin Glazebrook, Mike Pidd, Emma Rose, Alison Stone, Malcolm Tight, Sylvia Walby, Ian Walker and Linda Woodhead, all appointed to main or sub-panels for the Research Excellence Framework. Cursory research in the subtext warehouse suggests that the number of Lancaster representatives compares favourably with numbers from the kind of universities with which we like to compare ourselves.

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LICA is launched

LICA's Launch Festival will take place from 29 March - 2 April. Among the events and activities listed on its website, subtext editors were especially intrigued by the Plaza Piece, a 'short mass dance event' to be held in what used to be the piazza, or possibly even the plaza, and is now Lancaster Square. The invitation to participants says that 'it is essential that you are able to move quickly, willing to use your voice in a variety of ways, and available to rehearse continuously' for three hours on the morning of 30 March. We hope that the subtext collective's reaction ('That rules us out, then') will not be generally shared in the university community.

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Beer festival

Another festival, requiring no rehearsal, was held last weekend in the Town Hall. This was the annual 'Beerfest' organised by Lancaster Round Table. subtext investigators attended in a spirit of disinterested research. Over 50 beers from the north west were available on tap, each sponsored by a local business. On the Friday night the event was very well attended. There was plenty of drinking, possibly even of the binge variety, and plenty of good natured sociability. All ages, both sexes, and a fair spread of ethnicities were represented among the drinkers. There were only a few identifiable members of university staff, and even identifiable fewer students - and hardly any drinkers conformed to the real ale stereotype of beards and sandals. subtexters reflected that it is possible in the windy isolation of Bailrigg to forget that Lancaster is a substantial town with, on this evidence, a thriving and active civil society.

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REDUNDANCIES

At a time when every day brings news of large scale redundancies, not only in the public sector, and in the supposedly protected NHS as well as less politically sensitive public services, it would be unrealistic to hope that Lancaster University will somehow be spared.  But it is still useful to consider what redundancy means, how the term is being interpreted, and what can be done to mitigate its effects.

As the University management likes to remind us, redundancies are not new at Lancaster, or in any other university.  When staff on fixed-term contracts, often 'externally' funded, come to the end of the term, or when the funding has been exhausted, they technically become redundant.  (The university management's failure to handle these redundancies correctly was the basis for the finding last year by an employment tribunal, confirmed on appeal, that 60 days' salary should be paid to staff made redundant in this way between March and June 2009.)  For years this kind of routine redundancy happened to research and other staff, often on part-time as well as fixed-term contracts, without much of a fuss being made about it by anyone: these redundancies were foreseen, and the insecurity of employment which led to them was seen as an inherent feature of 'non-tenured' employment in higher education.  Now virtually nobody is 'tenured', and the insecurity long endured and often stoically accepted by fixed-term staff law has spread to groups of staff for whom it is a new experience.

Many - most? - subtext readers will know someone on what used to be called a permanent contract and is now an 'indefinite' one who has been made redundant, or threatened with redundancy,  in the past year. It is therefore in everyone's interest to know how redundancy is defined.  In the HR section of the university's website there is a draft version of a redundancy policy, whose details are still being negotiated between the management and the three campus unions.  It includes a paraphrase of the legal definition of redundancy in the Employment Rights Act of 1996. This says that an employee is dismissed on grounds of redundancy when the employer has ceased, or intends to cease, to carry on the business for which the employee was employed (or to carry it on, but somewhere else), or when the requirements of the business for employees to carry out work of a particular kind have ceased or diminished, or are expected to do so, in the place where they are employed.  (As we are repeatedly told, universities are now businesses, so the language of the Act applies perfectly.)  The test for redundancy under the Act is whether the employer requires fewer (or no) workers to carry out the work, not just whether the work itself has ceased or diminished.

If this sounds quite broadly worded, that is because it is. As a result, it is very difficult to bring a successful challenge to an employer's decision on redundancy 'because a tribunal will not generally interfere in what it considers are "business decisions"' (wording from the Labour Research Department's booklet 'Law at Work 2010', to which this account is indebted). Successful challenges are more likely when the issue is one of procedural fairness, or relates to the adequacy of consultation. That is why everyone employed by the university should be grateful for the careful, detailed work of the union negotiators on the new procedure.

