Events Archive
In the last two years, international travel was transformed by a pandemic, Brexit, civil unrest in many parts of the world, and regime change in the US. Meanwhile, our industry’s reliance on international travel has raised concerns about the sustainability of our practices. Join three experts on artist mobility as they talk through the legal, ethical, and practical issues that we must all confront when artists hit the road. Zelie Flach heads Wales Arts International’s mobility work, helping the U.K. manage the artist mobility impact of Brexit.
Entitled ‘Re-Creation, l’Europe de la création et des artistes en mouvement’, these meetings, which will be held on March 4 at the Théâtre de la Colline in Paris, will provide an opportunity to reflect on the future of artistic creation in Europe.
The health crisis has put a strain on the production and dissemination of shows in all fields, as well as the holding of exhibitions or events dedicated to the visual arts. This situation has had negative consequences for many European artists, production and dissemination structures and cultural venues.
Participation d’On the Move à une session organisée par le Fonds Roberto Cimetta sur le sujet: Vers une mobilité artistique et culturelle, durable et équitable : quels enjeux aujourd’hui dans l’espace méditerranéen ?
Avec la participation de Selim Ben Safia (chorégraphe et directeur artistique d’Al Badil en Tunisie) et Myriam Amroun (curatrice et opératrice culturelle, Alger).
Animée par Marie Le Sourd (On the Move), Fanny Bouquerel (Fonds Roberto Cimetta).
In the last two years, international touring was transformed by a pandemic, Brexit, civil unrest in many parts of the world, and regime change in the US. Join five experts on artist mobility as they discuss the legal and practical issues that European artists encounter when they tour outside of Europe, and the challenges European promoters must grapple with when bringing musicians into the EU.
Moderated by Marie Fol, President of On the Move with OTM members Tamizdat (Matthew Covey), Wales Arts International (Zélie Flach).
14:00-16:15 CET
The second pilot phase of i-Portunus supporting individual artists and cultural professionals is now coming to an end.
The issue of mobility for artists is a central point in building a professional career: developing your network, expanding your field of experimentation, learning from elsewhere. The residency format is the most effective tool in this regard, offering artists reception and remuneration conditions favourable for working.
The pandemic has been impacting cultural mobility flows in Europe and internationally and has been intensifying or deepening conversations and forms of actions related to more sustainable, fairer and ethical forms of mobility. How do these reflections and potential new formats of cultural mobility impact your own project or organisation? Which questions would you like to raise in order to continue to think on a European and international scale?
The Cultural Forum The COVID-19 Era- Breakthroughs and Possibilities of Creative Industries will elaborate more about new ways of cooperation within CCI sector. How has the Covid-19 pandemic changed the working conditions, and is the industry in a state of change and renewal? What kind of new possibilities and needs for cooperation are emerging in the field, and how can we use competences and synergies in new resourceful ways?