Australian War Memorial funding dwarfed that of other cultural institutions in Coalition’s final years

Memorial given more than $600m in last two years of Morrison government, as the nation’s peak collecting museums languished

The Australian War Memorial received more funding than the rest of Australia’s national cultural institutions put together, in the last two years of the Coalition government.

The National Gallery of Australia and the National Library of Australia are among the nation’s peak cultural institutions warning their operations, collections and even buildings are under threat unless emergency funding of tens of millions of dollars are allocated in May’s federal budget.

The Australian War Memorial is undergoing a major refurbishment, with $500m allocated by the Morrison government, topped up with a further $50m in March 2022. This $550m is on top of more than $110m in recurrent funding the memorial received in the 2020-2021 and 2021-2022 federal budgets.

Over the same time, the country’s national collecting agencies – the National Gallery of Australia, the National Library of Australia, the National Portrait Gallery, the National Museum of Australia, the Australian Maritime Museum and the National Film and Sound Archive – collectively received $400m from the Coalition government, as efficiency dividends saw budgets slashed over successive years.

The national collecting institutions were not included in the $300m national cultural policy announced by the arts minister, Tony Burke, in January.

Burke indicated at the time that additional support for the national cultural institutions was being considered for the May budget.

In January the National Library warned its expansive public digital archives could cease operation, with its last tranche of funding set to run out in July.

On Wednesday photos emerged of water leaks and mould in the National Gallery of Australia’s upper level, forcing staff to pull artworks from the walls.

The gallery says it is in urgent need of $265m over the next 10 years – about half of what has been allocated to the war memorial for its upgrade – to bring the 55 year-old heritage listed building up to standard.

The Australian War Memorial is scheduled to finish its major public works in 2025.

A spokesperson for the veteran affairs minister, Matt Keogh, told the Guardian no additional funding had been allocated to the memorial’s redevelopment program under the Albanese government.

Additional funding for the memorial had been achieved through corporate sponsorship and donations, the spokesperson said, which had gone towards exhibitions and programs independently commissioned and curated by memorial staff.

The memorial has attracted criticism for its reliance on sponsorship from arms manufacturers, including Thales Australia, Rolls Royce, QinetiQ, Polaris, BAE Systems and Boeing. The memorial’s former director of seven years, former Liberal politician Brendan Nelson, was appointed president of Boeing Global in January.

The minister’s spokesperson said the expansion project was not being funded through sponsorship.

“The memorial, like many similar institutions around the country, has received support from a range of funding sources outside of government. This includes funding from defence industry contractors,” the statement said.

“All sponsorship agreements are considered carefully by the memorial’s executive and council to ensure they align with the memorial’s act, mission and purpose.”

A spokesperson for the memorial said the institution was currently operating at a loss, which was budgeted to continue for the “foreseeable future”, with operating losses of $2.3m in 2020-21 and a $2.5m in 2021-22.

“While the development project received a significant amount of funding tied to capital expenditure, the memorial has not yet received funding to operate these new galleries,” the spokesperson said.

“Our general operating funding has been negatively impacted by inflationary pressures and the memorial is currently using cash reserves, and has for some years, to supplement operating costs.”

Contributor

Kelly Burke

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Gender pay gap in Australian arts almost double that in other industries, research finds
Women paid almost 25% less in performing and visual arts than men, with pay gap almost doubling if artist had a first language other than english

Kelly Burke

08, Dec, 2022 @8:17 AM

Article image
National Library of Australia’s free digital archives may be forced to close without funding
With only six months worth of funding left, library’s director general faces ‘very big decisions’ on the future of Trove

Kelly Burke

05, Jan, 2023 @2:00 PM

Article image
Brendan Nelson to step down as head of Australian War Memorial
Former minister will not stay beyond his current seven-year term, in which he was criticised for accepting donations from arms companies

Christopher Knaus

15, Aug, 2019 @1:15 AM

Article image
Military buff Tony Abbott is the wrong choice for the Australian War Memorial | Paul Daley
The war memorial’s council lacks a professional historian and critics say it’s like a hospital being run by homeopaths not doctors

Paul Daley

08, Oct, 2019 @5:00 PM

Article image
National Gallery of Australia among institutions to receive $535m to avert funding crisis
National gallery, library and museum among organisations to be thrown financial lifeline after years of underfunding

Kelly Burke

04, Apr, 2023 @12:30 PM

Article image
Australian cultural institutions struggle to survive as War Memorial gets half-billion dollar upgrade
Institutions such as the National Gallery and National Archives have been told to find $75m in savings

Lisa Martin

02, Nov, 2018 @7:00 PM

Article image
Australian War Memorial cannot be given ‘blank cheque’ to cover cost blowouts, Labor MP says
Government maintains support for $550m expansion project despite previous objection from MPs David Smith and Tony Zappia

Christopher Knaus

30, Aug, 2022 @5:30 PM

Article image
Experts deride 'snake oil' mental health claims for $498m Australian War Memorial expansion
Former principal historian says claims it will help veterans are ‘museum equivalent of hydroxychloroquine’

Paul Karp

14, Jul, 2020 @7:31 AM

Article image
Brendan Nelson takes job with Boeing, weeks after stepping down as head of Australian War Memorial
Nelson was criticised during his stint at AWM for allowing weapons companies such as Boeing to act as corporate sponsors

Christopher Knaus and Ben Doherty

20, Jan, 2020 @12:10 AM

Article image
Richard Marles under attack for support of war memorial display honouring boat turnbacks
Labor left MPs and Greens say commemorating Operation Sovereign Borders a ‘shameless attempt at culture wars’

Paul Karp

26, Apr, 2018 @4:59 AM