So, realistically, the prospects of successful action on a grand scale - such as the 'greylisting' of universities which had some success in the past - are not bright.  Too many universities are making too many people redundant; redundancy has become part of academic life in a way that would have been almost unthinkable even ten years ago.  (At Lancaster, even in times of serious economic stress and management enthusiasm for cuts, compulsory redundancies of academic staff on indefinite contracts were always - just about - avoided.)  Until now.  But it is still worth questioning whether specific individual redundancies are legally justified.  There have been one or two recent instances of successful appeals against redundancy decisions, when it has been possible to show that the work in question is actually going to continue to be done - but by somebody else.  If, for example, the management plan is that work that would have been done by staff who are made redundant should be done instead by staff employed lower down the salary scale and on fixed-term term contracts, there is, on the face of it, an argument that such redundancies are at least premature. 

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COUNCIL REPORT

The latest meeting of University Council started with a presentation given by Gavin Brown (Director of Undergraduate Studies) on the current and future level of Technology Enhanced Learning and Teaching at Lancaster University. Council was informed that the average student on arrival at Lancaster owns nine digital devices.  These students, who have grown up with this technology, are known as 'Digital Natives'.  The bulk of Council are 'Digital Immigrants' who have been introduced to technology later in life (there may also be a few 'Digital Luddites').  The key developments are to be in information delivery - 'Mobile Integration' - 'any content, any device anywhere.'  The Digital Library - eBooks and 'Google-type' search technology.  Cloud Computing - remotely stored servers accessible from any location.  Most frighteningly for academics, Automated Video Capture - one-touch capture and web publishing of lectures!

The Vice-Chancellor reported on a number of meetings he had attended, including a meeting in 10 Downing Street with the Deputy Prime Minister and the Minister for Higher Education.  The key item on the agenda was the increase in student fees.  Nick Clegg is very keen to give some of the increased income back to students.  The National Scholarship Programme would be one way of doing this.  This would be a one-off payment of £3000 to some students, the money coming equally from central funds and individual universities.  It is not certain yet what criteria would be used to allocate these Studentships.  Other topics included fee waivers and discounts to various classes of students.

The President of LUSU confirmed that it would be discussing, at its General Meeting, the possibility of submitting a vote of no confidence in the President of NUS, Aaron Porter (who announced in late February that he would not be standing for a second term in April, the first NUS president since 1969 not to seek re-election).

The Director of Planning presented a set of data summarising Lancaster's position relative to the rest of the university sector on a wide variety of measures.  These included Staff/Student Ratios (ours is about 14:1, which is lower than the majority of universities).  Other data showed we have a very young student population, with only three universities in the country having a lower proportion of mature (over 21) students.  Lancaster's financial position was very good compared to the bulk of universities but our percentage of total income from research grants and contracts was towards the lower end of the sector.

The Deputy Vice-Chancellor reported on the opportunity to develop a joint campus in China in partnership with Guangdong Foreign Studies University.  An unidentified investor is providing the capital funding and Lancaster would share in the tuition income.  Initially Lancaster degrees would be awarded.

The Director of Finance confirmed that a 1% increase in employer pensions contributions (from 14.1% to 15.1%) effective from April 2011 is to be phased in over a three year period.

The Chief Operating Officer reported that the Sports Centre is now expected to be completed by the end of April 2011.  The University has now submitted a new planning application for a single wind turbine.  As reported in subtext, Katrina Payne has been appointed as the new Director of Marketing and External Linkages; and Christine Parry has been appointed as the University's first Brand Manager.  A (long overdue) programme to update our web presence is now fully established with four work streams; content management, user experience, search and governance.

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SENATE REPORT: 23 February 2011

The agenda for this Senate seemed rather thin, which probably explained the low turnout. In fact, the occasion turned out to be more interesting, and engage more contributors, than previous meetings with meatier agendas, and may turn out to be more influential.

