º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Retail & Consumeropinion

Patronage doesn't have to hit artistic freedom

Being reliant on grants and handouts brings with it the danger of dilution or distortion of expression.

Who pulls the strings when creative expression is only possible through patronage?

There has been an uneasy relationship between artistic expression and money since Roman times.

The discomfort felt by writers and artists at having their endeavours presided over by patrons is best summed up in Catullus 49.

It’s a sarcastic little poem on patronage and the conventions of ‘liberalitas’ (the giving and receiving of gifts) that deftly mocks Cicero, one of the greatest orators of the day.

O most learned of the descendants of Romulus,
as many there are and as many as there were, Marcus Tullius,
or as many as there will be later in years,
Catullus gives you great thanks,
the worst of all poets,
by as much the worst poet of all,
as you the best lawyer/patron of all.


The content is meaningless, the verse packed with empty superlatives.

And that was Catullus’s point.

Art beholden to patronage loses its way. Much of the same disquiet is felt in arts circles today.

The Roman system may have been replaced by policymakers, objectives and tick boxes but the constraints can be the same.