Online voting opens for Gaelic short films

FilmG, MG ALBA’s Gaelic online media shorts competition, has Continue reading

Russell promoted to Education in Scottish Government reshuffle

In the second change to the Scottish Government’s front bench Continue reading

FilmG sets up £10k Development Fund

Film G Dev Fund - Uisdean Murray with Carole Sheridan, Head of Talent at Scottish Screen and actor David WalkerFilmG, aiming to build a strong talent base in the Scottish Highlands in making short Gaelic language films, has set up a development fund of £10,000.

This is targeted on helping the winners of this year’s FilmG 2009 Entertainment and Best Director categories to try to emulate the international success of last year’s winner, Siubhlachan (The Traveller).

Since its win at the 2008 awards ceremony,  Siubhlachan has been screened at film festivals in Switzerland, South Korea and Canada. Director Ùisdean Murray (pictured, centre, above with Carole Sheridan, Head of Talent at Scottish Screen and actor David Walker) has also developed a 30 minute pilot episode for the Gaelic Channel, BBC ALBA.

There are 5 weeks to go tothe closing date for entries of 3-5 mimute Gaelic shorts in FilmG 2009.

This year’s competition has a special prize of £2,500 for Best Entertainment short -  music, sport, a quiz show, chat show, a live performance or even a stand-up act.

FilmG is open to anyone aged 18 or over and has a separate category for 12-17 year olds.  Full competition details and to view last year’s films for inspiration, are at the FimG website.

Big boost for Creative Scotland in first reshuffle in Scottish Government

Michael Russell Culture MinisterAlex Salmond today removed three Government Ministers, saying: ‘There have been no failures in the ministerial team, but I have asked them to make way to give colleagues an opportunity to show what they can contribute’.

Giving way are Culture Minister Linda Fabiani, Schools Minister Maureen Watt and Housing and Sports Minister Stewart Maxwell.

Michael Russell, the current Environment Minister moves to take over Culture from Linda Fabiani who was regularly found wanting in her role. This has been most keenly felt in the mess that has been made of the Scottish Government’s forward-looking strategic initiative to combine the current Scottish Screen and Scottish Arts Council into a unitary bodty, Creative Scotland.

The two bodies have, under cover of compliance, had room to scrap like the proverbial ferrets in a sack and manoevre incessantly to preserve their vested interests against the common interest. A minister with credibility in the role and the personal authority to carry it, as Michael Russell possesses on both counts, could have achieved the transition cleanly. Mr Russell now inherits a lumpen morass and will have some serious stable cleaning to do.

The Minister will also have work to do in refreshing the perception of arts and culture today by those steering its development. For Argyll noted that, in the recent intelligent structuring announced by Ewan Brown – appointed as Chair of Creative Scotland in November 2008 – there was an omission of some concern.

The published structural division of cultural sectors showed no evidence of a real grasp of the role the Internet is playing and will develop in creativity and in the relationship between the creator and the audience. This is not simply a commercial relationship. It is an interactive relationship – with all that this implies for the creative process and the fluidity of the ‘product’ – and it is technologically a highly skilled area for development. Scotland is well placed to set out to take the lead in this field.

In this promotion Michael Russell will work directly under the First Minister’s with the formal title of Minister for Europe, External Affairs & Culture. His new responsibilities include: Europe, external affairs, culture and the arts, architecture, built heritage, Historic Scotland and lottery funding, major events strategy, Gaelic. This brief is understood to cover the Independence Referendum to come in 2010.

Mr Russell’s move is accompanied by new additions to Government – backbenchers Alex Neil, Keith Brown and Roseanna Cunningham.

  • Roseanna Cunningham takes over from Michael Russell as Environment Minister under Cabinet Secretary Richard Lochhead
  • Alex Neil, who fought to the last to save the Bank of Scotland, takes up a revised post as Minister for Housing and Communities under  Cabinet Secretary Ncola Sturgeon
  • Keith Brown becomes Minister for Schools and Skills under Cabinet Secretary Fiona Hyslop

Another change in the reshuffle is the logical addition of Sport to the existing portfolio of responsibilities held by Public Health Minister, Shona Robison.

The First Minister says: : ‘The SNP group is extremely fortunate in having such a strong team of backbenchers and the purpose of the reshuffle is to give talented individuals such as Alex Neil, Roseanna Cunningham and Keith Brown the opportunity to make their contribution to government and the delivery of vital public services for the Scottish people’.

The overall picture of this reshuffle demonstrates the maturity and internal cohesion of the Scottish Government. The First Minister has promoted Michael Russell – one of the candidate’s who stood against him in the election for party leader following the resignation of John Swinney. He has brought in to Government Roseanna Cunningham, another such candidate. He has also brought in Alex Neil, who withdrew his own candidacy for the leadership after Alex Salmond publicly blamed him for having consistently sabotaged John Swinney’s authority..

This is a confident reshuffle to the credit of all concerned and one determined to maximise the impact of the spectrum of ability available.

The photograph above of Michael Russell outside the Scottish Parliament at Holyrood is issued by the Scottish Government and is reproduced here under the Creative Commons licence.

70 Scottish organisations from Shetland down form cultural alliance to get action on Creative Scotland

Around seventy Scottish cultural organisations have formed an alliance to deal jointly with the Scottish Governemnt and the Creative Scotland ‘transition team’.

The transition team – which appears weak and mired in the mindset and language of the bureaucrat, has spent several hundred thousand pounds of public money on hiring consultants. It seems lost in transition rather than engaged in the action of moving the business forwards. It has regularly ‘collated and circulated feedback’ to all attending meetings – which defence rather proves the point.

Culture Minister Linda Fabiani’s management of her brief has not seen her emerge as a notably capable minister. Crucially she produced an inadequate bill which failed to get though the Scottish Parliament in June of this year, stalling the entire process.

The response to this was to establish Creative Scotand as a limited company and to plan the inclusion of it funding within Finance Secretary John Swinney’s Public Services Reform Bill

The new alliance’s member organisations say that they are not prepared any longer to be ‘passive recipients of information and consultation’. They want to engage positively with the process of the establishment of Creative Scotland, effectively a merger of the Scottish Arts Council and Scottish Screen.

Donald Smith, Director of the Scottish Storytelling Centre says that the alliance is positively taking the initiative: ‘It is not a girning session. It is not a revolt. It is saing “Let’s get together and try and get this thing sorted” ‘. He points out that none of the parties involved can afford  another year like this one – where issues around Craeative Scotland’s budget, location and funding criteria are still to be resolved.

The alliance will meet for the first time in Edinburgh on 10th December. It expects to be taken seriously because its purpose is collectively serious. Something needs to get this embarrassment brought to a positive conclusion and neither the Minister nor the ‘transition team’ under Director Anne Bonnar, seem able to do so.

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