Archive for the ‘role of arts and culture’ Category

Community Spotlight: Cristian S. Aluas – Artist and Teacher, Kanata, Ontario

April 14th, 2011 by sbattle

As many across the country are starting to organize activities for Culture Days 2011, people are writing in, sharing their stories and what they’re planning for this year’s event, happening September 30, October 1 & 2. Here, we’re profiling individual artists who will be sharing their craft with those in their communities over the 2011 Culture Days weekend.

My name is Cristian S. Aluas and I am a full-time artist and art teacher, with a new art school here in Kanata (suburb of Ottawa). For starters, I was born in Romania and came here when I was 8 years old, fostering a love of art that grew here in Canada, at Canterbury High School, Algonquin College, and Concordia University (all specializing in the visual arts). I am proud to be Canadian, so that is one of the main reasons I love being part of Culture Days, and sharing my artistic gifts with my community.

I started my professional career in 2002, and have been teaching privately for art schools in the Ottawa area for 8 years. I noticed that in my area, Kanata, there was a demand for art classes, and I began taking students privately. This year, I have decided to focus on forming my own art school in Kanata, to serve my community by providing fun and creative ways that they can pursue a drawing or painting hobby, or develop skills in the visual arts. I teach ages 7 and up, and adults, subjects such as Cartooning, Drawing, and Painting with Acrylics (or water soluble Oils). Art can be a great creative outlet, I am passionate about it, and I love to share my knowledge with others.

Being part of Culture Days, I hope to spread awareness of the services that I provide, and to have an easy way for people to come by and get a complimentary art class, and know that there is a place now in the constantly growing Kanata area where young people and adults alike can pursue their dreams and interests and learn how to draw and paint.

Looking forward to seeing you on Saturday October 1st, from 2pm-3pm, for a free Culture Days Art Class!

More info can be found at www.CSA1.ca

Innisfil Public Library – “Where Culture Lives”

April 8th, 2011 by Reuben Finley

Nazanin Shoja, Ontario Arts Council Culture Days Animator/Coordinator, recently spoke with the Innisfil Public Library, which hosted a number of Culture Days activities in 2010. Here’s an account of their experience and thoughts on the active role that can be played by libraries in promoting local talent.


Celebrating Culture Days 2010

Innisfil Public Library is a multi-branch system within a geographically diverse community located in central Ontario.  The Culture Days initiative complements the library’s mandate as a community gathering place providing progressive, user-oriented library service that anticipates the educational, cultural, leisure and other informational needs within the community.  Participation in the program achieved several organizational goals including collaboration with local partners to enhance community involvement, promotion of the library in order to encourage the widest possible use of services, and focused attention on the achievements of local artists.

Innisfil Public Library has participated in artist studio tours and regularly displays artwork in its main branch.  However, through the Culture Days planning process, staff realized that we had neglected to promote artisans in our communities.  As a result, Culture Days became an opportunity to highlight a neglected aspect of local talent.  Through previously established partnerships with arts groups, possible participants were identified. We were specifically seeking artisans whose work would engage the public with hands-on activities.  For example, at the Cookstown Branch, woodcarving and quilting were highlighted and library customers were fascinated to watch the works unfold before them.

Through Culture Days, the perception of the library’s role within the community is shifting.  Libraries are viewed, not only as a source of information, but also as a place “where culture lives”.  Library customers have come to view the library as a destination that will continually surprise and delight them with the breadth of arts programming and variety of experiences to be shared.  This perception will continue to grow as the library continues to participate in futureCulture Days weekends.   As a largely rural population, Innisfil residents can take pride in participating in a cross-Canada celebration of culture.  Participation in this event was worthwhile for the Innisfil Public Library and we will most definitely continue in the future.  In 2011, the Culture Days theme will be “performers” and we anticipate an even more exciting celebration of community talent.

