Hungarian Showcase Programme I Contemporary Drama Festival Budapest 2014 I Information

Hungarian Showcase Programme I Contemporary Drama Festival Budapest 2014 I Information

 

Dear Friends and Colleagues,

We are pleased to inform you that we are organizing Contemporary Drama Festival Budapest this year, too, making this the 12 the edition of the festival,running from 28 November to 7 DecemberThe Hungarian Showcase Programme of CDF Budapest 2014 is going to take place between 4 December and 7 December.

 

Last year, the focus of the festival was on introducing the new generation of Hungarian theatremakers, which proved to be a successful choice and an immensely remarkable focus, based on the feedback from our guests. That is why we think it is important to continue this pursuit this year, too, however, we are also presenting the latest works of the most well-known representatives of Hungarian contemporary theatre, such as Béla Pintér and CompanyÁrpád Schilling,Sándor Zsótér and playwright-director duo the Mohácsi brothers.

What today’s Hungarian theatre makers are most interested in is the current social and political situation in Hungary. These thoughts and intentions are present in and are reflected by every single performance in the Hungarian Showcase Programme, which were chosen by a seven-member professional jury, regardless of the materials these playwrights and directors are working from. This tendency hasn’t appeared in such an intensive way in any of our showcases.

We are proud to present original results of performance writing, from theatre makers such as Béla PintértheMohácsi brothersPéter Kárpáti,  Dániel Kovács and PálGöttinger with the help of novelist Márton Gerlóczy (with astage adaptation of Márton Gerlóczy’s novel). There is also going to be a chance for you to see guest performances from abroad (Regensburg, Bratislava, Cluj Napoca).

 We are also still on the mission to present performances of utmost genre and aesthetical diversity. This is reflected by the Showcase Programme, which contains performances of author’s theatre, physical theatre, dance theatre, concert theatre and youth theatre.

Also at the time of the Hungarian Showcase Programme, weare organizing aninternational conference on 5 Decemberdiscussing self-sustainable cultural and theatreproduction and cultural activism with the help ofinternational experts, in the framework of workshops.

Also, in connection with the Showcase Programme, theIndustry and Encounter Series is organized, in the framework of which national and international presenters, producers and artists will have the opportunity to meet, to exchange ideas and to discuss touring opportunities and possible future collaborations.

You can join us at the Festival Club in the Jurányi Incubator House after the performances in the evenings which offers different kinds of entertaining cultural programmes.

 

Unfortunately, our financial situation has not improved immensely compared to last year’s. The Hungarian National Cultural Fund has only increased last year’s support of 3500euros to about 6500 euros. Therefore, CDF 2014 can offer the following conditions for guests:

  • Free tickets for the performances of the Showcase Programme; 
  • Free participation in the Conference and the Industry Series
  • additional information including details of all shows, producer contacts and a CDF 2014 DVD show reel.
  • As for accommodation, foreseeably,  we can provide free accommodation to a limited amount of guests and discount price accommodation to others
  • All the performances will be subtitled or simultaneously translated into English; 
  • Assistance of our volunteers throughout the festival.

We are going to send you a formal invitation with details about the Showcase Programme and the registration form within a week.                                                                            

If you have any questions, please do not hesitate to contact us.

Kind regards,

Mária Szilágyi Festival Director and Dorottya Zsófia BacsiVisitors’ Programme Coordinator

 

Contemporary Drama Festival Budapest

Festival Office

H-1094 Budapest

Bokréta u. 10. I/1.

Hungary

Tel/Fax +361 786 2933

Mobil +3630 2032114

guests2014.dramafestival@gmail.com

szilagyi.dramafestival@gmail.com

bacsi.dramafestival@gmail.com

www.dramafestival.hu

 

 

Bakelit Multi Art Center, Budapest, Hungary

ABOUT US
Bakelit Multi Art Center is a cultural institute in the industrial area of a former spinner factory (Hazai Fésűsfonó és Szövőgyár). The factory worked as intensively from the early 1920s that there was a time when thousands of Cuban women worked there in the frames of a socialist exchange programme. From that time on there has been rhythm in the buildings. And still there is.
Our institute was found with the aim of building common future by involving different sorts of arts and the past of the unique location. We try to make our goal come true by contemporary theatre-, literature-, and dance performances, installations of fine art/applied art, concerts, festivals, and one-of-a-kind events. Bakelit M.A.C. gives the opportunity to learn, create, rehears and perform for those who come here. Moreover these artists have chance to make an impact not only on their audience but on each other as well.
As a result we have built multifunctional areas within the industrial buildings, which give us the possibility to use them according to the different unique and specified visions we face every day. That is how we assure the conditions of inspiring study and development.
Kckó/Bar and Palack Pult are the places of conversations between professionals and wider audience, where precious relations born constantly.
As you can see Bakelit M.A.C. works as a contemporary knowledge centre within the international cultural scene, much more than being just the “first factory-theatre of Budapest”, as we started. If we take a look at the creative results of the last few years we have constantly been an inspiring, charming and development-friendly multicultural environment. From education to realized professional success.
Because life has its own rhythm as well.