We opened as usual with items of information from the VC and others. First came formal confirmation of yet another international partnership, this time with Siegen University in Germany, received without comment. Next was information on the recently-received HEFCE grant letter. Senators knew what was coming but it was still disheartening to hear the figures: an immediate cut of £1m this academic year because of the overlap of academic and government financial years, an overall cut of 9.5% in 2011/12 (masking much deeper cuts in teaching funding and capital grants). No clarity as yet on future postgraduate teaching funding, which was still the subject of consultation. By 2012/13 research funding for 2* departments will be nil. The grant letter becomes public on 17 March (happy St. Patrick's Day) after which the VC will address a meeting of all staff on what it will mean for Lancaster.

After an update on pay and pensions (proposed changes to the latter yet to be confirmed), the Deputy VC give a summary of the UG applications for next year. These were so far above the national average that there was concern that we may be in danger of over-recruitment. This should be an opportunity, he said, to look at our entry requirements so that all future programmes have a requirement of at least one 'A' grade. However, the picture for PG recruitment was not quite so rosy, and for 2012/13 was likely to be a cause for concern.  

The Academic Registrar then provided an overview of work in progress in the area of learning, teaching, assessment, and the student academic experience. Her paper listed a host of committees and project groups, all beavering away to come up with sure-fire ideas to make us even better than we are at teaching and assessing students. The results of all this effort, she said, would be far-reaching, and affect every student and member of staff. When asked to come up with an example of this she was momentarily at a loss but quickly came back with the confident prediction  that it really would be groundbreaking (whatever 'it' might be). Those who have been concerned by the dismantling of central quality assurance mechanisms and the dismemberment of CELT will no doubt be reassured by all this activity.

Professor McMillan then took us through the upcoming REF Internal Exercise (a sort of mock A Level for our research submission) which will involve all departments and will be taking place over the next two terms. Some senators queried whether the effort and time involved in this exercise would be worthwhile when departments needed to be concentrating on producing the goods for the real REF. And what would be done with the results? What about those departments who turned out to be 'disappointing' in the exercise? Would they be given any additional resources? Professor McMillan thought that the impact on staff time would be 'minimal', and the outcomes of the exercise 'advisory'.

The Deputy VC concluded this part of the agenda with an illuminating update on student financial arrangements and access arrangements - i.e. the new fees regime. The decision on the fees to be charged by Lancaster will be taken by a full meeting of Council in March, rather than by the Finance Committee on its own. This will follow consultation with key stakeholders in the University, including the LUSU President (is this the first fruit of the new UMAG/LUSU coalition, so evident at the recent Court meeting?) (See subtext 71). Professor McKinlay went on to say that the timetable for an access agreement to go with the new fees (required of all HEIs which are increasing their fees) is especially tight. A letter of guidance from OFFA - the Office for Fair Access - is expected in March to which we have to respond by April, and we will know by June if our proposed access arrangements are acceptable. Then we have to ensure that all this information goes into our brochures and promotional literature in time for the prospective 2012/13 cohort to make their decisions. No pressure, then.

Following this unusually informative 'Information' section, we had a proposal from Professor Bradley, the new PVC for international matters, for Senate to approve in principle the establishment of a campus in China in collaboration with Guangdong Foreign Studies University. Land would be provided by the city of Foshan, finance by an as yet unidentified Chinese investor, and the first students would enter in September 2013. The student population was expected to grow to 10,000 within the first ten years. The new university would be managed jointly by Lancaster and Guangdong and fee income would be shared with the investor. The curriculum, teaching styles and assessment would be largely as at Lancaster. It was this last point that raised doubts among a number of senators. It was pointed out that under Chinese law it was the Chinese government that decided on departments, degree programmes and staffing, not the individual university. How could academic freedom and the right of free speech be protected? And what about quality of delivery and assessment - weren't we experiencing difficulties in these areas in some of our other international partnerships? Was it right, queried one senator, for Lancaster to 'get into bed with this nasty government'?  Professor Bradley's stock reply to all these points - that Nottingham has been involved in a similar venture and has not met any of these problems - somehow failed to reassure. Sensing that all was not going well, the VC intervened with a pledge that Senate would be given a further opportunity to discuss this proposal before a final decision was made. Senate voted to support the proposal in principle, though somewhat unenthusiastically.

