The European Association of Independent Performing Arts kindly invites to a series of online events.
After two seasons of knowledge-sharing and information on the social and working conditions of independent performing arts professionals in Europe, EAIPA will spend the upcoming season focusing on strengthening the performing arts communities on local, national, and international level.
Each event will offer moderation, expert inputs, in depth questions and discussion.
Duration: 120 min. Time: 14h – 16h CET
We kindly invite you to participate in our events on the following dates and topics:
1. 12.12.2024: Community Building: Uniting the Art Scene
2. 13.02.2025: South-East Dialogue: Definitions of Art, Visibility & Funding
3. 08.05.2025: Social Responsibility of Art
4. 12.06.2025: Environmental Responsibility of Art
Participation is for free, please sign up using this registration link. The full programme will be published about 4 weeks prior to the event.
Thank you for engaging in these highly political topics. EAIPA is pleased to offer actual information and best-practices throughout Europe.
# 1 Community Building: Uniting the Art Scene
While in some European countries interest groups and associations have already represented the interests of specific art scenes, such as the independent performing arts sector, for many years on the national level, other countries‘ art scenes still face an uphill battle when it comes to uniting artists and voicing their concerns and demands as one. Since the effectiveness of solidary structures and common goals in policy negotiations has been proven, this event will thus focus on how some artists and cultural workers have scrambled to establish structures in their regions in order to bring together artists to join those conversations. Artists at grassroots level, representatives from newly created arts associations and those working despite lack of funding will talk about the challenges, demands and progress they have seen in their countries.
# 2 South-East Dialogue: Definitions of Art, Visibility and Funding
For this event, artists, producers and representatives from arts associations and interest groups based in Southern and Eastern European countries will come together to discuss ways of thriving without major state support. As some countries‘ art scenes rely on cooperation with other European partners and receive funding from bodies such as the Norway Grants scheme, artists and cultural organisations have had to find other means to fill the gaps of national funding opportunities. Especially independently working artists or those with a multidisciplinary approach often fall outside limited definitions of state-sponsored art practices. Questions thus arise as how to survive as an artist in those situations, and how advocacy efforts and international collaboration can raise the visibility of underfunded local art scenes.
# 3 Social Responsibility of Art
In a recent communique on the working conditions of artists, the European Union has reiterated its commitment to upholding artistic freedom in all member countries. However, as cultural debates have recently become more and more politicized, especially in countries with more authoritarian governmental rule, the role of the artist as a social agent has to be re-examined: What responsibility does the artist have in creating their art? Do artistic projects need to address the issues facing their communities, or should art be a site of refuge? Can it be both? These and other questions will be discussed by artists and academics working in the independent performing arts sector.
# 4 Environmental Responsibility of Art
With a looming climate crisis, artists and art projects are not only asked to uphold ecologically sustainable working practices, but to address environmental debates in their work as well. Repurpose, reuse and recycle have therefore driven organisational innovation, and topics concerning the planetary decay in the age of the Anthropocene have started to conquer stage and gallery. But what can the ecologically insignificant arts sector really achieve in the face of big polluters, like the car or energy sector? For this event, artists, cultural managers and sustainability experts will come together to discuss the ways in which we can effect structural change and the role of individual artistic responsibility.
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