Read online now – Not If But When: Culture Beyond Oil

Now available to read online – click on the Issuu link above, or you can download the publication as a pdf here.

For hard copies by post visit this page for a range of payment options or you can purchase it from the Live Art Development Agency online shop here.

December 2011: Art collective Liberate Tate, arts and research organisation Platform and activist group Art Not Oil release a new publication, ‘Not if but when: Culture Beyond Oil’, on oil sponsorship of the arts.

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Protest Exposes Shell’s Grim Record on Human Rights

Last night Shell came face to face with its grim record on human rights in Nigeria at a corporate event for London’s bright young entrepreneurs. Protesters in haunting costumes from London Rising Tide stormed the Shell Live Wire event, unfurling a large banner and distributing leaflets to event attendees.

 

 

 

 

Watch the video by you and i films here:

The protest coincides with the 16th anniversary of the execution of writer and activist Ken Saro-Wiwa and eight other Ogoni activists for their campaign against the environmental and social devastation caused by Shell and the Nigerian military regime. Continue reading

Shell sponsors oil clean up competition

I challenge anyone to find a more cynical example of corporate sponsorship than this one.

(Thanks to @Adammaanit in Brighton and @MsVanessaMurray in Australia for bringing it to our attention).

In the same week that Shell was condemned by the UN for its devastating oil spills in Ogoni, and admitted liability for 2 massive spills in Bodo village in the Niger Delta, the company announced that its sponsorship of an oil spill clean up competition in the US:

Shell has announced that it is a supporting partner of the Wendy Schmidt Oil Cleanup X Challenge, a global competition to develop the most effective oil spill cleanup equipment.

10 teams from Northern Europe and the United States will compete for prize money, with Shell’s Peter Velez, global emergency response manager, judging the scores.

The team with the highest oil recovery rate and highest oil recovery efficiency will get $1m first prize; second place will get $300k and third place $100k.

 

So while the Ogoni people continue drink water contaminated with hydrocarbons 1,000 times higher than the legal limit, and have their land and fisheries turned into toxic dump, they can at least rest in the knowledge that Shell cares far more about its image than it does about their suffering.

If you feel it, tweet it:

“Shame on @Shell for decades of doing nothing to clean Ogoni oil spills.”

 

Coming soon – the ‘Tate a Tate’ audio tour

Earlier this year, working alongside Liberate Tate and Art Not Oil, we made a call out to commission a sound artist to create an ‘alternate Tate audio tour’ – a work of site-specific sound art that would be themed around the issue of BP sponsorship of Tate. We were overwhelmed with almost 40 responses, and in the final shortlist, the quality of the ideas was so high, that we ended up choosing three of them instead of just one. The idea now is that the tour won’t be restricted to just one gallery space – the three pieces will correspond to Tate Modern, Tate Britain and the riverboat journey in between the two of them.

The artists that are working on the different pieces are:

Ansuman Biswas (Tate Britain)
• Phil England and Jim Welton (Tate Modern)
Isa SuarezMark McGowan and Mae Martin (Tate riverboat)

The tour is going to be launched in Autumn. We don’t want to give away too much about the content, but all three pieces are shaping up to be very distinctive, and we’re hoping that this unsanctioned sound installation inside Tate galleries will provide visitors with a new experience of the presence of BP within those spaces. Now is a good time to once again thank the many people who contributed to our crowd-funding drive that has made this project possible – it’s as much about the vote of confidence in the aims of the project as it is about the money.

This work comes at a time when BP is ramping up the promotion of its sponsorship activities in the run-up to the Olympics. Its first major TV ad campaign (see below) focused almost exclusively on its cultural and sports sponsorship and said pretty much nothing at all about its primary product. In the adverts sportspeople are seen in museums and in one case a runner is filmed on a pristine beach. BP’s sponsorship of arts institutions like Tate is clearly not an act of philanthropy, it’s a very cheap piece of PR to detract attention away from the devastating impacts its causing around the world.

For those who may have missed it, don’t forget to check out the amazing video of Reverend Billy and the Church of Earthalujah performing an exorcism of BP from Tate Modern Turbine Hall. We knew it would be entertaining, but I think everyone was surprised by how it was also very moving and powerful.

