European
Cultural Policies 2015: A Report with Scenarios on the Future of
Public Funding for Contemporary Art in Europe
The report was released 20 - 24 October 2005 at
Frieze Art Fair as part of Frieze Projects, and is a collaboration between
Iaspis, eipcp and åbäke.
Workshop on Saturday 19 November 2005, 12 pm -
8 pm, at Iaspis in Stockholm.
It
is 2015. Art is almost completely instrumentalised - regardless
of whether its financing
is private or public. Art services
are either national or European interests, where
it is especially useful in the construction or
reinforcement of specific identities. At the
same time, art is a desirable commercial product.
It is ideal for collecting and it contributes
to regional development whilst providing society
with new creative employment opportunities. Visiting
art museums and centres is a popular, easily
digested leisure activity. In 2015 art
is also used to stave off undesirable fascistic
and nationalistic tendencies in society.
This
is one way of viewing the near future according to the eight contributors
to European Cultural
Policies 2015: A Report with Scenarios on the
Future of Public Funding for Contemporary Art
in Europe. The report is a collaboration between
Iaspis (International Artist Studio Programme
in Sweden) eipcp (European Institute for Progressive
Cultural Policies) and åbäke, an international design
group based in London. The report has been produced on
the occasion of the Frieze Art Fair in October
2005. At the Frieze Art Fair, the report
will be distributed free of charge. The report
will also be available as a pdf-file at www.iaspis.com and www.eipcp.net
On
Saturday 19 November 2005, tactics and strategies for concrete action
based on the report will
be discussed during a day-long workshop at
Iaspis. With the authors: Hüseyin Alptekin (artist,
Istanbul), Branka Curcic (editor of kuda.org, Novi sad), Tone Hansen
(artist and critic, Oslo), Frédéric Jacquemin (Fondation
Hicter, Brussels), Oleg Kireev (art and media
critic, Moscow), Gerald Raunig (theoretician, eipcp, Vienna) and
Cornelia Sollfrank (artist
and publicist, Berlin). The authors will give
public presentations on Saturday 19 November at Iaspis and will
participate in a public workshop.
Sunday 20 November is scheduled for closed
discussions between the authors for the report.
The aim is to think through and discuss the various
scenarios in order to start formulating methods
for dealing with the situation. Are site-specific approaches necessary?
How can networks
and other alliances function? How realistic are
alternative economies? What could be fruitful ways of approaching
mixed economies? The workshop
in Stockholm will later be followed up by workshops
in Vienna and elsewhere.
To register for the Stockholm workshop please
contact extra@iaspis.com before
Friday 11 November 2005. For further
information
visit www.iaspis.com IASPIS / Box 1610 / SE-111 86 Stockholm
Tel +46 (0)8 402 35 77 / Fax +46 (0)8 402 35
92
info@iaspis.com / www.iaspis.com
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