ACTIVITIES
• Contemporary theatre- and literature performances
• Dance performances
• Installations of fine arts/applied arts, new media activities
• Indoor and outdoor exhibitions, art programs
• Concerts
• Organizing international, regional and national projects, festivals
• V4 and EU partnership with cultural institutions, organisations, art companies & artists, wide professional network
• Workshop and conference venue
• International Artist-In-Residency program
• Art Caffe & Bar with free wifi
• Factory Hostel Budapest

INTERNATIONAL FESTIVAL VENUE
As an international multicultural centre we offer top quality infrastructure for all artistic fields at our multifunctional event places, which are fully equipped with the latest professional technology. Our event spaces (a total of 40- 900 m2) can be used and modified according to different sorts of festivals, theatre-, dance-, and classical music performances, concerts, conferences, lectures, meetings, workshops, fashion shows, movie making, photo shooting or exhibitions. Furthermore our rehearsal studios of varied sizes can be rented by bands and musicians.
• As an international multicultural centre Bakelit M.A.C. has the relevant technical background of the 21st century: goods lift, amplifying, sound, lights, service rooms (dressing room, stock-room, toilet, bath).
• Own kitchen, buffet, excellent cold- and hot meals (other catering company also acceptable if requested).
• Unique interior design if requested: art deco/retro furniture and additional elements.
• No quiet rules in the industrial area.
• Easy to find: it’s a 10-minutes drive from downtown by car; BUS nr. 23 (BUS nr. 923 by night) stops at the entrance.
• Free parking for more than 100 cars.

STUDIO is a fully sound-proofed 200 square metre hall covered with flexible wooden parquetry, 150 -200 persons can fit in. Non smoking hall, no natural light. The stage is made up by elements installed optionally.

HANGÁR is a 360 square metre hall, which consists of a ground area of 280 m2 and a gallery of 80 m2. It can hold 500-800 people and it is covered with dust free, smooth concrete floor. Natural light, darkening is available.

KUCKO/BAR has a parquet floor, mirrored walls and is 80 square metres in size. It's a multi-functional hall with excellent acoustic facilities. 70 people can fit in the bar and 20-25 dancers can rehears at a time in front of the mirrors. App. 40 person can fit in as audience at a studio theatre performance. No natural light.

PALACKPULT of 120 m2 gives opportunity for the audience and the artists, actors, dancers to meet before/after the performances.

Our experienced professional creative team can handle all promotional tasks related to cultural events in order to best use the communicational tools of the Hungarian online and printed press, radio and television, etc. We truly believe that planning and realization of all international tenders, festivals, workshops, seminars, conferences can be successful if we make it together. Bring your festival to Bakelit M.A.C. and we are matching you with wide professional and amateur audiences in Hungary.

FACTORY HOSTEL BUDAPEST
FACTORY HOSTEL BUDAPEST is a funky place to stay in while visiting Hungary, located in a former spinner factory (Hazai Fésűsfonó és Szövőgyár) of Budapest. Come and discover our instant artistic social scene full of talented young people from around the world. Enjoy the good-time atmosphere.
„Tell Me and I Will Forget; Show Me and I May Remember; Involve Me and I Will Understand.” – Confucius
We started our 52-bed hostel according to the thoughts above. FACTORY HOSTEL BUDAPEST is both the place of calmness and inspiration as there is room for international and Hungarian performers of different sorts of arts and students of international art schools and art institutions to influence each other and to have rest together during their learning periods, study camps, rehearsals, workshops, group exhibitions, etc. Contemporary dance, theatre, applied arts, fine arts, music, film, photography and digital media can effect each other at FHB as we believe that staying together and living together gives artists unique opportunities to develop each other. Moreover anybody else is welcomed who are likely to discover Budapest from such an artistic environment and is interested in alternative routes and highlights of the capital.
Rooms are located in a special architectural environment and are equipped with cosy beds, newly built bathrooms, lockers, air conditioning and heating. A fully arranged shared kitchen is available for all guests; furthermore there is a dorm with en-suit studio kitchen.
• Free wifi, 24 hour reception, security, travel support, and specialized holiday planning help our guests to feel comfortable during their stay, while they can choose from a great amount of cultural programmes on the spot between September and July all year.
• We offer the best pieces of Hungarian and international cuisine three times a day, as well as office services (print, copy, fax, laminating) and laundrette.
• You can hop on one of our Charity Bikes from “Bike Kitchen” and the donations are transferred to those who are in need.
• In the Movie Room our guests can choose from more than 120 concert films and 100 movies; moreover private videos are also allowed to be shared.
• Palack Pult and Kucko/Bar give room for loose, informal conversations with our existing and new friends by a cup of coffee, tea or a glass of finest Hungarian wine.
Bakelit Multi Art Center gives the opportunity to chill, fill-up and build new professional contacts and long-lasting friendships. Not only as performers and audience but as the guests of FACTORY HOSTEL BUDAPEST as well. Because if we would like to understand our lives we have to be involved. Together.
Booking and further information:
www.factoryhostelbudapest.com
info@factoryhostelbudapest.com
Phone: +36 30 376 9085
CONTACTS 164 Soroksári Street,
buliding 18,
H-1095 Budapest HUNGARY
GENERAL MANAGER: +36 30 516 8860
E-MAIL: info@bakelitstudio.hu
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS:+36 30 376 9085
E-MAIL: info@factoryhostelbudapest.com
OUR WEBSITE: www.bakelitstudio.hu
OUR SPONSORS
Bakelit
M.A.C.