Shell sponsorship and censorship at Southbank Centre?

On 29th June, the Arts Council England finally announced its new “Catalyst Arts” philanthropy programme, aimed at pushing arts organisations towards a US-style corporate and private philanthropy culture. It’s ironic that 3 days later, PLATFORM had a close encounter with censorship from a major arts venue, the Shell-sponsored Southbank Centre, London.

As part of the London Literature Festival, PLATFORM was invited to present our forthcoming book “The Oil Road” (by Mika Minio and James Marriott), alongside writer Neal Ascherson and moderator Gareth Evans on 3rd July. The Oil Road is a travelogue and analysis of how oil travels from the Caspian to Europe. It focuses on human rights and environmental impacts of one particular pipeline, chiefly backed by oil company BP.

We had emailed with the SBC events manager in advance about bringing materials to put out on a table for the audience’s interest, to which she agreed.

On arrival half an hour before the event, the events manager stated she needed to check with the marketing manager about our supporting literature and that this is standard practice. It was the Duty Manager who explained that material could not be put out which could be seen to be inciting action or being overtly critical of Shell. (This is not a direct quote but paraphrase.)

Our materials – which as it happens were mostly focused on BP and RBS – were looked at cursorily, and all were “passed” after questions such as “is there anything on Shell in this?”.

This was a clear example of the dangers to freedom of expression which are only set to increase under a push towards corporate philanthropy, unless bold moves are made to stand firm on ethics and censorship.

It’s also an example of massive internal contradictions within an organisation. SBC staff attempted to mute discussion on important environmental issues pertaining to Shell, because of risk of offence to a major sponsor. Yet other staff were happy to programme an event that was detailing similar abuses of power by BP.

This was not the first time we have experienced trouble and confused messages from SBC over Shell, when we have been an agreed part of their programme:

- During the Freedom and Culture Festival, on 10 November 2007, SBC staff presented sudden strong objections to the temporary placement of the Living Memorial to Ken Saro-Wiwa on Queen Elizabeth Walk, which had been carefully planned and agreed. SBC was part of the original Remember Saro-Wiwa Coalition (run by PLATFORM) and had previously programmed a major event on this, which was heavily critical of Shell, featuring Wole Soyinka, Lemn Sissay, Alice Oswald and others.

- During LIFT’s “A Parliament for Climate Change”, held at SBC on 6 July 2008, LIFT staff were put under pressure over an event PLATFORM was running that debated the ethics of Shell’s sponsorship of SBC in light of abuses in Nigeria and climate change.

Last week, in a letter to SBC’s Artistic Director Jude Kelly we challenged SBC on the censorship issue, and demanded to know what their policy was with regard to programming artists who may be critical of their sponsors. We also pointed out that Jude was the keynote speaker two days after our event, at an Index on Censorship event at Free Word (on 5th July). Her support for the crucial work of Index on Censorship seemed a massive contradiction with what we experienced at the weekend, and on previous occasions.

Jude Kelly phoned us later the same day, “to put something right that was clearly wrong”. And backed up the conversation with an email:

“…We have no policy at all that instructs staff to avoid criticism of sponsors. We do have a policy that says 3rd party advertising is by discretion -ie rival concerts…etc. But that’s not related to sponsors at all. However — i can promise you we would not create the programme of debate, polemic and inquiry around controversial and contested subjects if we separately wished to censor criticism. Nevertheless, we are to blame for not giving staff a clear guide that supports them understand the apparent contradictions that can seem to arise in a world were sponsorship and free speech live side by side. If there was confusing action that is our fault not theirs…”

One question we will be pursuing with SBC arises about written and unwritten policies. A culture can be fostered where tacit understanding is all that is needed. It can be in interest of the big arts institutions to let internal self-censorship operate when it comes to sponsorship (or any other hot political issue). Senior management can say that there is no written policy – which may be true – while staff in the Marketing or Corporate Relations department may be delivering other instructions verbally, or in informal written exchanges.

There are many precedents for senior management being seen to “keep their hands clean”, while staff in other parts of the hierarchy are handling the real agenda. Do SBC staff in Marketing and Corporate Relations agree with the position as described by the Artistic Director? The Duty Manager was absolutely clear in his message. He had been instructed.