Get in touch with your elected representatives

August 30th, 2010 by Aubrey Reeves

When you are spreading the news about your Culture Days activity, don’t forget to also contact your elected representatives.  This will support the Culture Days objective to build public awareness for the importance of arts and culture in our communities.  Nothing could better foster a broad appreciation for the arts among our elected officials than witnessing local artists engage the public with their arts activities in their own ridings.

City or town Councillors, Members of Parliament (MP) and Members of Provincial Parliament (MPP)* value communications from their constituents. They want to be informed of the issues that are important to voters and know what is happening in their constituencies. Like the public at large, elected representatives don’t always understand what artists do or recognize the value your work contributes to their community. A greater appreciation among elected representatives for arts and culture will have a positive long-term impact on the whole cultural sector. Don’t be shy; invite them to your activity and start up a conversation. You may be surprised how interested they are in the arts and to learn about your work.

Elected representatives can be overwhelmed with the sheer volume of emails and other pieces of correspondence that they receive.  Make your invitation and activity stand out by emphasizing how Culture Days offers them a unique behind-the-scenes peak at the creative process. Invite them to come try their hand at art making or to meet one-on-one with creators.  

* The official name of provincial elected representatives varies depending on the province. In Ontario they are called MPPs. Please visit your provincial government website to find out the official title of your elected representatives to properly address them in your letter.

How to contact your elected representative

Federal Members of Parliament
View a list of current MPs here or search for your riding and MP at Elections Canada

Please note: Mail may be sent postage-free to any Member at the following address:
House of Commons
Parliament Buildings
Ottawa, Ontario
Canada
K1A 0A6

Ontario Members of Provincial Parliament
View a list of current Ontario MPPs here or find your electoral district at Elections Ontario.  In other provinces please consult your provincial government website for similar directories of elected representatives.

Did you know that Fridays are Constituency Day for Ontario MPPs? Most MPPs should be in their home ridings on Fridays so you have a better chance that they will attend an activity taking place on September 24.

Regions, Counties and Municipalities
There are hundreds of regional councils and municipalities across Ontario and thousands across Canada with varying and sometimes overlapping responsibility for arts and culture infrastructure. Despite this patchwork, it is often the politicians at the local level who are the most engaged with their community’s cultural events. As a result, it is worth the effort to find out how to contact your councillors and mayor and to invite them to your activity.  

View the Association of Municipalities of Ontario’s list of municipalities, counties, regions and districts here with links to each municipality’s official websites.

Tell us what they said
Let us know if an elected representative has confirmed his/her attendance at your activity and whether he/she will be making a public statement or will be doing a photo-op. Also let us know if an elected representative has sent you any interesting feedback on Culture Days or your activity.

Written by Aubrey Reeves, OAC’s Ontario Culture Days Animator/Coordinator

All Good Things Come in Small Packages

July 29th, 2010 by Crystal Kolt

‘All good things come in small packages’ I’ve heard this saying all of my life and although sometimes I didn’t want to agree, it always seemed to be true. I mourned my skinny legs and 56 pounds at age twelve, skinny arms while pounding out Chopin in my teens and 20’s and would give anything to have a taste of that ‘problem’ today (I’m planning a Valerie Bertinelli-esque comeback). Similarly when my husband and I were studying Piano duo in New York with fabulous piano duo teacher/performer Jeaneane Dowis, one of her many words of wisdom was to build our career in a small community where you can hone your art, survive with family and friends during those ‘thrifty’ years shall we say then move on up the circuit.

Well the small town she meant was Winnipeg and as life would have it we would invest in those words by heading eventually more North until we would arrive at the best artistic time in our lives in a town (it’s actually still called a City because at one time its population was over 10,000 and once you’re called a City you’re a city) of 6,000 people called Flin Flon. We left Winnipeg thinking that we were leaving music behind forever. You see 15 years ago when we were professional musicians (Mark with the Royal Winnipeg Ballet and Contemporary Dancers and myself teaching piano and enjoying being a stay at home mom with our two children) government cuts seemed to be happening all over the place and we either had to come up with a plan or live off of the kids in our old age. One law degree later led us to this northern community.