Res Artis Newsletter, March 2011‏

Join us in Hungary! – Res Artis regional meeting in Debrecen, May 23-26

The main theme of the conference will gather around the notion of Horizon. Thinking of Hungary, we are reminded of one of its symbols, the national heritage of the country, the Hortobágy, The Great Plains with its unending horizon. The topics discussed at the conference will all gather around the theme of Horizon, as a scale of unending possibilities for art residencies.

Panel Discussions:

  • Different Models of art residencies
  • Across the border-a geographical comparison
  • Mobility and its restrains
  • Expectations from an artists’ point of view
  • What is a successful art residency
  • Visual arts vs. other disciplines
  • International and EU institutions: introductions, working structures
     

View full Conference Program


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What’s happening in Hungary?

Res Artis has three member organizations in Hungary. Two in Budapest and one in Debrecen.

  • The Hungarian Multicultural Center invites interested visual artists and writers to submit applications for its residency programs in downtown Budapest, Hungary. The goal is to provide a supportive community with uninterrupted time to work. The residencies offer participants a unique opportunity to interact with other artists representing a variety of cultures and backgrounds. Exhibitions and Artist Talk/Seminars/Workshops of public events organized along with the residencies. Next exhibition:

    9 X 12 (22.9X30.5cm) – Budapest
    AIR/HMC International Artists Residencies (works in a variety of media)
    Ferencvarosi PinceGallery, IX. Mester u. 5. Budapest 1095
    May 26 – June 19, 2011
    Opening reception: May 26 at 7:00pm
    Opening remarks: by Peter Baky
    Curator: Beata Szechy – HMC
     

  • Areamodul Kft – In 1983 Modulok-ids Studio opened its office and studio in the heart of Budapest. The studio's design practice has connections with education, interior design and architecture. Their residency program aims to develop unique arts and culture at an international level in Hungary by inviting contemporary visual artists and promoting exchange with local artists and creators.
     
  • The MODEM Centre for Modern and Contemporary Art is one of the largest and most up-to-date modern and contemporary art centres of the country and its greater region. It is located in the historical city centre, in the recently formed Baltazár Dezső Square. The three-storey gallery spreads on 4650 square metres of space. It will host the upcoming Res Artis Regional meeting from the 23rd to the 26th of May.
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Thank you Website and Newsletter Translators!

We are able to offer the Res Artis webpage and newsletter in English, Spanish and French. This would not be possible without the generous contributions from our many volunteer translators.

Thank you for your time, your skills and your generosity.

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Res Artis Members – Update your Profiles

It is really important that you take a moment to look over your profile page on the Res Artis website. Our new website has a different member’s profile system, resulting in a better search tool, but it only functions well if your residency’s information is re-entered. So please! Take a look.

If you have any questions about this, or need your log-in information, please email: julie@resartis.org
 

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What’s new in the member’s section?

  • 12 listings of funds, grants and programs especially supporting residency programs
  • 14 reviews of online tools especially useful for residency programs
  • 23 reports and research, essays and books relevant to the field

plus

  • Member’s Forum – start or join a conversation with your peers
  • Cooperation – join a fellow member in a project or apply together for a grant

Log in Today!
If you need your log-in information, please email: julie@resartis.org
 

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What are you looking for? A Residency? Conferences?

News – In this section on the Res Artis website, you will find the latest news from Res Artis and its members regarding conferences, festivals, exhibitions, grants etc.

Upcoming Deadlines – Here you will find residencies, workshops, opportunities… deadlines and open calls directly from our members
 

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New Residency: Medea Electronique Koumaria Residency, Greece

 

  • Where is it?
    Selassi, Sparta in an organic olive oil farm at the foot of Mount Taigetos in Sparta.
  • What is it?
    The artist collective Medea Electronique organizes every year, since 2009, the experimental artist residency Koumaria, which is based on improvisation and the practices of new media, taking place near the area of Sparta in Greece. Avant-garde artists from all over the world, inspired by the Greek natural landscape, create a multicultural and cross-media ‘dialogue,’ which leads to a collective presentation of an outcome.
  • Whats going on now?
    Our target with this residency is the creation of an educational experience for the participants, inspiring and exalting their future work. Through the multicultural association a cross-cultural dialogue can create new speculations or solidify older. In the past years, friendships and concepts for new artworks were formed between the residents, resulting in their further artistic cooperation. Medea Electronique, as an original art collective, is interested in the experimentation of the residency as a means of promoting new ways to work and cooperation among people with diverse cultural backgrounds. For us this experience works as a model for future creative contacts.
  • www.medeaelectronique.com
  • Medea Electronique Koumaria Residency on the Res Artis Website

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New Residency: ISIS Arts studios, UK

 

