LONDON.- The Arts Council published its 2016/17 Cultural Gifts Scheme and Acceptance in Lieu annual report. It shows that in the last year, 44 cases spanning a vast range of works of art worth £40 million were accepted for the nation under the governments Cultural Gifts Scheme and Acceptance in Lieu Scheme. Objects accepted through these schemes are allocated to public collections throughout the UK and are available for everyone to engage with and enjoy.
Cultural Gift highlights include:
The first cultural gift to the ss Great Britain Trust of over 850 items relating to one of the nations greatest engineers Isambard Kingdom Brunel and his family
One of the most important donations to a UK museum of works by Fabergé including carved animals once belonging to Queen Alexandra
A strikingly realistic Renaissance sculpture of a foot
The first cultural gift to the Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art of an important early Constructivist sculpture by Naum Gabo
The Cultural Gifts Scheme enables UK taxpayers to donate important works of art, historic or scientific objects to the nation. In return, donors will receive a tax reduction based on a set percentage of the value of the object they are donating 30% for individuals and 20% for companies. Since the scheme was introduced by the UK Government in 2013, cultural gifts have steadily become an important part of the UKs cultural philanthropic landscape.
Acceptance in Lieu has received the highest number of offers in the last year since the scheme began over 100 years ago. It has brought a great many treasures into public collections in 2016/17 including:
The first offer in lieu to Durham Oriental museum of a Ming Dynasty sculpture of a bodhisattva (enlightened being);
A masterpiece painted by John Singer Sargent when he was just 19 years old
Two seminal sculptures from the 1960s by Sir Anthony Caro
A tiara given by the Duke of Fife to his bride, Princess Louise
A group of antiquities from Castle Howard, a magnificent historic house in the north of England
The archive of former Labour Deputy Leader and Cabinet Minister Denis Healey
The papers of the physiologist and pioneer in reproductive medicine, Sir Robert Edwards
Acceptance in Lieu allows those who have to pay Inheritance Tax or once of its earlier forms to do so by offering important works of art, historic or scientific objects to the nation.
Both schemes are administered by the Arts Council on behalf of the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS). In the last decade the schemes have brought over £330 million worth of cultural property into public collections where they can be enjoyed by the millions of people who visit the UKs museums, galleries and libraries.
Edward Harley, Chairman Acceptance in Lieu Panel, said: This last year has seen a record number of important cultural objects accepted through Acceptance in Lieu and the Cultural Gifts Scheme. These items can now be enjoyed by visitors to the UKs museums, galleries, historic houses and libraries. In the last decade the schemes have brought over £330 million worth of cultural property into public collections across the UK. Thank you to all those who have contributed to the success of the schemes.
Sir Nicholas Serota, Chair Arts Council England, said: It gives me enormous pleasure to see so many important works of art come into public ownership through Acceptance in Lieu and the Cultural Gifts Scheme. The acquisitions detailed in this report can now be enjoyed by millions of visitors to the nations public museums, libraries and galleries. I am particularly pleased to see that the range and number of institutions benefitting from the scheme continues to grow. I would like to express my gratitude to the Chairman, Edward Harley, and members of the Acceptance in Lieu Panel and the many expert advisers listed at the back of this report, whose unstinting contribution ensures the schemes work properly and have the trust of offerors, professional advisers and recipient organisations.