What was significant about this discussion was that this was the first time that an international partnership proposal was directly challenged on principled academic grounds, rather than on financial or practical grounds. There was real concern about what Lancaster might be getting involved in and what it might do for our reputation. As recent events at the LSE have shown, cosying up to unsavoury regimes can have dire consequences for the reputation of the institution involved.

The business of this Senate concluded with a proposal from the University Secretary to make amendments to Charter and Ordinances to reflect changes in governance that had already been agreed by previous Senates. To Ms Aiken's evident astonishment, these amendments went through without opposition from any of the usual suspects.

There was, however, one more issue that had to be decided. The Senate, minus its student members, sat as the Committee of Senate to deal with one item of business. A proposal was made by the University Secretary, on behalf of an Associated Institution, that an academic qualification awarded to an individual and validated by Lancaster University, be revoked. This was the first time in the history of the University that such a request had been made. The issues involved in this case were many and complex, and the Academic Registrar from the Associated Institution, who was present for the discussion, was subjected to close questioning by a number of senators. When the vote was finally taken, members voted by a majority of one to reject the request for revocation.

This debate, and the earlier discussion on the collaboration with Guangdong, showed Senate at its best - inquiring, challenging, sceptical and, at times, passionate. There's hope yet.

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WELLBEING AT WORK SURVEY

The results of the Wellbeing at Work survey have been available for some time, but along with a sizeable proportion of staff, this subtexter has been suffering from 'overload' and hasn't previously got round to looking at them.  We are told that the response rate of 58% 'is higher than is typical in other organisations' and 'enables generalisation across the University'.  However, in some departments response rates were much lower (PPR - 39%, Accounting and Finance - 32%, English and Creative Writing - 37%), and so this claim to generalisability might be questioned. Overall, the wellbeing of most respondents seems fairly good. Respondents in the Management School and the School of Health and Medicine were particularly happy, those in the Faculty of Arts and Social Science, and the Faculty of Science and Technology and Central Services less so.  The broad presentation of the results by faculty and job type prevents any more fine-grained analysis (for example, reports are circulating that the survey found that staff in Corporate Information Services, part of ISS, were particularly unhappy, but this does not show up in the report).

Bullying is rare. Unsurprisingly, in the present climate, many respondents were concerned about job security. Work-life balance and overload are also of broad concern. In one of the more intriguing parts of the survey, respondents were asked to tick a list of positive emotions that they had experienced at work in the last three months. It turns out that employees at Lancaster lack excitement in their jobs, and Robertson Cooper suggest that this positive emotion might be increased by 'team-building and informal exercises'.  Unsurprisingly the report ends by suggesting that the university should commission more follow-up studies. Given that the report notes that 'it is important to do this using consistent items and factors' one guesses that the proposed future reports would be commissioned from Robertson Cooper (as in the company founded by Cary Cooper, Professor of Organisational Psychology and Health at Lancaster University).

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UNIVERSITY IN CRISIS

This Monday (7 March) saw the sixth and final talk in the student-organised lecture series, The University in Crisis.  Michael Dillon, Professor Emeritus at the Department of Politics, Philosophy and Religion, gave a talk called 'To Tell the Truth ...', explaining that the title was a reference to 'Le courage de la verité', the final lecture series delivered by Michel Foucault at the Collège de France in 1984. 

Professor Dillon talked about truth as a contested 'remainder' within the university - a truth that cannot be reduced to instrumental utility.  The university has never been ideal, he acknowledged, and has never been the only institution in which truth-telling takes place - literature, film, art and poetry are other such sites. But it has nevertheless occupied a unique and interesting place in western history: as well as producing doctors, lawyers, administrators and so on, it has also been a space where the addressing of the truth has been permitted and been fought over.

He went on to discuss how truth-telling practices in the university were being homogenised as it is increasingly submitted to the demands of capital accumulation and administration. This development, Dillon suggested, is part of the wider loss of public spaces in the societies of the North Atlantic Rim, which instead are becoming spaces for spectacle, spin and the regulation of populations. David Cameron's speech to the Conservative Party spring conference, in which he said that the government were 'taking on the enemies of enterprise', was a declaration of war against all truth-telling practices other than those of wealth creation.  This is not simply a cost-saving exercise but a transformatory policy without mandate.  Global capitalism appears now to be self-sufficient; it no longer even seems to need the legitimatory power that once it found in the humanities and social sciences. In such circumstances, telling the truth is needed more than ever.