  • Where is it?
    ISIS Arts studios are based on a quiet square in the centre of Newcastle upon Tyne, North East England.
  • What is it?
    ISIS Arts is an artist led, visual and media arts organisation, which runs an international programme of commissions, residencies and events. ISIS Arts’ core ethos is to support artists to make critically engaged visual and media art, which is locally significant and internationally relevant, and to share the learning and relationships we gain. ISIS is committed to showing work within the public realm, engaging as wide an audience as possible in dialogue with artists and artworks, making our projects accessible to a diverse public.
  • Whats going on now?
    Currently ISIS Arts is developing a series of Nomadic Villages with partners from Austria, Bulgaria and Macedonia for artists who consider themselves to be without borders. The villages will support collaborative practice and exchange through engagement with rural communities who are usually excluded from creative discourse. The villages will be self-directed residencies during which artists will create visual artworks of social relevance influenced by their surroundings.
  • www.isisarts.org.uk

  • ISIS Arts on the Res Artis Website


mehr

Upcoming Res Artis meetings

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Upcoming Residency Deadlines

The complete listing of upcoming deadlines is listed on our website here:
www.resartis.org/en/news/upcoming_deadlines/



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Worldwide network of artist residen
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Phone: +31 20 6126600
Fax: +31 20 6126600

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please write to Julie in Istanbul:
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Other questions
please write to Mark in Amsterdam:
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on the move Newsflash 02/2011‏

February 11, 2011

www.on-the-move.org is a cultural mobility information network that aims to encourage and facilitate cross-border mobility and cooperation, contributing to building up a vibrant and shared European cultural space that is strongly connected worldwide. On-the-Move provides international cultural mobility information, engages in research, capacity building and advocacy mediating between the network members, other grassroots organisations and policy makers.

Please send your mobility news and opportunities: info@on-the-move.org

News from On the Move

New OTM website live! (14 February)On the Move is proud to launch its new website on the 14th of February. Stay tuned to www.on-the-move.org!Making Mobility Green! Please contribute to OTM´s research survey! (deadline: 31 March)On The Move is working with Julie’s Bicycle to create a Guide to the environmentally sustainable movement of performing arts and artists in Europe. Please contribute with your ideas, experiences and contacts to our online survey.OTM co-signs the mobility pilot projects recommendations to the new EU Culture Programme.On the Move has endorsed and contributed to the common position of the mobility pilot projects on the new EU Culture programme. This joint paper will be oficially presented to the European Commission at the Stakeholder Consultation Meeting that it will take place in Brussels on the 16th February.On the Move announces new Board and team members in 2011On the Move is happy to announce a new Executive Board and team members in 2011! 

EU News

Hungarian EU Presidency to adopt Council conclusions on mobility information services for artists and cultural professionalsOn the Move welcomes the upcomming adoption by the Hungarian EU Presidency of the Education, Culture and Youth Council conclusions on mobility information services to artists and culture professionals that will take place on 19-20 May.

Grants for Mobility

European Cultural Foundation (ECF) Collaboration Grants – apply now (deadline: 1 March)Effected by the cultural sector’s funding cuts? ECF Collaboration Grants could be ideal for your new project. The grant scheme provides funding for cultural cross-border activities for organisations working with partners in Europe.

Calls for participation

Call for Mais Imaginarius, International Festival of Theatre and Street Performances, 19-21 May, Santa Maria da Feira, Portugal (deadline: 28 February)Mais Imaginarius, for the third consecutive year, provides the implementation of emerging artistic practices in the public space of Santa Maria da Feira, Portugal. Applications are open to any artist of any nationality with professional artistic trai
ning as well as creators motivated towards artistic intervention in this location.Contemporary Dance Duets Festival Diversia, 23-25 September, Kostroma, Russia (deadline: 30 April)Contemporary Dance Duets Festival Diversia will take place in Kostroma, Russia, 23-25 September. The organisers call for 15-45 minutes contemporary dance performances with two performers on stage.CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS :: Nuit blanche 2012, Studio 303, 28 February 2012, Montreal, Canada (deadline: 1 April)Studio 303 is looking for an artist to create an immersive in situ performance presented at the Nuit blanche in Montreal on February 25th 2012.Encouraging Private Investment in the Cultural Sector: PARTICIPATE in Questionnaire on Good Practices and Existing Problems (deadline: 20 February)The Culturelink Network invites you to participate in the research study "Encouraging Private Investment in the Cultural Sector" that IMO, Culturelink's focal point, is currently undertaking on behalf of the European Parliament. Please respond to a short questionnaire that has been designed in order to pool your knowledge and experience, as insights learned through this exercise will bring benefit to all those in Europe that are working on enhancing the cultural sector.

Training

IFA InteatroFestival Academy 2011, call for young perfomers, Inteatro, April-June, Polverigi, Italy (deadline: 4 March)IFA – InteatroFestival Academy is the programme of research and professional training, promoted and founded in 2006 by Inteatro, that gives the opportunity to young performers, coming from all over the world, to work with estabilished artists of the international theatre and dance scene.Training in international cultural management, Robert Bosch, 2011/2012, Germany (deadline: 6 March)The Robert Bosch Stiftung invites selected German speaking participants from Central, Eastern and Southeastern Europe to Germany qualifying them in international cultural management.

Residencies

Call for X-OP Residency at Association for Culture and Education KIBLA, Maribor, Slovenia (deadlines: 25 February and 25 March)ACE KIBLA invites artists, theoreticians, curators, critics or producers for one-month residency in Maribor in March and April 2011 in the frame of the eXchange of art Operators and Producers – X-OP project.SUMMER RESIDENCY 2011 at tanzhaus nrw, Call for Applications, 25 July-19 August, Düsseldorf, Germany (deadline: 15 March)tanzhaus nrw is offering summer residencies from July 25th until August 19th, 2011. Choreographers doing artistic research or rehearsing a current project may apply.

