DEPARTMENT FOR
CULTURE, MEDIA AND SPORT News Release (029/09) issued by COI News
Distribution Service. 13 March 2009
The results of a
pilot programme to introduce a new system of self-assessment and
peer review for directly sponsored museums were published today by
the Department for Culture, Media and Sport.
The pilots were carried out at the National Portrait Gallery,
Natural History Museum and Tyne & Wear Museums.
Welcoming the three reports, Culture Secretary Andy Burnham said:
"Peer review is the right way to drive forward quality and
excellence across museums and the wider cultural sector moving
away from the concerns about targets and box ticking. The museums
will learn much from the exercise and become stronger and more
confident as a result. I am pleased to see the evidence of how
strongly they are all performing and I look forward to developing
this work across the cultural sector over the coming years."
Each museum was asked to detail its vision, its successes and its
challenges. In each case the peer review was then conducted by a
panel of three individuals, from both the UK and abroad and from a
range of professional backgrounds. The peer reviews took place
over three days and the panel reports include a critique of the
self-assessment, an over-arching appraisal of the excellence
across the museums functions and a set of recommendations for each
museum to consider. Each museum was also asked to provide a
management response to the peer review.
It takes forward a recommendation made by Sir Brian McMaster in
his report Supporting Excellence in the Arts: From Measurement to
Judgement, which called for a renewed focus on excellence in the
cultural sector.
The Department is now evaluating the success of the pilot and is
considering the roll out of the system, taking on board
refinements from the pilot, to all sponsored museums with
Non-Departmental Public Body (NDPB) status.
Notes for Editors
In July 2007 James Purnell, the then
Secretary of State for Culture, asked Sir Brian McMaster, former
Director of the Edinburgh International Festival, to undertake a
review to report on:
* How the system of public sector support
for the arts can encourage excellence, risk-taking and
innovation
* How artistic excellence can encourage wider and
deeper engagement with the arts by audiences
* How to
establish a light touch and non-bureaucratic method to judge the
quality of the arts in the future
The review involved artists,
directors, curators, producers and administrators from across the
country, and from across a wide variety of art forms. Sir Brian
was supported by Nicola Thorold and staff from DCMS and Arts
Council England.
A public consultation ran from 1 - 30
November 2007, the findings of which helped inform Sir
Brian's thinking ahead of his final report to the Secretary
of State.
The review was published in January 2008 and the
Department for Culture, Media and Sport has been committed to
overseeing implementation of the reports recommendations.
The review made 26 specific recommendations, of which two were:
"...that funding bodies, jointly with representatives of
cultural organisations, develop good-practice guidelines for
self-assessment. These should focus primarily on the excellence of
the art and commitment to innovation and risk-taking." And
"...that, to complement the culture of self-assessment,
funding bodies institute a system of peer review. I suggest all
regularly funded organisations should be reviewed by peers on a
cyclical basis and that the process is managed by the funding body."
These two recommendations have led to DCMS developing and
piloting a framework for self-assessment and peer-review for its
NDPB museums which it will manage directly.
Analogous to this pilot, Arts Council England have recently
completed a consultation on self-assessment and peer review for
its Regularly Funded Organisations.
The recent launch of the Arts Council England managed scheme for
free theatre tickets for under 26's "A Night Less
Ordinary" is also part of the wider McMaster implementation
programme. Other recommendations made in the review are being
taken forward by Arts Council England and the Museums, Libraries
and Archive Council.
Public enquiries: 020 7211 6020
http://www.culture.gov.uk
2-4 Cockspur Street
London SW1Y 5DH
http://www.culture.gov.uk