Finally, this incident revolving around censorship does not escape from the fact that SBC takes money from the fossil fuel industry, thus endorsing climate change, rather than endorsing activity which moves us away from it. This relationship polishes the image of the oil industry, and, in the words of a recent Arts & Business report, illustrates “how the arts render authenticity to business”. The new arts philanthropy will be no more than a gloss on the barnacle of industry if we don’t have a discussion and take action urgently on where ethics and aesthetics meet.

Licence to Spill

To download Licence to Spill, a new release from Platform, visit http://www.carbonweb.org/showitem.asp?article=381&parent=39
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Photo: Robin Bell
Apart from catastrophic spills like the Deepwater Horizon, there are a whole host of adverse impacts that are associated with the production of oil. On the local level, it often involves extreme forms of pollution for local communities, while regionally oil is frequently associated with greater militarization and conflict. Globally, carbon emissions, oil companies, and our collective dependence on the product they push, are taking us ever closer to the edge of climate catastrophe.

In order for an oil company to produce oil and transport it to the global market, it needs either the support or the silence of the population in those areas of the world in which this takes place. Where the necessary support – or ‘social licence to operate’ – is not forthcoming, the ability of that company to carry out its business becomes seriously impaired.

The building of this social licence takes place to some extent in the countries of the distant oilfields, but to a far greater degree in the cities of the global North, such as London, one of the companies’ key centres of operation. Here, Shell and BP have between them sponsored almost all of London’s most prestigious museums and cultural institutions over the course of the last decade.

The financial support that the companies provide strengthens their position as a part of Britain’s cultural and social elite, and creates a perception of making a positive contribution to our society. This in turn not only provides them with an important profile with ordinary fuel customers, but far more importantly strengthens connections between the corporations and vital bodies such as government departments. The support of institutions such as the Foreign & Commonwealth Office, or the Department of International Development, are far more important to the global operations of Shell and BP than that of the populations near the oilfields or on the pipeline routes. These relationships are made at the gala openings and concerts, where the audiences made up of civil servants and decision makers rub shoulders with the oil executives.

A decade ago, tobacco companies were seen as respectable partners for public institutions to gain support from – the current BP Portrait Award at the National Portrait Gallery was previously sponsored by Imperial Tobacco. Now it is socially unacceptable for tobacco to play this public role, and it is our hope that oil and gas will soon be seen in the same light, as the public comes to recognise that the sponsorship programmes of BP and Shell are means by which attention is distracted from their impacts on human rights, the environment and the global climate.

Leaked invite reveals Tate’s ill-timed plans to celebrate BP sponsorship

 

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Artists to protest Tate Britain Summer Party; Art/activist group Platform release briefing on oil sponsorship of the arts

Embargo: 00.01 AM, Friday 25 June 2010

Tate is throwing a gala event in order to celebrate 20 years of BP sponsorship next week, a leaked invitation seen by campaign group Platform reveals [1].

The party comes at a time when BP’s battered reputation as a result of the Gulf of Mexico spill is creating a public relations disaster for Tate through its association with the oil company [2].

A group of artists calling themselves The Good Crude Britannia, who want Tate to cut its ties with BP, will picket Monday night’s event [3]. Artists have also come together to speak out against oil industry sponsorship of the arts in “Licence to Spill”, a new briefing being launched by Platform today [4].

These developments come amid signs that BP sponsorship is a growing source of controversy amongst Tate trustees and staff. Tate’s five-year sponsorship deal with BP is up for renewal in spring 2011, and sources within Tate have suggested that the controversial issue of BP’s sponsorship will be on the agenda for the first time at the upcoming trustees’ meeting in July.

In recent weeks there has been an unprecedented wave of public actions against oil industry sponsorship of the arts. Last month, Liberate Tate disrupted Tate Modern’s 10th anniversary celebrations. This week, Rising Tide and Art Not Oil targeted the BP Portrait Award ceremony at the National Portrait Gallery and Greenpeace mounted an alternative exhibition to coincide with the private view [5].