Little did we know what we were getting into. Did we gulp when we drove past the Welcome to Flin Flon Home of Bobby Clarke billboard? Yes but we soon found out that this place was also once the home of famed Tenor Jon Vickers, the Young family (Neil’s dad and grandparents), the Prices and the Goodman’s. Twenty five years earlier, music and musical theatre was HUGE in this community!

Hearing about our musical past, we were embraced. Within a few months a chorus of 40 people was formed, a year later it was up to 80 and it swells to over the 100 person mark yearly. We have performed with the Winnipeg Symphony Orchestra, the Saskatoon Symphony, many amazing independent Canadian artists and 25 of our group joined in the New York premier of Scott Macmillan’s Celtic Mass for the Sea in New York’s Carnegie Hall. Alternating between classical masterworks and musical theatre productions we have also created and produced original musical theatre that have received National recognition (check out Bombertown the Musical on Youtube if you want). Our peers shake their heads in wonder. How is it possible?

We love our small community and we’re not the only ones. I’ll bet R. Murray Schaefer, Heather Bishop or Irvin Head would back me up. We love getting to the ‘big city’ to cheer on our friends but ‘no matter how humble there’s no place like home’. I CHEER ON ALL SMALL COMMUNITIES IN CANADA TO CELEBRATE CULTURE DAYS! By the way, I have to admit I now enjoy watching a few games of Hockey and a few players have joined the Flin Flon Community Choir. There’s balance in everything.

Crystal Kolt

What’s your elevator pitch for Culture Days?

July 13th, 2010 by Erica Mattson

First off, hello – this is my first post on the Culture Days site! I’ve been involved with the project for over a year now, first as a member of the Alberta Task Force when I worked at Calgary Arts Development. Since that time I’ve moved to Vancouver and I’ve just started helping with online communications for Culture Days as the countdown to September begins.

Even though my official role with Culture Days is mostly about the online world, I wanted to write a post about spreading the word in real life (“IRL” if you’re conserving characters in the Twitter-verse!). A lot of the people I talk to either haven’t heard about Culture Days, or they only know a little bit and they’re eager for more details. Either way, it’s an awesome opportunity to share my enthusiasm for the movement and add a bit of fuel to the word of mouth marketing efforts for Culture Days.

I don’t know about you, but the more I talk about something, the easier it gets to understand why I’m excited about it. When I first learned about Culture Days, I immediately thought, “Great, a ParticipACTION campaign for the arts!” And that’s true: a national awareness campaign for Culture Days encouraging all Canadians to celebrate the arts begins this August with generous support from media partners like the Globe and Mail, CBC and St. Joseph’s Media. For me, the idea of a robust, cross-Canada marketing campaign for the arts is tremendously exciting. I’m sure this is true of all artists and cultural workers, and for everyone who cares about the artistic life of our country.

As September draws near, I’m also struck by the openness of the Culture Days movement. I love that so many people in so many communities across the country will have a chance to get in the middle of that line between audience and creator. I love that anyone in Canada can easily organize an activity and that every conversation, online or offline, contributes to the movement. Most of all I love that everyone seems to have a personal connection with arts and culture and when I tell them about Culture Days they’re intrigued and glad to know that something like this is finally happening.

I thought I’d share the “elevator pitch” I hear coming out of my mouth when people ask me what Culture Days is all about. It’s written out here thanks to a conversation with my dog, Emily, who happens to be named after one of my favourite Canadian artists, Emily Carr!

A lot of people say Culture Days is like a ParticipACTION campaign for the arts. There’s a national awareness campaign starting this August with media partners like the Globe and Mail, CBC and WHERE Magazine. During Culture Days – it’s in September – there will be hundreds of free, interactive activities for the public like behind the scenes tours, free performances and community art projects. Thousands of artists, individuals, organizations and communities are involved in organizing Culture Days. It will be the largest-ever grassroots campaign to celebrate the arts and promote cultural participation in Canada, which is really exciting to me and I think to everyone who cares about the arts. You should check out the website: CultureDays.ca.

