A new Dark Age for Dutch Culture

The letter ‘Meer dan kwaliteit’ (‘More than Quality’) by the State Secretary 
for Culture, Halbe Zijlstra (VVD, People's Party for Freedom and Democracy) 
arrived in the electronic mailboxes of Dutch art and cultural institutes on 
Friday, 10 June 2011. It stated that €200 million would be brutally slashed 
from the arts and culture budget, starting as early as 1 January 2013. 
Apparently, Zijlstra, who admits that he lacks any understanding of art and 
culture, has blatantly ignored all the recommendations made to him on this 
subject, including those from the Arts Council (the government’s official 
advisory body). Subsidies for a limited number of ‘world-class institutes’ such 
as the Nederlandse Opera, which already receive a substantial portion of the 
existing budget, will be maintained. As far as Zijlstra is concerned, most of 
the other institutes can disappear – they will no longer be able to rely on 
structural support from the government. This not only applies to all the 
production houses for theatres, half of the orchestras, the Muziekcentrum 
Nederland (formed in a recent merger), the Foundation Art and Public Domain 
(SKOR), renowned exhibition spaces and research facilities for visual art such 
as De Appel, but also to the entirely new media sector with its internationally 
acclaimed institutes such as V2_, the Netherlands Media Art Institute (NIMk), 
Mediamatic, WORM, the Waag Society and STEIM, as well as to the Rijksakademie, 
de Ateliers and the Jan van Eyck Academy. Support for critical-analytical 
journals such as Open and Metropolis M, and for the literary magazines, 
including De Gids, will be discontinued. Furthermore, the budget that will be 
allocated to project subsidies, i.e., for individual artists, one-off projects 
and festivals, will be more than halved. Only ‘international world-class 
talent’ and art that has already proven itself will remain.

This is not merely the austerity plan that was anticipated from a centre-right 
minority cabinet that is at the beck and call of the populist PVV (Party for 
Freedom): it is a direct attack on art, an attack on anything that does not fit 
into a market economy, on anything that refuses to, or cannot be, adapted to a 
populist-tinted, neo-liberal mindset. It marks the end of a cultural sector 
that was birthed with a great deal of effort and difficulty. His letter does 
include a few obligatory sentences that could fool a hasty reader into thinking 
that there actually is a coherent vision behind this policy, but each 
substantive phrase is contradicted by the proposed regulations. The letter 
brims with resentment towards innovative and investigative art, towards 
groundbreaking art, art that cannot survive if it is only supported by the 
market. The letter expresses contempt for artists’ works, contempt for the 
wealth of experiences that art can provide, and contempt for people who enjoy 
it. The contributions that art makes to society and innovation have been 
completely ignored. The idea that sustaining art and culture is in the public 
interest is negated; in fact, the notion of the public interest is ignored 
altogether. The right for works to exist is reserved only for those works that 
‘the market’ – whatever that might be – or wealthy patrons will support. 
Zijlstra’s letter is nothing more than a dictatorial ruling. We are being 
spurred to our downfall by populist neo-liberalist policies.

There are absolutely no policy reasons for the €200 million of cutbacks. This 
deal was struck with the PVV in exchange for its support in parliament of the 
minority cabinet. The intention is to inflict irreparable damage on an entire 
profession. Zijlstra is striving to decimate and eliminate this professional 
group’s creative, innovative and critical potential. Not a single member of his 
own party (VVD), or anyone from its coalition partner, the CDA (Christian 
Democratic Party) has opposed him. As far as they are concerned, traditional 
art is merely the superfluous ornamentation of a society. Contemporary art is 
labelled as alienating, and even, although no one actually says it out loud, as 
‘degenerate art’. 

Prioritising world-class talent implies that the State Secretary makes a 
distinction between ‘art that has already proven itself’ and all other art. 
This is illogical and downright ignorant. Art is in a state of constant change, 
it reflects on a society and the time in which we live, it is frequently at 
odds with accepted norms and values, and reveals new and unexpected 
perspectives. Zijlstra is of the opinion that there is only room for art from 
the distant past, for cultural heritage such as centuries-old ballet, opera, 
classical music and visual art. But classical art only has meaning in the 
context of new art, they enhance each other and validate each other’s existence.