He called into question the idea that truth-telling can ever be wholly autonomous; while truth is a remainder that cannot be collapsed into power, neither is it ever wholly separate from power, since every politics invokes truth, and every form of truth is a form of politics.  The battles fought over the truth are bloody because so much is at stake, because interrogating truth is 'priceless'.

Professor Dillon used his 35 years of experience in teaching and researching at Lancaster to reflect on the responsibility to be aware of the 'truth effects' of one's own truth-telling practices.  He ended by emphasising three points.  Firstly, concern for the truth can be driven by the recognition of untruths.  Here he cited the examples of Iraq, Afghanistan and Abu Ghraib.  You didn't need to be a Kantian to see a crisis of truth there; but to call these untruths into question is also to call into question the regime in which they arise.  Secondly, he reiterated that truth-telling is always fugitive, interstitial, even within the university (he followed Foucault in holding up Diogenes the Cynic as an exemplary truth-teller). There has never been a golden age in which truth-telling in the university has not been in crisis, and has not needed to be fought for.  Thirdly, whereas Foucault called Diogenes an example of 'fearless speech', Dillon insisted that what should drive the courage to speak the truth is not fear but passion, joy, fun, affection and comradeship.

The 'University in Crisis' has been a highly stimulating series of talks and discussions, one that has responded in real time to the current crisis of the university as an institution, and which reminds us, if such a reminder were needed, of the 'priceless' contribution that a critical, engaged student body can make to the truth practices of a university.  The real test will be to what extent the university community can turn this cumulative diagnosis of our predicament into practical action.

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DAVID WILLETTS AND THE HUMANITIES

David Willetts' speech (http://bis.gov.uk/news/speeches/david-willetts-arts-humanities-social-sciences) at the British Academy on 1st March represented one of the first times that the government has actually stated its views on the arts, humanities and social sciences (hereinafter 'the humanities'). Willetts set the scene by stating that '[t]his is clearly the right place and the right occasion to tackle a worry in the academic community - and beyond - that the Coalition's policies on universities and on research are a threat to the arts, humanities and social sciences'. Quoting Simon Schama's and Stefan Collini's critiques of the government's proposals, Willetts claimed that what troubled him was that '...such distinguished thinkers could entertain' these views that were simply not true. He went on to try to counter 'genuine misunderstanding[s] of our policies on funding, teaching and research' through an explanation of how the withdrawal of the HEFCE teaching grant from the humanities did not put them at any serious disadvantage compared with other subjects in terms of the percentage cut. That is, since they were receiving less money in the first place the cuts were not at all that drastic, and the shortfall could easily be made up through increased tuition fees - to £6,000, according to Willetts, an increase of a mere £2,700 or so on present levels. So, nothing to worry about.

Willetts said he saw no reason why student demand for humanities courses should decline: while 'employability' was an important consideration for students in choosing what degrees to apply for, the humanities need not worry, provided they were 'well taught in universities which attach high value to the quality of the student experience'. On research, Willetts said that the government had ring-fenced a budget of £4.6 billion for 'science and research', which he claimed showed a continuing 'commitment to research, even in tough times' - and the ring-fence did not apply solely to the 'hard' sciences. On the REF, Willetts said that he had changed his mind about the value of assessing 'impact', as a result of the success of the pilot exercises; the inclusion of impact (at 20% of the overall assessment) would reward academics who 'spend part of their career outside universities - in say, a cultural institution' (with the possible implication that academics who don't can by definition have no or minimal impact).

In the penultimate part of his speech Willetts turned to 'some deeper questions about [the humanities'] place in our universities'. After reassuring his audience that 'your disciplines are fundamentally worthwhile in and of themselves', he went on to argue that the 'public value' of the humanities 'come[s] across most clearly when we see how the natural and medical sciences find themselves needing to draw on insights for arts, humanities and social sciences' - that is, their status is essentially a subordinate one. His examples were aviation security, which relies not just on state-of-the-art sensors but on an understanding of human behaviour, and of the need for medical scientists who have developed a drug for the developing world to understand why local cultures fear Western drugs.