I’d love to hear the soundbyte you’ve created for your activity or community. Just post a comment below and think of it as another conversation in your word of mouth marketing campaign!

Gavin Stride speaks at Art Matters. “You know what the difference is between sport and art? Sport is less competitive.”

June 24th, 2010 by Helen Yung

Last week I was at the 51st Art Matters forum, which took place this time in Kitchener-Waterloo during the Magnetic North Theatre Festival. Art Matters is a series of public forums on arts and culture organized by their Excellencies, Governor General Michaelle Jean and her partner Jean-Daniel Lafond. Some 230 people attended this iteration. The theme was Creating Art, Creating Communities.

Gavin Stride, director of UK’s Farnham Maltings, was one of the cultural practitioners at Art Matters who was invited to present some thoughts on the topic. He started with a funny and insightful anecdote:

On a visit to Brittany last year I was walking round a fairly austere cathedral in Vannes with my son. Above the altar there was a beautiful stained glass window of the crucifixion. We were following a fairly elderly English couple around and the wife turned to her husband and said ‘You see the sky around Jesus’ head?’ and the husband said ‘yes’ and she said ‘That’s the colour I want our bathroom’.

Everyone laughed at this. And Gavin immediately said, “You see, we laugh. But I would argue that this woman was making an artistic choice about the quality of her life. Art is everywhere.” Or, one could say – artists and cultural creators are everywhere.

It was a great opener to a great presentation that articulated many points and perspectives that I thought the Culture Days network have also considered, debated or would otherwise be interested in hearing. Gavin’s presentation continued as follows:

I would contest that for our communities and the arts to survive we need to disenthrall our view of what the arts are and are not. I like that word, disenthrall. To reject the things that we are enthralled to. We need to reject ideas that are too often posed as opposites. Excellence and popular, accessible or experimental, maker or audience, high or low art, amateur or professional. We also have to get away from the drug dealer attitude of getting people in on the soft stuff before we get them on to real art. People express who they are in all sorts of ways. As knitters and cooks as gardeners and cake decorators, we tell stories to our children, dance at weddings, sing songs to our country at the start of football matches. Art is everywhere.

In the UK the Arts Council of England has just undertaken a major piece of research on how the arts might thrive over the next ten years. A kind of 2020 plan. And the sector itself said “invest in participation.” The more people know how to make a pot the more likely they are to recognise the work of an extraordinary potter, understand the craft and be prepared to pay for it. You see, participation and excellence are constituents of the same ambition.

Of course this is what sport has been doing for years.  You know the difference is between sport and art? Sport is less competitive. Picture those huge marathons that happen in London and New York and cities all over the world. Well some are wonderful athletes who will cover the course in 2 hours 12 minutes but there are also people finishing inside two three five hours. – and celebrate their achievements.  People train for months in our parks and on our roads to be as good as they can be on that one day. They encourage each other. Buddy up, lend a hand, even stop to check someone is alright. Everybody gets that if we stay active we will live longer. That sport is good because it keeps your body healthy. Well I would argue that what sport does for the body the arts do for the mind. We need those events in the arts.

I am not sure if arts create communities but they do help us think, understand, feel and imagine. That’s what the arts do. They develop our emotional intelligence, bring us together, help us imagine, heal, build empathy and develop a vocabulary to make collective sense of the world.

When I first started working with Farnham Maltings I said that my job was to help people feel happier, live longer and be safer. And that if I didn’t get that right they could have their money back. I still believe it. It is a much more compelling argument than ‘I want you money to pay for my art’.  I don’t know about in Canada but in the UK only about 10% of people are regular attendees of the arts. Well I am interested in the other 90%. That might mean working in new ways in new places through a different set of skills.

In the UK we have moved in the last month from a labour government whose emphasis was on the instructive value of art to a conservative government who are happy to promote the intrinsic value. Me? I am too busy trying to make the world a better place to get involved in politics. But there is something about the institutional value of art. The capacity they have to make sense of all our lives. I’m with Isabel Allende when she says ‘Art is to humankind what dreams are to the individual’ And it is everywhere.

