FIT for the festival
Against the backdrop of a flourishing festival industry and the associated inflationary use of the term "festival", the Theatre/Festivals in Transition (FIT) initiative spent the last two years examining the current role and future potential of festivals in general, and of theatre festivals in particular. One aspect of the work was "the festivals' cultural role in a Europe growing closer together". The material was collected in the framework of eight festivals in eight countries, at symposia, panel discussions and round-table talks, and has now been published.
All festival organisers have to contend with the "deep-rooted prejudice" that festivals are "fireworks, astounding and amazing audiences with sensations, only to immediately disappear". In fact, says Tilmann Broszat, speaking on behalf of all organisers and the FIT network, festivals are "complex cultural performances" comprising more than just the individual performance or presentation. Festivals are "centres of cultural transfers" for opinions, aesthetics and artistic potentials, and should bring new and unaccustomed things to town. Consequently, they do not compete with local cultural institutions. They in fact complement each other, says Broszat: while festivals have "more the function of a lighthouse", local theatres, for example, stand more for the provision of "basic cultural supplies". "Festivals create their own cultural landscape and an environment that is open to art" for a limited period. The relationship between festivals and sponsors, the economy and cultural policy is also addressed. The records of all eight discussion sessions can be found here
Battle of Algiers
More than 50 people were killed, and over 250 injured, in attacks in Algiers. They constitute an assault not only on the current government, but also on its cultural policy. Algiers is the 2007 Cultural Capital of the Arab world. [more]![Internal link [Internal]](fileadmin/templates/images/link_int.gif)
More than an interesting event
The cultural capitals to be, Liverpool and Stavanger (2008), Linz and Vilnius (2009), Ruhr, Pécs, Istanbul (2010), Turku and Tallinn (2011 ) want sustainable effects. [more]![Internal link [Internal]](fileadmin/templates/images/link_int.gif)
Interview: Jacques Santer
Jacques Santer, former President of the EU Commission, criticises that Europe has too often defined itself "ex negativo" in the past. And yet, there is no alternative to Europe. [more]![Internal link [Internal]](fileadmin/templates/images/link_int.gif)
European cultural associations
There are just under 80 cultural associations at the European level. According to a new study commissioned by the Kulturpolitische Gesellschaft, only a good half of them are actually active in matters of cultural policy for... [more]![Internal link [Internal]](fileadmin/templates/images/link_int.gif)
Free every day
In the past, free daily newspapers were alternately seen as being "the future of the press market" or "a threat to quality journalism". They have in the meantime achieved an average market share of more than 20 percent in Europe... [more]![Internal link [Internal]](fileadmin/templates/images/link_int.gif)