This means that from 1 January 2013 no money and thus no time will be made 
available to create unique or ambitious artworks, for fundamental research, for 
developing complex technological works, for art that critically examines our 
complicated world, for artworks that enrich society and people in sometimes 
unparalleled ways. What remains is ‘music for the millions’; all the rest will 
be amateur art. Artists who are driven by their craft will have to create their 
art in their spare time. Cultural vitality will disappear, as will the economic 
vitality that is driven by art. We can forget about innovation and 
international allure entirely.

Of course, the situation as it stands at the moment can and should be 
criticised. For a long time many of those who are active in the sector have 
been dissatisfied with the ways in which funds are allocated. But Zijlstra’s 
plan has brought an abrupt end to this discussion, as well as to the discussion 
about how funds can best be used to stimulate culture. He has opted for the 
simplest solution: get rid of it all.

Reactions to the proposals have been manifold, and they have naturally provoked 
a rebellion by artists and the employees at the affected institutes. It has 
also inflamed a furious backlash from private funding organisations, wealthy 
right-wing culture aficionados and patrons – after all, Zijlstra’s intention is 
that they should fund the arts sector. During the parliamentary hearings they 
repeatedly reminded Zijlstra that the Netherlands is a country where private 
sponsorship of the arts has always been in short supply, and that there are 
almost no financial incentives for patrons. They stated resolutely that they 
feel betrayed, burdened with the impossible task of saving art, and declared in 
no uncertain terms that the government has revealed itself to be an 
untrustworthy partner. In their opinion, the proposed policy is offensive, 
irresponsible and counter-productive. Rick van der Ploeg, a leading economist, 
a former State Secretary of Culture and a proponent of professionalising the 
economic aspects of art, wrote in the NRC (national newspaper) that it is “a 
measure of their brazen brutality that this cabinet wants to be remembered for 
its irreversible butchering of a closely-knit, high-quality and multi-faceted 
network of cultural opportunities in our country,” and continued, “The policy 
being proposed lacks the standards of quality which are necessary in a 
democratic, constitutional society.” This sentence is worth reading twice.

It should be a cause of concern for everyone that a minority cabinet with the 
feeble support of a parliamentary majority of only one seat would take such 
draconian and drastic measures without paying any heed to the other half, which 
has only one seat less than the ruling coalition. Zijlstra shamelessly admits 
that the proposals have no basis in fact, and display a total lack of sympathy 
for the field. This undemocratic attitude only compounds the suspicions about 
this government’s much more drastic proposals for cutbacks in health care, 
education and pension schemes, and it underscores the steps they are (not) 
taking to discipline the financial sector.

Despite all the government’s hollow arguments, nobody has actually explained 
why these cultural cutbacks are necessary. All those who were asked to make 
recommendations about the plan advised against it in the strongest possible 
terms, and all of the unsolicited recommendations were negative too. There is 
unanimous agreement that the plans will have disastrous consequences. A 
staggering number of institutes will have to be closed and there will be very 
little funding for artists. There will be a wide-scale destruction of capital, 
costs will not be offset by the profits, and the Netherlands will be downgraded 
to a cultural backwater. It is clear what the implications of this will be for 
the cultural and economic business climate: international companies or 
professionals working in the knowledge industry will no longer consider basing 
themselves in the cultural wasteland that the Netherlands will become.

The government has disdainfully cast aside all the recommendations and is 
bulldozing ahead with its plans. The only possible conclusion that can be drawn 
is that they are intent on the wide-scale eradication of art and culture in the 
Netherlands. Halving the project subsidies – in an arts budget that was one of 
the lowest in Europe, even before the cutbacks – means that art in the 
Netherlands will cease to exist in its current form and diversity. After 600 
years of growth and progress that started in the Renaissance, the Netherlands 
will once again find itself in a Dark Age. 



Sonic Acts 

Arie Altena, Lucas van der Velden, Martijn van Boven, Annette Wolfsberger, 
Nicky Assmann, Femke Herregraven, Gideon Kiers



WHAT CAN YOU DO?

Sign the petitions!

http://www.schadekaart.nl/page/1946/nl

http://www.schadekaart.nl/

http://www.dezaaknu.nl



Join in!

Boijmans Bezet (Boijmans Occupied)

26 June, 11:00 - 17:00 hrs

Museum Boijmans van Beuningen, Rotterdam

www.schuileninhetrijks.nl



Take part in the March of Civilization on 26 & 27 June from Rotterdam to The 
Hague

http://www.marsderbeschaving.nl



















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