Meetings

Trans Europe Halles 71 meeting, Creative Center Carnation, 14-17 April, Tartu, Estonia (deadline for early bird registration: 28 February)The next TEH meeting will be held at Creative Center Carnation (Noor-Eesti Loomekeskus in Estonian) in the lively city of Tartu, Estonia. The theme of the meeting is Shifting Gears – Moving the network into a new phase of development. The meeting is co-organised together with Culture Factory Polymer in Tallinn.Horizons. Perspectives of Artists in Residencies, Res Artis regional meeting, modem centre for modern and contemporary arts, 23-26 May, Debrecen, Hungary (deadline for registration: 30 April)Res Artis next conference topic is inspired by the concept of Horizon, as a scale of unending possibilities and versions of possible Artists In Residencies (AiR). The lectures and workshops will discuss different models of residency centres, the expectations of the various art fields, the geographical impacts and how mobility may change artists’ horizons.IETM Spring Plenary Meeting in Stockholm, 14 – 17 April 2011Under the working theme “Whose Story is it Anyway?” it intends to address a number of questions and challenges which face everyone – and we mean everyone- who has an ambition to develop their art forms, practices, methods, conditions, structures within society at large. They hope to create a pluralistic space of inspiration and energy, new friends and a creative focus that will enhance our ability to think of what has yet to be discovered.

Showcases

Balkan Dance Platform 2011, April 19-23, Ljubljana, SloveniaJoin the 6th edition of the Balkan Dance Platform 2011 (BDP 2011) this Spring in the lovely city of Ljubljana, to discover the flash body, honey and the blood of the Balkans!

Competitions

COAL Prize 2011 – Art and Environment, French association Coal (deadline: 30 April)The COAL Art & Environment prize was launched in 2010 by the French association COAL, the coalition for art and sustainable development, to reward a project about the environment by a contemporary artist.Prix Ars Electronica, International Competition for Cyberarts, 1-6 September, Linz, Austria (deadline:18 March)The Prix Ars Electronica has served as an interdisciplinary platform for everyone who uses the computer as a universal medium for implementing and designing their creative projects at the interface of art, technology and society. The next Ars Electronica Festival is set for SEPTEMBER 1-6, 2011.1st Forum for Young Composers for young musicians who live and work in Germany or Portugal, 17-20 May, Lisbon, Portugal (deadline: 15 March)In order to encourage the creation and circulation of new music works, the Sond’Ar-te Electric Ensemble and the Goethe-Institut Portugal are organizing the 1st Forum for Young Composers, which will take place between the 17th and the 20th of May 2011 in Lisbon.Artists’ Books on Tour, Artist Competition and Mobile Museum (deadline: 28 February)The EU-funded project “Artists’ Books on Tour – Artist Competition and Mobile Museum” was launched in June 2010 to create more public awareness for the book as an independent genre of art production. Now it invites artists to hand in their recent or planned art projects in the field: submissions will be accepted as completed physical or digital book objects or in the form of conceptual designs for projected but yet-unrealized book works.

Resources

Artists Moving & Learning European comparative report: «Artists’ mobility should be understood as an investment in human capital»Artists moving and learning – the research project that analysed artistic mobility in Europe from an educational and lifelong learning perspective has just been released. Now you can read the European comparative study as well as the ten National reports.The status of the artist in BelgiumBelgium is home to many artists on the move. A new professional status has been applicable to artists in Belgium since 1 July 2003. In order to meet the questions regarding this status, the Kunstenloket published a brochure which explains the various legal aspects of the status in a convenient and understandable manner.

Don't forget …

The News and Announcements section is constantly being updated. This Newsflash offers a selection of current items. If you are looking for opportunities for professional mobility, check the site regularly so you don't miss any deadlines.

New links and updates

ON-AiR website launched!ON-AiR is a collaborative project of 19 partners; artist-in-residence centers, art education institutes, municipalities, knowledge centers and artists-run initiatives in 15 EU countries coordinated by Trans Artists.

NewsFlash archive

OTM NewsFlash ArchiveIf you missed a newsletter or are looking for an item we featured some weeks or months ago, you can find previous copies of the NewsFlash here. These are presented for reference.

Subscribe / Unsubscribe

If you wish to subscribe to the On The Move mailing list we will send you our regular bulletin. Just send an e-mail to list-ON@on-the-move.org . To cancel your subscription, just send an e-mail to list-OFF@on-the-move.org. Feel free to forward this e-mail to colleagues and friends.

Res Artis Newsletter, January 2011‏

Happy New Year!
Happy 2011!
Happy New Res Artis Website!

Call for Participation, Join us in Lima!

Following up on the productive meetings and exchanges we held in Montreal with some of our colleagues from Latin America, we would like to invite you to join us in Lima, Peru for a meeting of residencies from the region. residencias_en_red [iberoamerica] – a new network of residencies in Latin America—will be holding a meeting between March 23rd and 27th of this year at which Res Artis has been invited to participate.

