Introduction Reflections Whats new This Present Moment helps to set up Human Rights thread Human Rights political amp civil social amp economic Trends eg good and bad Innovations ID: 638950
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Slide1
Artistic FreedomSlide2Slide3
Structure
Introduction
Reflections (What’s new?)
This Present Moment (helps to set up Human Rights thread)…
Human Rights
political & civil
social & economic
Trends (e.g. good and bad)
Innovations
n
ew language (e.g.
artivist
, socially-engaged, actor for change)
n
ew organizational forms (this broadens the CSO section on advocacy to funding bodies, legal aid & holistic approaches)
how policy shifts set the stage for these innovations?Slide4
Structure (cont.)
Obstacles to Artistic Freedom (incl. difficulty to implement in policy sense)
Indicators to be monitored
2030 Sustainable Development Agenda
Other things to watch—new developments
Conclusion
Embedded:
case studies
quotes
design: photos, graphics
t
imeline (experimental)Slide5
‘Formal’ Cases
New government policy & measures, e.g. Sweden (development assistance), Tunisia (article 42 of new constitution);
Symbolic actions, declarations & publications, e.g. Carthage Declaration on the Protection of Artists in Vulnerable Situations; Amsterdam ‘artist visa’
Bi-lateral participation or cooperation where it didn’t previously exist (still looking for good examples??)
Funding mechanisms that function & set precedent e.g. Nordic countries
City Leadership (bilateral partnerships such as Amsterdam to Sao Paulo, and/or a city countering state stance or
area norms such
as Mexico City)Slide6
Non-F
ormal
C
ases as Ecosystem
Artist
e.g. Mohammed Siam,
Rafram
Chaddad
, Tania
Bruguera
,
Samandal’s
crowdfunding
)
Space
e.g. No Lugar (Quito),
Hammana
(Beirut), Port Said Cultural Center (Egypt)
Organization
e.g. Al
Mawred’s
Be With Art
, Roberto
Cimetti
Fund’s
In Exile
,
Nhimbe
Trust
Network
e.g. Arterial Africa
Community Initiative
e.g. UNICORN (Sweden)Slide7
Quotes
Art works
subterraneanly
. It’s never the striking, superficial cause and effect people would like to see. Art goes underground into people’s dreams and surfaces months later in strange, unexpected actions. People bring a sort of instant-coffee expectation to art; they’d like the results to be immediate. It doesn’t work that way. I like that image of art dropping down through the various layers of the individual’s psyche, into dreams, stirring around there and then surfacing later in action.
–
Athol
FugardSlide8
Quotes (cont.)
Public media falls under the aegis of the State Party that lays the editorial policy and in some instances the editorial policy may act as an impediment to full cultural expressions. The tendency may be to ban seemingly unpalatable cultural expressions in the eyes of the State Party.
– Zimbabwe QPR