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Holyrood's all art with £500,000 collection on display

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Published Date: 02 January 2009
SCOTTISH Parliament bosses have built up an art collection valued at more than £500,000.
An inventory of the parliament's assets lists 52 works of art with values ranging from just over £1000 to more than £30,000.

Ten are listed as "donated" but most have been bought by the parliament over the years.

And the parliament's art adviso
ry group is now pressing for a dedicated budget to buy or commission more paintings, photographs and sculptures.

But Independent Lothians MSP Margo MacDonald was surprised at how much had been spent on art.

"It's difficult to see where it has gone," she said. "Although there are some nice hangings, there are others where you feel someone maybe left them there until they could think of something to do with them and just forgot.

"However, I'm quite willing to accept beauty is in the eye of the beholder."

But Ms MacDonald said rather than buy more art, the parliament should explore the possibility of displaying paintings and other pieces currently kept in storage by galleries.

She said: "There is lots of art all over the place that we don't see and I would like to see it.

"That would give a nice mix in the parliament. We've got some modern artists. Why not use some of the stuff that's in storage and rotate it?"

The inventory of assets does not identify any of the individual works of art with their value, apart from the parliament's mace which is shown as the most valuable item at £37,982.

Next most valuable are two works of art at £29,280.

SNP Lothians MSP Ian McKee, who is a member of the Holyrood art advisory group, defended the parliament's investment in works of art.

He said: "I don't think £500,000 over ten years is excessive.

"All acquisitions are looked at very carefully, not just for quality, but for relevance."

And he said he hoped the parliament's corporate body would agree a budget for acquisitions.

At the moment any plan to buy new art has to go to the corporate body.

But Dr McKee argued if the art group had its own budget it could get a better deal at auctions.

He said: "If you wanted a painting by a contemporary Scottish artist and one was coming up in a sale you might get it cheaper than if you come along and say, 'we're from the Scottish Parliament and we'd like you to do a piece of work for us'."

• The parliament has just launched specialist tours of the building's artworks. The hour-long tour is only available on Monday, Friday and Saturday afternoons for groups of 15-20. It costs the same as the normal guided tour – £5.85 full price, £3.50 concessions.





The full article contains 470 words and appears in Edinburgh Evening News newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 02 January 2009 10:28 AM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

brandy al,

embra 02/01/2009 13:40:06
Why not sell of the art collection and pay for all the work getting done to the building,and give tax payers a break.
2

ikonoclast,

02/01/2009 14:01:35
Philistine! Why not sell off the Evening News website and allow all of its timewasting cyber-loafing commenters to do some work for a change? That would boost the economy.
3

Mallory,

Edinburgh 02/01/2009 14:14:03
Who are the SCOTTISH Parliament bosses? I thought the place was run by ELECTED politicians?

Which of them have been dipping their mitts into OUR poclets to acquire works of art when cash is so tight?
4

ikonoclast,

02/01/2009 14:33:04
3, when you consider how much public money was squandered on building the Scottish Parliament and its unsustainably high running costs, it's a wonder they only spent a measly half million on some pictures to hang in it. Displaying the heads of the perpetrators on spikes outside would have been much more fitting.
5

Eve,

Scotland 02/01/2009 16:56:39
#3 Mallory: It does acaly sounds like some other than the people of Scotland diced what happens in the building and NOT the MSP that we ellected.


May be it's Broon et al! That decide these daft things. When I say daft things i kind of talking about the design of the building.
6

brandy al,

embra 02/01/2009 16:59:47
2
This will indeed include you.
7

fair scunnered,

edinburgh 02/01/2009 22:50:54
art snobs again,kids running about edinburgh needing help,but no spend it on art for the culture vultures
lord haw haw foulkes will defend his 10,000 quid pic,it would have been cheaper giving him a mirror
or make him pay for it
8

COLINTON.MAINS,

Oakville Ontario 03/01/2009 03:16:48
WHAT.A.BLOODY.EYESORE.IT.HAS.TO.BE.ONE.OFF.THE.UGLIEST.BUILDINGS.IN.THE.WORLD

 

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