This is an excellent opportunity to exchange perspectives with our colleagues in this part of the world. It’s also an optimum opportunity for our members to participate in the continual development of our ResSupport program. An important part of this program is our ResSupport Fellowship, which provides opportunities for members of emerging residencies to spend time at a host institution learning about the field of residencies from the inside. As we announced in Montreal, our first fellowship is being sponsored by Akademie Schloss Solitude. We hope you will decide to join us by also sponsoring a fellowship.

Please let us know by February 8th if you would like to participate.
mariocaro@visualcultures.net


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New Res Artis Website

Our new website was launched last month with many changes and improvements.

Res Artis Member Organisations

  • Please take a moment and update your profile information, it is significantly different than the old system. Some of your information has been transferred for you, but there are many new categories, more multiple-choice, additional details. Thank you! For more information, please see the tutorial here.
  • The new member’s section will be an archive of case studies, funding information and tools specifically especially for residencies.
  • Join our forums to start an active online discussion
  • Log in here

Artists, newsletter subscribers, friends

Please write to webeditor@resartis.org with any problems, suggestions or comments.

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Goodbyes and new beginnings

A letter from Irene Saddal, Res Artis project manager

Do I have everything? What will the people be like? Will there be language and cultural issues? And perhaps most importantly what will the food be like?

These are questions one has when traveling to a different country, either going to a residency, or like me, organizing Res Artis meetings or attending other conferences and network events.

During the recent years I have worked with much enjoyment at the Res Artis office. It has been an exciting time, in which I learned a lot. This is largely because of all the people I met along the way who shared their experience and knowledge.

After working for almost four years at Res Artis, I feel that it is time for me to move on to other challenges. Starting February a new team, together with the board, will take over running the office and daily operations of Res Artis, and they will do this with much enthusiasm and drive, I am sure.

I’ve traveled the globe and had wonderful experiences representing Res Artis. It was an opportunity to meet old acquaintances and new friends. And I made great friends! I want to thank you all and wish you well.

My bags are almost packed. So I’ll be off to new adventures.

All the best and till we meet again,
Irene Saddal

The ‘PAiR’ Initiative – Performing Arts
in Residence

Traditionally, we find Artist in Residence programmes as individual scholarships mostly in the field of visual arts, literature, and music. During the last meetings of the networks Res Artis and ACCR, Schloss Broellin (Germany) started informally the discussion around residencies for artists of the Performing Arts, articulating the rising needs for European/international ensembles to meet and work at appropriate places.

Following a work meeting in September, PAiR was formed, continuing discussions at the recent Res Artis General meeting in Montreal. The objective – To strengthen existing and support the development of new residencies for performing artists.

Contact: pair@broellin.de


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Cooperation Case Study : Fokus Korea

The Berlin-Seoul Korean Performing Arts Residency Program

  • What
    Cooperation between a governmental agency, two performing arts groups and a residency program.
  • Who
    Ufa Fabrik, Berlin, Germany
    Creative Group Noni, Seoul, Korea
    – SU group, Seoul, Korea
  • The program
    Two groups of Korean performers traveled from Korea to Germany, for a period of several months. giving workshops and working at the Ufa Fabrik in Berlin. The group of artists work together will local artists and carry out performances until the end of January, presenting the European premiere of their play RIN, using puppetry, masks and shadow theatre with a particular music composition. Fokus Korea also includes a film program including two documentary films dealing with Korean traditional music and spiritual roots.
  • Supported by
    The South Korean Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism and the Korean Arts Management Service

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New Residency: Ateliers Topaz, Canada

  • Where is it?
    Ateliers Topaz is halfway in between the Atlantic and the Pacific on the TransCanada Highway's northern segment in Northern Ontario in a 60s building reminiscent of "Route 66".
  • What is it?
    Ateliers Topaz is privately own by Laurent Vaillancourt, a sculptor. His idea is to host artists that wish to work in remote area surrounded by the Boreal Forest. Due to heating cost Ateliers Topaz are available only from late April to October. Spaces available are versatile and are open to all disciplines.
  • Whats going on now?
    Currently it is Laurent's workshop. A store of found objects, or 'Topazian material' is developing and from that Laurent is starting a new body of work called "Minute, small things of life". The Topazian material store is open to visiting artists only.
  • www.atelierstopaz.ca
  • Ateliers Topaz on the Res Arits Website

read more

New Residency: Spark Box Studio, Canada

  • Where is it?
    Spark Box Studio is located in Prince Edward County, Ontario, a vibrant rural community full of artists, great food and wine and scenic provincial parks.
  • What is it?
    Spark Box Studio offers many programs for both the community and visiting artists. Their Residency Program provides visiting artists living accommodations and access to our professional studio and resources, which includes equipment for silkscreen, etching, relief printing and photography. The Residency Program affords artists the space and uninterrupted work time needed to support the advancement of their careers and to strengthen their practice. The studio also has an Open Studio program to local artists, publishes an arts magazine called Square2
    and offers career development guides to emerging artists.
  • Whats going on now?
    Spark Box Studio is currently updating its Emerging Artist Guide website, finishing its third issue of Square2 Magazine and accepting applications for their 2011 round of Artists in Residence.
  • www.sparkboxstudio.com
  • Spark Box Studio on the Res Artis Website

read more

Upcoming Residency Deadlines

The complete listing of upcoming deadlines is listed on our website here:
www.resartis.org/en/news/upcoming_deadlines/

Upcoming Res Artis meetings

Contact information

Res Artis
Worldwide network of artist residencies

Arie Biemondstraat 105
1054 PD Amsterdam
The Netherlands

Phone: +31 20 6126600
Fax: +31 20 6126600

Visit our website
Visit us on Facebook

Questions about our website or newsletter
please write to Julie in Istanbul:
webeditor@resartis.org

Other questions
please write to Mark in Amsterdam:
office@resartis.org

Res Artis Newsletter, January 2011‏

Newsletter 12.1.2011 

Happy New Year!
Happy 2011!
Happy New Res Artis Website!

