Why a scorecard of quality in the arts is a very bad idea

Numbers and culture can be dangerous bedfellows. Andy Maguire/flickr, CC BY
Julian Meyrick, Flinders University; Richard Maltby, Flinders University; Robert Phiddian, Flinders University, and Tully Barnett, Flinders University : Foxes were introduced into Australia from Britain in the 19th century for the recreation of faux-English huntsmen. They destroyed dozens of native species. In the 21st century a parallel is at hand in an export of cultural metrics from Australia to the UK. The impact may be equally damaging. 

Culture Counts, developed in Western Australia by the Department of Culture and the Arts, is a computer dashboard data program, designed to be used across art forms. It is currently being trialled for wider rollout by Arts Council England. Its aim, according to a Manchester-based pilot, is “a sector-led metrics framework to capture the quality and reach of arts and cultural productions”. 

What is proposed is substantial, serious, and no doubt well-intentioned. Unusually for a government-led measurement scheme, arts practitioners as well as policy experts have helped develop it. Yet we at Laboratory Adelaide - an ARC Linkage research project into culture’s value - view the venture with dismay. We argue that the approach is wrong-headed and open to political abuse.

In essence, Culture Counts is a quantitative scorecard for artistic quality, with a set of standardised categories translating a set of verbal descriptions into numbers. 

For example, if a surveyed audience can be prompted to say of a cultural experience that “it felt new and different” or “it was full of surprises”, it would rate highly on a 5-point scale for “originality”. That number would then sit on the dashboard beside other numbers for “risk” and “relevance”.

The categories are nuanced enough to provide usable feedback for practitioners and bureaucrats with the time and desire to think hard about what the numbers mean. And we understand the pressure cultural organisations face to justify their activities in quantified ways. 

But will funders analyse the numbers with care? Will artists resist the temptation to trumpet “a 92 in the ACE metric” any more than vice chancellors have refrained from boasting of their rankings in university league tables?

We think not. A quantitative approach to quality betrays naivety about how people look at dashboard data, privileging a master figure or, at best, two or three figures. Context is lost to the viewer, and the more authoritative a number is presumed to be, the more completely it is lost.

A dread homogeneity: The second problem with a metric for artistic quality is the homogeneity of purpose it implies. A theatre in Leeds, an orchestra in London and a gallery in Loughborough not only do different things in different places, their values are different too. They can be compared, but it  
A London orchestra: quite a different kettle of fish to a theatre in Leeds. Neil Hall/Reuters 
requires  critical assessment not numerical scaling. This was a view discussed at length by the UK 2008 McMaster Review Supporting Excellence in the Arts – from Measurement to Judgement. It is to be regretted the current UK government has failed to heed the advice of this insightful document. 

A third problem with the approach is the political manipulation it invites. Metrical scores look objective even when reflecting buried assumptions. If a government decides it wants to support (say) “innovation”, different projects can be surreptitiously graded by that criterion and “failures” de-funded. The following year the desideratum might be “excellence” and a different crunch would occur. Supposition is camouflaged by abstraction and the pseudo-neutrality of quantitative presentation.

Arts Council England’s metrics will be expensive. They will demand time, money and attention from resources-strapped cultural organisations who cannot spare them. Is it worth it? This is a vital point. The introduction of a new quantitative indicator should tell us something we didn’t know before. It is not enough to translate verbal descriptions into numbers as a matter of course. There has to be knowledge gained by doing so that we didn’t already have.

If the only answer is “by using numbers we can benchmark cultural projects more easily”, then we have a fourth problem. The incommensurability inherent in concrete instances of creative practice is not something that will be addressed by improving standardized measurement techniques. 

In fact, the more sophisticated the Council’s approach becomes, the more its numbers will stand out as two-dimensional. In this way a scorecard of artistic quality is not only misrepresentative, it is self- 
A scene from The Record. Maria Baranova 
defeating. More than other areas of life, art and culture are full of outliers and singularities, things that do not fit easily into standardized categories. A good example is The Record, a recent production at Adelaide’s OzAsia Festival. The Record was a genre-less, story-less dance piece with 45 strangers in the cast who moved around a 40ft square stage in their work clothes, at varying speeds. It had little interest in meeting conventional audience expectations, promoting an explicit message, or displaying visual or choreographic prowess. Yet in its originality and social engagement, it showed a profound sense of human connection.

We doubt it would score well on Arts Council England’s metrics. 

“So much, so obvious”, we think at Laboratory Adelaide. A deeper question is why. What’s driving our insatiable desire to quantify things that self-evidently do not lend themselves to enumeration?

Addicted to ratings: One answer is that modern society has become addicted to ratings and rankings that convey a comforting sense of clarity and control (league tables for everything). When a football match is decided by a point, arguments that the margin is not statistically significant hold no water. There is a clear winner and loser. In arts and culture, however, all-too-human processes of judgement lie behind ostensibly impersonal outcomes. This fact gets lost when numbers step forward as a mark of value.