Jane Trowell of Platform said: “BP is trying to repair its tarnished reputation and buy our approval by associating itself with culturally important institutions like Tate. The financial support provided by BP creates a perception of it being a cuddly corporate entity, and aims to distract us from the devastating environmental and social impacts of its global operations. Public outrage over the Deepwater Horizon spill is creating a moment for change. We hope that, as happened with the tobacco industry, it will soon come to be seen as socially unacceptable for cultural institutions to accept funding from Big Oil”.

Electronic artist and composer Matthew Herbert said: “It is absurd that Tate should be sponsored by a company that is as irresponsible and polluting as BP. Day one of any critical art theory course would dissect the logo of BP and show it to be the most cynical and barefaced piece of modern visual corporate propaganda. Why is Tate so keen to have it attached to its proud collection of modern art? At a time when urgent action is required to slow consumption of fossil fuels, oil companies should not be allowed to advertise or sponsor anything at all. It’s time to cut the oily tentacles that BP and Shell have wrapped around our most prestigious cultural institutions”.

The new Platform briefing brings together artists’ statements about oil industry sponsorship and provides a critique of its cultural, political and environmental impacts.

ENDS

For interviews and more information:

Platform: 0207 403 3738 or 07790 430 620 / info@platformlondon.org
We can put you in touch with artists quoted in the Licence to Spill briefing.
www.platformlondon.org

NOTES FOR EDITORS

1. The invitation can be seen at:
http://www.platformlondon.org/carbonweb/documents/summerparty.pdf

2. The 20-year relationship between Tate and BP has seen increasingly close ties develop between the gallery and BP. Ex-BP Chief Executive Lord John Browne is currently the chair of the Tate board of trustees.

3. The Good Crude Britannia is a national artists’ campaign against BP sponsorship of Tate. We are calling all concerned artists to either sign the petition and/or support the ‘campaign’ which is to be launched on Monday 28th June 2010 at Tate Britain’s Summer Party, 7-9pm.

http://www.facebook.com/?sk=2361831622#!/group.php?gid=126083700763469

4. The briefing is available at:
http://www.carbonweb.org/showitem.asp?article=381&parent=39

Platform works across disciplines for social and ecological justice. It combines the transformatory power of art with the tangible goals of campaigning, the rigour of in-depth research with the vision to promote alternative futures.

5. See:
Liberate Tate: http://twitter.com/liberatetate
Video of the action: http://vimeo.com/12664991

Rising Tide: www.risingtide.org.uk
Video of the action: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-adx5mS2klA

Art Not Oil: www.artnotoil.org.uk
Greenpeace: www.greenpeace.org.uk

BP piggybacks on London Olympics to generate social acceptance

BP brand hypocrisy continues, with Marketing Magazine reporting on the company’s plans for the London Olympics in 2012.

Energy company BP has appointed agencies Landor and Ogilvy to handle its sponsorship of London 2012. Tony Hayward, executive director of BP, said that […] as BP is the UK’s biggest company with headquarters in London, the 2012 Olympics provides it with a unique opportunity to engage with its workforce, customers and existing partners in the arts, educational and cultural arenas.

BP pays millions for sponsorship deals such as these to generate a “social licence to operate” from its “special publics” in London. The company requires this social licence to continue its destructive operations in the Caspian, Iraq, Angola and Colombia. Sponsoring the Tate, the National Portrait Gallery or the British not an act of charity for BP, but a clear-cut corporate strategy to reduce criticism from certain London-based audiences. Hence the importance of Art not Oil.

Since Tony Hayward took over BP in 2007, he has reversed what meagre trend there was towards renewables, clashing investment into wind and solar while consolidating the company’s focus on oil. “Beyond Petroleum” is now purely a marketing tool to distract attention from the company’s reality.

[BP] is the official oil and gas partner and the third sustainability partner. As part of the estimated £50m deal, it will provide fuelling facilities for the vehicles involved in the Olympics. The company will also provide liquefied petroleum gas for catering, vehicle-washing facilities and technical support services, including a system for tracking carbon emissions produced by the events.

BP will also support the Cultural Olympiad, an arts and culture programme comprising 500 events, which is taking place during the run-up to the Olympics. The brand will be present at a range of touring exhibitions and outreach programmes.