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  • Tate’s BP decision: Climate, ethics, and reputation-management

    by Bridget McKenzie Bridget McKenzie is a cultural learning consultant and director of Flow UK. Previously she was head of learning at the British Library for five years, and was Education Officer for Tate. This article is part of ‘Mind the Gap: expert evaluations of Tate’s ethical decision-making over BP’. For more expert comment and…

    Tate’s BP decision: Climate, ethics, and reputation-management

  • 27 Mar 2015 anna

    #MuseumWeek special: British Museum’s BP secrets revealed & more

    The latest just in: British Museum’s BP secrets revealed BP Or Not BP? forced British Museum to reveal: BP sponsorship was just £596,000 per year from 2000- 2011 – around 0.8% of the Museum’s income. The figures were revealed under Freedom Of Information Act, just a few weeks after we forced Tate to admit that BP’s…

    #MuseumWeek special: British Museum’s BP secrets revealed & more

  • New book ‘Artwash’ reveals Big Oil’s art PR strategies

    Artwash: Big Oil and The Arts by Mel Evans, out 20 April with Pluto Press To arrange interviews, contact Anna Galkina / [email protected] / @platformlondon For review copies or to arrange the publication of an abstract, contact Alison Alexanian / [email protected] New book analyses BP and Shell’s strategy to gain ‘social licence to operate’ by…

    New book ‘Artwash’ reveals Big Oil’s art PR strategies

  • Artwash: Big Oil and the Arts. Out 20.04.15. Press pack

    Artwash: Big Oil and the Arts is out 20.04.2015. Images and video here

    Artwash: Big Oil and the Arts. Out 20.04.15. Press pack

  • 12 Mar 2015 anna

    Art and power: reflections on austerity and sponsorship

    We often get asked: if we want the arts to be free from sponsorship by climate-wrecking oil companies, where’s the money going to come from? And aren’t we just going to push art institutions towards other corporate sponsors (arms dealers, banks) with tarnished reputations to polish? My immediate answer to this question is in the…

    Art and power: reflections on austerity and sponsorship

  • Take the Money and Run? a response to an event about ethics, funding and art by Mary Paterson

    Take The Money And Run? was an event about ethics, funding and art that took place at Toynbee Studios, London on January 29, 2015. Attended by over 200 people, it was a day of presentations and discussion hosted by three organisations, Live Art Development Agency, Artsadmin, Home Live Art and produced in collaboration with Platform. We commissioned Mary Paterson…

    Take the Money and Run? a response to an event about ethics, funding and art by Mary Paterson

  • 27 Jan 2015 anna

    We forced Tate to reveal BP secrets – now what?

    Nearly three years after we first set out to find out how much BP gave Tate, the galleries  have finally revealed BP’s contribution between 1990-2006. The figures range between £150,000-£330,000 a year – even less than we expected. When I tried to lay the numbers out on a graph for comparison, it was hard to even get BP’s contribution to be visible…

    We forced Tate to reveal BP secrets – now what?

  • 21 Jan 2015 anna

    Artwash: Big Oil and the Arts

    Order Artwash for just £10 (RRP £12.99) UK postage or collect in person:[wp_cart:Artwash:price:10:shipping:0:end] Go to our shop for checkout and more options As major oil companies face continual public backlash, many have found it helpful to engage in “art washing”—donating large sums to cultural institutions to shore up their good name. But what effect does…

    Artwash: Big Oil and the Arts

  • 12 Jan 2015 james
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    Share price of BP falling – will Shell take over BP?

    As the London Stock Exchange opened at 09.00 on Tuesday, 16th December, BP’s shareprice was down to 365 pence. It was the bottom of a long slide from 448 pence on the 21st November and investors in the company looked concerned that BP was failing badly. Shares in BP have lost 25% of their value…

    Share price of BP falling – will Shell take over BP?

  • A manifesto for Energy beyond Neoliberalism

    We’ve written a manifesto titled Energy beyond Neoliberalism: “This is a call for energy democracy. Not energy security or energy separation. A survivable and just energy future means breaking the grip of elite interests on our energy systems, ending dependency, increasing autonomy, building diverse power structures through which we can hold one another to account,…

    A manifesto for Energy beyond Neoliberalism