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The image displays three charts, two pie charts (top) representing proportional government spending on the arts in 1995 and 2005 for visual arts, theater, literature, and music, and one bar graph (bottom) showing the number of participants in arts events in the same years. In 1995, visual arts received the highest spending at 40%, followed by theater at 35%, music at 20%, and literature at 5%. In 2005, visual arts reduced to 35%, theater increased to 40%, music to 20%, and literature to 5%. In the bar graph, theater saw the most significant increase in participants from 400,000 in 1995 to 160,000 in 2005, visual arts increased from 100,000 to 120,000, literature remained steady at 100,000, and music declined from 120,000 to 80,000.
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The charts present data on government expenditure on culture and education, as well as the percentage of people attending various arts events in 1995 and 2005.
Overall, music and literature consistently received the highest proportions of funding in both years. Meanwhile, attendance at all four types of arts events increased over the period.
The pie charts show that music had the highest spending in both years, at around 30% in 1995 and 32% in 2005. This was followed by literature, which accounted for about 27% in 1995, though it dropped to 25% in 2005. Visual arts came next, decreasing slightly from 20% to 18%. Theater increased modestly from 15% to 17%, while cinema had the smallest share, rising slightly from 8% to 9%.
The bar charts show that theater had the highest attendance in both years, increasing from 40% to 50%. Museums ranked second, with participation doubling from 20% to 40%. Concerts came next, rising slightly from 22% to 25%. Finally, cinema had the lowest attendance, though it grew from 10% to 15% over the period.
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