Call for Participation, Join us in Lima!

Following up on the productive meetings and exchanges we held in Montreal with some of our colleagues from Latin America, we would like to invite you to join us in Lima, Peru for a meeting of residencies from the region. residencias_en_red [iberoamerica] – a new network of residencies in Latin America—will be holding a meeting between March 23rd and 27th of this year at which Res Artis has been invited to participate.

This is an excellent opportunity to exchange perspectives with our colleagues in this part of the world. It’s also an optimum opportunity for our members to participate in the continual development of our ResSupport program. An important part of this program is our ResSupport Fellowship, which provides opportunities for members of emerging residencies to spend time at a host institution learning about the field of residencies from the inside. As we announced in Montreal, our first fellowship is being sponsored by Akademie Schloss Solitude. We hope you will decide to join us by also sponsoring a fellowship.

Please let us know by February 1st if you would like to participate.
mariocaro@visualcultures.net

New Res Artis Website

Our new website was launched last month with many changes and improvements.

Res Artis Member Organisations

Please take a moment and update your profile information, it is significantly different than the old system. Some of your information has been transferred for you, but there are many new categories, more multiple-choice, additional details. Thank you! For more information, please see the tutorial here.
The new member’s section will be an archive of case studies, funding information and tools specifically especially for residencies.
Join our forums to start an active online discussion
Log in here

Artists, newsletter subscribers, friends

You’ll find our improved residency search tool here (note: thanks for your patience, the search will be more effective as the residencies update their information)
Our website is a portal to additional information about residencies, events and funding possibilities.
Check our upcoming deadlines list for the latest residency opportunities.

Please write to webeditor@resartis.org with any problems, suggestions or comments.

Goodbyes and new beginnings

A letter from Irene Saddal, Res Artis project manager

Do I have everything? What will the people be like? Will there be language and cultural issues? And perhaps most importantly what will the food be like?

These are questions one has when traveling to a different country, either going to a residency, or like me, organizing Res Artis meetings or attending other conferences and network events.

During the recent years I have worked with much enjoyment at the Res Artis office. It has been an exciting time, in which I learned a lot. This is largely because of all the people I met along the way who shared their experience and knowledge.

After working for almost four years at Res Artis, I feel that it is time for me to move on to other challenges. Starting February a new team, together with the board, will take over running the office and daily operations of Res Artis, and they will do this with much enthusiasm and drive, I am sure.

I’ve traveled the globe and had wonderful experiences representing Res Artis. It was an opportunity to meet old acquaintances and new friends. And I made great friends! I want to thank you all and wish you well.

My bags are almost packed. So I’ll be off to new adventures.

All the best and till we meet again,
Irene Saddal

The ‘PAiR’ Initiative – Performing Arts in Residence

Traditionally, we find Artist in Residence programmes as individual scholarships mostly in the field of visual arts, literature, and music. During the last meetings of the networks Res Artis and ACCR, Schloss Broellin (Germany) started informally the discussion around residencies for artists of the Performing Arts, articulating the rising needs for European/international ensembles to meet and work at appropriate places.

Following a work meeting in September, PAiR was formed, continuing discussions at the recent Res Artis General meeting in Montreal. The objective – To strengthen existing and support the development of new residencies for performing artists.

Contact: pair@broellin.de

Cooperation Case Study : Fokus Korea

The Berlin-Seoul Korean Performing Arts Residency Program

What
Cooperation between a governmental agency, two performing arts groups and a residency program.
Who
– Ufa Fabrik, Berlin, Germany
– Creative Group Noni, Seoul, Korea
– SU group, Seoul, Korea
The program
Two groups of Korean performers traveled from Korea to Germany, for a period of several months. giving workshops and working at the Ufa Fabrik in Berlin. The group of artists work together will local artists and carry out performances until the end of January, presenting the European premiere of their play RIN, using puppetry, masks and shadow theatre with a particular music composition. Fokus Korea also includes a film program including two documentary films dealing with Korean traditional music and spiritual roots.
Supported by
The South Korean Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism and the Korean Arts Management Service

New Residency: Ateliers Topaz, Canada

Where is it?
Ateliers Topaz is halfway in between the Atlantic and the Pacific on the TransCanada Highway's northern segment in Northern Ontario in a 60s building reminiscent of "Route 66".
What is it?
Ateliers Topaz is privately own by Laurent Vaillancourt, a sculptor. His idea is to host artists that wish to work in remote area surrounded by the Boreal Forest. Due to heating cost Ateliers Topaz are available only from late April to October. Spaces available are versatile and are open to all disciplines.
Whats going on now?
Currently it is Laurent's workshop. A store of found objects, or 'Topazian material' is developing and from that Laurent is starting a new body of work called "Minute, small things of life". The Topazian material store is open to visiting artists only.
www.atelierstopaz.ca
Ateliers Topaz on the Res Arits Website