What do you think? Did Gavin’s thoughts resonate with you? Share your thoughts – leave a comment below.


Culture Days in South Korea

June 3rd, 2010 by Lucy White

[logo for 2010 Jeju Haevichi Arts Festival]I am about to travel to South Korea to make a presentation at the Jeju Haevichi Arts Festival at the invitation of the Korean Cultural & Arts Centers Association. I’ve been asked to make special note of Culture Days! I am thrilled that news of Culture Days has spread as far afield as South Korea and a little daunted at the same time. After all, the inaugural Culture Days is still more than 3 months away.

I’m taking the fabulous promo video and I hope that I’ll be able to demonstrate the website. There is already an interesting range of events registered from rug hooking to play readings — that give the flavour of what is to come.

Of course, I’ll be chatting to dozens of arts professionals as well and I hope to bring back useful questions and feedback for the Culture Days team.
As the event grows nearer and the details start to overwhelm us, the news that our initiative is of interest on the other side of the planet is a great reminder that what we are about launch is truly innovative and forward-looking.

Lucy White, PACT

Four Great Insights into Outreach and Arts Education

May 25th, 2010 by Aubrey Reeves
workshop

Attendees at the Opera.ca Regional Roundtable take part in a mock Culture Days activity workshop. From left to right: Stephen Bye, Opera Hamilton, David Speers, Opera Hamilton, Caitlin Coull, COC, Calista Biermans, Toronto Summer Music and Cecelia Paolucci, Toronto Summer Music.

On Friday, May 14, I attended a regional roundtable on arts education and outreach presented by Opera.ca the nationally association for opera in Canada.  Following several other speakers on arts education, I had the opportunity to introduce the Culture Days movement to leaders in the Ontario opera scene. Three arts education staff from the Canadian Opera Company, Tapestry New Opera Works and Opera Aterlier led a group exercise designed to help organizations understand the value of arts education and to brainstorm ideas for potential Culture Days activities.

Arts education programs are often called “outreach” but Christina Loewen (Opera.ca Executive Director) floated the idea that we should in fact be calling it “inreach” since the idea is to welcome the public inside our arts organizations and within the creative process. “Inreach” conveys many of the goals of Culture Days. With a mission to develop new opera works by Canadian and international creators, Tapestry invites the public to “inreach” during every step of their creation and production process throughout the year. The reason is simply, said Amber Ebert (Tapestry), “Artists are our best spokespeople.” The passion of artists positively reflects on their company and imparts to the public a great appreciation for their art form.

Many arts managers wonder about the value of doing outreach when resources are tight and staff limited. Outreach is often justified on the assumption that consumers of free programming will eventually become ticket buyers but the transition is never so simple. When companies invest in arts education, especially when it is aimed at children, the return on that investment could take 20 years or more. Therefore, Katherine Semcesen (COC) explained the priority of outreach should be to promote your art form first, your company second.  Collectively, outreach will build a greater arts-aware public, which will in turn produce a stronger arts and cultural sector.

Nancy Hitzig (Opera Atelier) reminded us all to think back to that one influential arts education moment that inspired us to pursue careers and lives in the arts. Most of us can recall an awe-inspiring school trip to a museum or a special music teacher who shared her enthusiasm for the violin. Each Culture Days activity has the potential to be one of those special moments for someone else. You can be the artist who inspires the next generation to pursue their artistic potential and play a hand in shaping their life-long love of the arts.

The roundtable concluded with the arts education staff leading us through an opera creation workshop, where groups had to write and perform their own 5 minute opera with the aid of an accompanist and some simple props. Suddenly put in the position of performers, many of the executive directors and managers were nervous and reticent. With a bit of encouragement and teamwork, we brainstormed some ideas and produced some very silly short operas. The arts education staff pointed out how we were feeling uncomfortable, which will be the same for the public during Culture Days. Participating in the creative process is outside of many people’s comfort zones. We have to be prepared to deal with the public feeling silly or nervous. As activity hosts it is our responsibility to make the public feel safe and welcome within the creative process. If achieved, both the public and the activity hosts will be rewarded with new ideas and stimulating interactions.