Arts and culture are not the only domains that must be wary of going down the metrics route. For some time, academic research has also been locked in a struggle with dead-souled quantification that reduces it to simplistic aggregates of “outputs” and questionable citation indices. 
Smoochi/flickr, CC BY-NC
The historian Stefan Collini has written extensively on this issue. He offers further warning to governments intent on ignoring the line between measurement and judgement. Writing about bibliometrics, for instance – the statistical analysis of academic publication data that emerged in the 1980s and 1990s – he observed:

There is… no point in trying to devise a set of categories of publication appropriate to all disciplines unless you intend to reduce the extent to which decisions rest on the judgement of peers and increase the extent to which they rest on measurement by administrators… A uniform set of categories [is] an obstacle to making assessments. 

Laboratory Adelaide take Collini’s remarks to be true of the scorecard approach to artistic quality as well. In our three years studying the issue of how quantitative and qualitative methods can be combined to convey the value of culture, we have seen nothing to suggest that a metric for “good art” can or should exist. 

We note with relief that in Australia, Arts Council England’s scorecard approach has thus far been greeted with scepticism. We believe this scepticism to be justified.

Numbers are an important tool for understanding the contemporary world. Used in the right way, they are revealing not reductive. 

A metric for artistic quality is a flawed use of numbers, however, replacing what should be judgement of different types of evidence with simplistic figures and their inevitable corollary, ratings and rankings. The widespread adoption of such an approach can only bring harm to the making and curation of culture.

Julian Meyrick, Professor of Creative Arts, Flinders University; Richard Maltby, Executive Dean, Faculty of Education, Humanities and Law, Flinders University; Robert Phiddian, Deputy Dean, School of Humanities, Flinders University, and Tully Barnett, Research Fellow, School of Humanities, Flinders University  This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.

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How a troubled childhood can foster creative talent – new study

Many believe that a child’s creativity can only bloom in the warmth of a loving, nurturing and supportive household. While artistic talent can flourish in comfortable surroundings, research has shown that this is not always the case.

Paradoxical though it may seem, studies have found that many creative people had difficult childhoods. Indeed, many well-known artists owe their genius to tough childhood events, from which they escaped by creating mental worlds where they were free to develop their talents.

Famous examples include artistic geniuses like Vincent van Gogh, Franz Kafka, Edgar Allan Poe, Virginia Woolf and Sinéad O'Connor, all of whom suffered adversity in childhood and went on to develop great artistic prowess. Sadly, though perhaps not surprisingly, their talents were often tempered by neuroses and other mental health issues.

Creative people have even noted this in one another. Jean Paul Sartre’s lengthy biography of Gustave Flaubert’s childhood describes its subject as an unwanted, neglected child who was considered mentally disabled by his parents. The book’s title shows how central this was to Flaubert’s identity: L'Idiot de la famille (The Family Idiot).

Escaping childhood suffering

My recent study explores the development of human creativity, which can follow two paths: it can be an imitation of serene and pleasant parental models that inspire a child to thrive and improve, or it can be a way to manage the anxiety that stems from the absence of these models.

As Donald Winnicott explains in his seminal 1971 book “Playing and Reality”, children alleviate the anxiety of temporary separation from their parents by soothing themselves with objects (called “transitional objects”) or behaviours, which temporarily replace the absence of their parents’ affection or attention.

If the absence is prolonged and difficult, these behaviours continue and can, through repetition, develop into a creative skill. Unfortunately, along with creativity, these children sometimes develop harsh behavioural difficulties, and struggle with social relationships.

Some academics have proposed a model to explain this phenomenon. Up to a certain level of separation or neglect from parents, the capacity to develop talents grows, but beyond a certain limit this decreases and alterations in social behaviour become more acute.

Therefore, it is likely that our talents, those of which we will be proud when adults, put down their roots in the first few months of life. The rest of our lives are spent honing the creative behaviours we learned, or took refuge in, when were babies.

By closely observing young children, psychologist Mary Ainsworth found that our attachment style is already defined at the age of one. Other studies have found a similar precocious timing for other mental skills, and this is likely true for creativity as well. Early abandonment or neglect can have dire consequences, but can also be the source of creativity, as it helps children to survive.

Challenges in modern parenting

Today, affective relationships between parents and children are increasingly problematic. Cultural shifts often mean that modern parents are either scarcely or excessively focused on their babies. Working habits have also changed, meaning babies are more commonly separated from parents in the earliest stages of their development.

It is therefore unsurprising that young children today escape into a parallel word that replaces or supplements parental attention, one where they often develop considerable creative abilities and talents: computers and videogames. Screen time is, however, also linked to greater levels of stress, anxiety and isolation, especially as children grow into teenagers.

No substitute for care

Adversity does not always have negative effects, and caregivers should help children to cultivate their creative talents, but this is by no means a substitute for proper care and attention.

Studies show that a supportive attitude is important from the early years of school, but parents can often be with physically absent or mentally distant or distracted from their offspring. This can cause a raft of mental health issues, as a child’s first and most decisive cognitive maps are drawn in the earliest stages of life – late intervention is less effective.

The good news is that this research can help to identify and intervene when a child may be suffering. It also further highlights the deep, primordial psychological significance of children’s, and indeed adults’, talents and creativity.The Conversation

Carlo Valerio Bellieni, Professor of Pediatrics, Università di Siena

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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