A ‘vital’ Toronto printmaking studio says it risks permanent closure without financial help
A downtown Toronto printmaking studio that has been open for more than 50 years could permanently shut down without more funding, its executive director said.
Located at 401 Richmond St. W., Open Studio’s facilities include a range of printmaking techniques, such as screen printing and lithography, according to the studio website.
However, the artist-run studio is relying on community support after seeing a downturn in revenue since the COVID-19 pandemic, said executive director Pat Macaulay.
The studio announced in an open letter last Monday that it would temporarily close beginning June 28. A pause is necessary to gain more financial support, Macaulay said.
“We hope to relaunch in January 2025 for Open Studio’s 55th anniversary,” the letter reads. “This can only happen with your help.”
Macaulay said government funding has either been cut or plateaued, meaning funding has not risen with the cost of inflation. He said he has contacted all three levels of government about the studio’s funding crisis.
“My problem is that nobody is really listening, and culture is suffering for that,” he said.
CBC News has reached out to the Toronto Arts Council, Ontario Arts Council and Canada Council for the Arts for a response.
The studio is planning on downsizing its existing space to meet artists’ needs while being “fiscally responsible,” Macaulay said.
“There’s a lot of things we have to change.”
‘We do not want a city without arts’: MPP
Glover said he was surprised to hear that no other level of government responded to Open Studio. He said the studio provides a valuable service to artists in the community, allowing them to create in “new and innovative” ways.
“We need to make sure that coming out of the pandemic, we don’t lose our arts organizations,” he said.
The studio receives funding from the Ontario Arts Council that was cut by 15 per cent, Glover said. He said he will ask the government to reverse the cut.
Other arts organizations in his district have also struggled to bounce back from the pandemic, Glover said.
“It’s taking a long time to build back the community coming out and expressing the interest and financial support that they did before,” he said.
Glover described 401 Richmond, the building where Open Studio is located, as “one of the greatest buildings in the city.”
The heritage-designated building houses an arts and culture centre located in what was previously a manufacturing building, according to its website.
“As the cost of housing and real estate have continued to grow, artists have been squeezed out of our city,” Glover said.
“We do not want a city without arts.”
Studio provides resources artists can’t use at home
Around 163 artists access Open Studio’s resources, Macaulay said.
The studio’s annual membership fee costs $125, according to its website, but he said people have been hesitant to return to the studio after the pandemic.
Open Studio sells prints as well, but these sales have also declined, Macauley said.
Artist Meggan Winsley has been teaching at Open Studio since 2006. She described the studio as “vital,” providing artists the space to work with resources that cannot be accessed from home.
“There’s going to be people who aren’t going to have a place to print, who aren’t going to have a place to express themselves and make their art,” she said.
Since the studio made its public appeal for support, however, Macaulay said the community response has been “amazing.”
As of Monday, Open Studio has reached 38 per cent of its $75,000 funding goal, according to its website.
Community members are also reaching out with ideas for the studio as it transitions toward a more sustainable business model, Macaulay said.
Though the studio plans to reopen next year, a permanent closure could have impacts across the country, particularly in university and college programs, Macaulay said.
If graduates have few accessible resources to facilitate their printmaking work, Macaulay said universities and colleges will have no reason to continue providing printmaking programs
“It is a national crisis in terms of culture,” Macaulay said.
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