National Gallery’s unused €120,000 scanner under scrutiny

X-ray scanner was purchased eight years ago but no suitable room has been found

The specialist scanner was intended to be used to examine the Gallery's collection, which includes Caravaggio's The Taking of Christ, unintrusively. Photograph Nick Bradshaw
The specialist scanner was intended to be used to examine the Gallery's collection, which includes Caravaggio's The Taking of Christ, unintrusively. Photograph Nick Bradshaw

The spending of €120,000 on a scanner that has never been used is likely to be examined by the review of how the Department of Arts and Culture supervises the institutions under its remit recently announced by the Minister, Patrick O’Donovan, Government sources say.

Mr O’Donovan was due to brief the Cabinet on the issue on Tuesday when he brings the annual report of the National Gallery to the Cabinet for approval.

RTÉ reported this morning that the X-ray scanner, purchased by the gallery eight years ago, has never been used because a suitable room for it has not been found.

On his way into Cabinet this morning Tánaiste Simon Harris said that his reaction was “absolute fury” when he heard about the issue.

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He said that he expected the National Gallery to explain itself. He said that three significant issues of overspending – in RTÉ, the Arts Council and now the Gallery – had now arisen in one Government department.

The specialist equipment was intended to be used to examine the gallery’s paintings but issues have arisen, understood to be related to its X-ray capacities, which mean that a suitable room has not yet been found to house it at the gallery’s Merrion Square premises, adjacent to Leinster House.

Taoiseach Micheál Martin said it was “incomprehensible” and difficult to explain why “someone would embark upon the purchase of a scanner that they didn’t have a facility to locate it in”.

Mr Martin said it was up to the National Gallery to explain what had happened and people needed to be “accountable for what transpired”.

Speaking on the way into Cabinet on Tuesday morning, the Taoiseach said he was awaiting full details from Mr O’Donovan.

The Fianna Fáil leader said there had to be “a rigorous focus on value for money” and that is why there was a Comptroller and Auditor General and Public Accounts Committee.

“The sooner we establish the Public Accounts Committee to go through forensically with the Comptroller and Auditor General these issues, the better,” he added.

“It does anger people, without question, that expenditures of this type happen with no clear function or rationale for it.

“Of course, it’s taxpayers' money, it belongs to the people, and it has to be spent wisely and with value from money always the key objective in spending that money.”

The former minister for arts Catherine Martin should come before an Oireachtas committee to answer questions in relation to spending at the National Gallery of Ireland and the Arts Council, the Labour Party and Social Democrats have said.

Labour TD Duncan Smith said it was important for transparency and even if it was just to “clear the minister’s office”.

“Going back to the RTÉ scandal, there were issues in terms of lines of communication between ministers and senior officials in that department,” he said.

“I think the former minister, I’m conscious of the fact that she’s no longer in politics, but I think should come in and go to a committee to take questions on this.”

Social Democrat TD Gary Gannon said there was precedent for a former minister to come before an Oireachtas committee to answer questions.

“We don’t have powers of compulsion, so that would be up to former minister Martin,” he said. “I just don’t think there would be anything wrong in her actually coming in and just outlining how that oversight occurred.”

The Dublin Central TD said he was “dismayed” at how willing members of the Government were to be “commentators” on issues people were looking for accountability around. He said there had to be leadership shown in terms of public expenditure.

Pat Leahy

Pat Leahy

Pat Leahy is Political Editor of The Irish Times

Sarah Burns

Sarah Burns

Sarah Burns is a reporter for The Irish Times