학술논문

Art and the Twenty-First Century Gift: Corporate Philanthropy and Government Funding in the Cultural Sector.
Document Type
Article
Source
Anthropological Forum. Dec2014, Vol. 24 Issue 4, p364-380. 17p.
Subject
*ARTS fundraising
*CORPORATE giving
*GOVERNMENT aid
*ART & state
*GOVERNMENT-funded programs
*NONPROFIT organizations
*GRANTMAKING foundations
Language
ISSN
0066-4677
Abstract
Marcel Mauss's work on the archaic gift contributes to understandings of corporate and government support of arts organisations, or ‘institutional funding’. His approach allows us to see institutional funding as a gift that is embedded in a system of exchange wherein gifts come with a variety of obligations, and self-interest and disinterestedness are inseparable. The institutional gift operates through money and contracts; nevertheless, it entails obligations to give, to receive, and to reciprocate. This system of obligations has been joined, in the contemporary institutional gift, by another obligation: the obligation to ask. Institutional funding of the arts has acquired additional twenty-first-century elements. The article elaborates these, using the UK as an example. It also argues that the ambivalence felt by some members of the arts world about institutional funding stems, in large part, from the obligations inherent in the gift. The recent imposition of the neo-liberal model into the arts is an intrinsic part of the exchange between institutional funders and arts organisations. Given that Mauss's work is strongly anti-liberal and anti-utilitarian, it is ironic that his ideas should prove so useful for understanding a form of twenty-first-century gift in which neo-liberalism plays such a crucial role. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]