Plus Tate Research Shows Role of Visuals Arts in Regeneration
/PHOTO BY CARL MILNER ON FLICKR (CC BY 2.0)
The place of the contemporary visual arts in British society has been transformed over the last twenty years.
The Plus Tate network, bringing eighteen cultural institutions together with Tate, provides a snapshot of this dynamic creative ecology. New research, Plus Tate: Connecting Art with People with Places, reveals the huge regenerative and economic benefits of this group of organisations. The success of Plus Tate has led to plans to expand the network in 2015.
Together the Plus Tate partners, excluding Tate sites
- attract 3.5 million visits annually;
- employ around 500 staff;
- have an annual turnover of around £33million.
The wider public benefit does not just stop at the gallery door. In addition to extensive exhibition and learning programmes around international contemporary art, each institution is deeply committed to working with their local community attracting new and diverse audiences to art. Their onward supply chains generate substantial economic benefit.
Nicholas Serota, Director of Tate, said: “The impact across communities through the imaginative work of these dynamic visual arts organisations has been transformational. Their ongoing success, however, depends on continuing strategic investment. We must make sure we nurture a creative asset that is admired across the world.”
To view Plus Tate: Connecting Art with People with Places visit www.tate.org.uk