Some may see a contradiction between Willetts' words (reassuring in intent if not in effect) and the government's decision on teaching funding for these subjects. Sally Hunt, the UCU general secretary, commented: 'I am absolutely amazed that the minister had the audacity to tell the British Academy that, although the government had removed the entire arts and humanities teaching budget, the subjects were still valued by the government.'

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LIVE AT LICA: CONVERSATIONS WITH THE COLLECTION

Lancaster University is fortunate in possessing a fine art collection: at present LICA is in the middle of a three year programme to raise the impact of its works of art.  'Conversations with the Collection' has this year invited staff from the University to choose an object from the Collection and explain how their chosen artwork links in with their lives, pairing it with items of their own which enhance the connection.

Some art is self-explanatory, some less so.  Even when the artist's inspiration and intentions seem obvious in the finished work, there may be layers of meaning which others will not penetrate and are, perhaps, not expected to penetrate.  Over some works of art there is no agreed interpretation.  Perhaps the artist did not intend the work to be understood by others: did not care whether it was or not.

This is not an excuse for gallery-goers to utter the despised words 'I may not know much about art, but I know what I like.'  It is a plea for people to be able to make their own connections with a work of art, regardless of what the artist might have meant, without feeling self-conscious or being labelled a philistine.  Art which allows us to do this is perhaps Good Art.

The exhibition at the Peter Scott Gallery which ran until 19 February has allowed people from all backgrounds to make connections with artworks from the University's splendid collection.  This has brought forth some pairings with clear links, such as Peter Brook's 'Kendal' with exploring in the Lake District, Camille Bilaire's 'The Band' with the Jack Hylton Archive, and Albert Irvin's 'Thames' with artwork in a Spanish gallery.  Other choices are likely to make the viewer look at least twice at the original and the connecting piece  -  John Bailey's 'Apotheosis' with the shapes, colours and richness of wooden musical instruments, prompting memories of intimate experiences of music; Sheouak's 'Sea Birds on Rocks' prompting the creation of yet another bird image, this time as a newspaper cutout, linking the selector's preference for simple images and bold colours with his liking for newspaper as a material which can be used and reused; William Dafter's 'Play Centre', with its naive depictions of young people's pastimes in a street of bricked-up houses emphasising the role of a key, whether actual or symbolic in opening up and securing doorways.  Some of the choices were linked directly to the selector's job or role in life, others captured a moment or a memory.  For all the people making the connections in this exhibition this is Good Art.

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'ALL CLASSICAL MUSIC EXPLAINED'

Last week's concert in the Lancaster International Concert Series, entitled 'All Classical Music Explained', sounded as if it would be right in line with the rest of the series; but in fact it broke new ground by presenting a stand-up comedian on the Great Hall stage.  The performer, Rainer Hersch, is an accomplished pianist as he demonstrated; and his CV records that he has conducted or appeared with the Philharmonia and St Petersburg Philharmonic orchestras, amongst others.  Much more important for a stand-up performer, his act was original and highly entertaining.

Two facts make him particularly interesting as a performer at the Lancaster concerts: he is a graduate in economics, not music, and his economics degree was from Lancaster University.  Contrary to the reputation of economists, or at any rate of economics, Hirsch was far from dismal: he kept the audience entertained throughout both halves of the evening.  The inclusion of his performance in the concert series was a success.

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LETTERS

Dear subtext,

Some top-of-the-head triptych slogans, just to pass an idle ten minutes:

   Lead. Haver. Follow. (Finance Committee)

   Select. Wait. Expire. (The Venue)

   Neglect. Renovate. Neglect. (Estates)

   Plunge. Struggle. Sink. (Swimming pool ... no, on second thoughts, Institute of Advanced Studies)

Keep up all the good work!

John Foster, PPR

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The editorial collective of subtext currently consists (in alphabetical order) of: Rachel Cooper (PPR), George Green, Gavin Hyman, David Smith, Bronislaw Szerszynski and Martin Widden.

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