Written by Aubrey Reeves, Ontario Arts Council’s Culture Days Animator/Coordinator.

Facts & Figures

March 24th, 2010 by Culture Days

A dynamic culture sector is a magnet for talent and a catalyst for economic prosperity, attracting people and spurring creativity across all sectors of the economy

  • The Conference Board of Canada estimates that the total direct, indirect and induced contributions of the arts and culture industries in 2007 was $84.6 billion, representing 7.4% of Canada’s gross domestic product (GDP). For comparison, the value-added contribution of Canada’s entire retail industry was just under 6 per cent in 2007.
  • The culture sector created and induced 1.1 million jobs in the Canadian economy in 2007, representing 7.1% of Canada’s total employment.*
  • Culture is a growth market: Consumer spending on cultural goods and services grew by 36% between 1997 and 2003, much higher than inflation (14%) and population growth (6%).**
  • Two-thirds of all international tourists participate in a cultural activity†. These arts and cultural tourists spend more and stay longer.
  • In terms of international trade, the value of original visual art exported from Canada grew from $45 million in 1996 to $70 million to 1998 to $145 million in 2000.***

Cultural participation enhances Canadian society

  • Cultural participation has been shown to reduce social isolation and increase the likelihood that a citizen will empathize with and assist a neighbour. In a 2005 study by Hill Strategies, cultural participants were found to be up to 41% more likely to do a favour for a neighbour than non-participants.
  • Citizens who read books, attend theatre and classical music events and visit art galleries, historic sites, conservation areas or parks show are more likely to feel a significantly greater sense of belonging to their province and to Canada than citizens who do not participate in such cultural activities.

Studies show consistently that Canadians view arts and culture very positively

  • In a 2005 Ipsos-Reid study, 94% of respondents said that having a wide variety of cultural activities and events makes for a better place to live.
  • In a 2003 study by T.J. Cheney Research, 90% of respondents indicated that they think school children should be taken to visit public art galleries annually, with 3 out of 4 agreeing it is important to have an art gallery in their community.

Canadian’s appetite for arts and culture continues to grow. In 2003, Canadians spent:

  • $980 million on live performing arts, a 31% increase from 1997;
  • $530 million on works of visual art in 2003, 48% more than in 1997;
  • $410 million on admissions to museums and heritage sites in 2003, 23% more than in 1997;
  • $1.2 billion on books, 34% more than in 1997. For comparison, consumer spending on live sporting events was $530 million in 2003.
* Source: Conference Board of Canada
** Source: Hill Strategies
*** Source: T.J. Cheney Research
† Source: Americans for the Arts

Arts & Culture in Society

March 24th, 2010 by Culture Days

Arts and Culture Play A Fundamental Role In The Development of Canadian Society

A society’s or a people’s culture is expressed in many different ways – including painting, writing, theatre, dance, pottery, quilting, museums, landmarks, sculptures, architecture, and many more. To quote one of our national collaborators, the Creative City Network of Canada:

  • Culture is a way for individuals and communities to express and engage themselves with family, friends, and their neighbourhoods, their communities. Culture can be used to renew or revitalize municipalities, regions, even a country. It can build community identity and pride, strengthen bonds, improve quality of life on all socioeconomic levels, and engage children and youth in education and their environment.
  • Culture can be the catalyst for positive change, engaging all ages and communities. Diversity can be embraced through culture, building trust and understanding. And culture can act as the economic engine that drives municipalities toward growth and prosperity.

The Creative City Network has published a series of 6 papers collectively entitled, Making the Case for Culture. These documents “detail how and why culture is key to our betterment”. Click on the image below to be taken to the Creative City Network’s website where you may download or read the papers online.