 

New Residency: Spark Box Studio, Canada

Where is it?
Spark Box Studio is located in Prince Edward County, Ontario, a vibrant rural community full of artists, great food and wine and scenic provincial parks.
What is it?
Spark Box Studio offers many programs for both the community and visiting artists. Their Residency Program provides visiting artists living accommodations and access to our professional studio and resources, which includes equipment for silkscreen, etching, relief printing and photography. The Residency Program affords artists the space and uninterrupted work time needed to support the advancement of their careers and to strengthen their practice. The studio also has an Open Studio program to local artists, publishes an arts magazine called Square2 and offers career development guides to emerging artists.
Whats going on now?
Spark Box Studio is currently updating its Emerging Artist Guide website, finishing its third issue of Square2 Magazine and accepting applications for their 2011 round of Artists in Residence.
www.sparkboxstudio.com
Spark Box Studio on the Res Artis Website
 

Upcoming Residency Deadlines

The complete listing of upcoming deadlines is listed on our website here:
www.resartis.org/en/news/upcoming_deadline

Upcoming Res Artis meetings

March 23-27, 2011 – Res Artis Regional Meeting, Lima, Peru
as part of residencias_en_red [iberoamerica], a new network of residencies in Latin America
May 23-27 2011 – Res Artis Regional Meeting, Debrecen, Hungary

Read the newsletter online
English

Español

Français
 
Topics
Call for Participation, Join us in Lima!
New Res Artis Website
Goodbyes and new beginnings
The ‘PAiR’ Initiative – Performing Arts in Residence
Cooperation Case Study : Fokus Korea
New Residency: Ateliers Topaz, Canada
New Residency: Spark Box Studio, Canada
Upcoming Residency Deadlines
Upcoming Res Artis meetings
 
Contact information
Res Artis
Worldwide network of artist residencies

Arie Biemondstraat 105
1054 PD Amsterdam
The Netherlands

Phone: +31 20 6126600
Fax: +31 20 6126600

Visit our website
Visit us on Facebook
 Questions about our website or newsletter
please write to Julie in Istanbul:
webeditor@resartis.org

Other questions
please write to Mark in Amsterdam:
office@resartis.org

  
  
 
 

 

Subversion on stage: can theatre change the world? | Stage | guardian.co.uk‏

"Then, as reported in yesterday's Noises Off, the education minister of Iraq has banned the study of theatre altogether in Baghdad's institute of fine arts."

Sent to us at Theatre Without Borders by Prof. Waleed Shamil, Baghdad University.

Subversion on stage: can theatre change the world?

Recent events in Hungary, Belarus and Iraq show that governments find theatre dangerous enough to think it's worth banning. So what should we be doing in response?

belarus free theatre Enemy of the state … Belarus Free Theatre's production of Being Harold Pinter. Photograph: Greg Wood/AFP/Getty Images

In the past month, three rather serious things have happened to what could loosely be called "the world's theatre community". In Hungary – the country that has just assumed presidency of the EU, folks – a law has been drafted that, as well as enabling the government to censor newspapers, would give it the power to ban theatre performances, while the country's parliament looks set to sack the director of its national theatre on the grounds that his work is "obscene, pornographic, anti-national, and anti-Hungarian". In Belarus, Natalia Koliada, the artistic director of the country's only free theatre company, has, following the "re-election" of Alexander Lukashenko, been forced to go into hiding, threatened with rape and torture. Then, as reported in yesterday's Noises Off, the education minister of Iraq has banned the study of theatre altogether in Baghdad's institute of fine arts.

 

Of course, Britain's theatre culture has its own problems, faced with a government that seems determined to turn the arts into a glossy pastime through a mix of condescension, "philanthropic giving" and sheer stupidity.

 

And while it's instructive, for example, to compare British media coverage of protesting students with its far less equivocal condemnation of police brutality in Belarus – apparently a savage police force is easier to spot if it's in eastern Europe – it's hard to say that problem is here .

 

It's hard not to feel a sense of powerlessness (both ours and theirs) in the face of these attacks on theatre around the world. The spectacle of massive, often violent, state power being wielded against the arts is a bleak one. At the same time, there is something faintly optimistic in the idea there are still places that actually find theatre dangerous and subversive enough to think it's worth banning.

 

So what should we be doing by way of response? On the one hand, it seems self-evident that theatres in Britain should be loudly declaring their solidarity with persecuted Belarusians, threatened Hungarians and newly banned Iraqi professors. On the other hand, what help, beyond making a comforting, self-important noise, will our solidarity offer? Democratic western "solidarity" will presumably leave a sour taste in the mouths of Iraqis, who have a government we voted for to thank for freeing up the clerics who have demanded this ban in the first place.

 

In his most recent blogpost, writer and director Chris Goode argues that "theatre can change the world, [and] is already doing so". Clearly the governments of Hungary, Belarus and Iraq share his belief. Clearly the challenge the British theatre-makers face in 2011 is to prove that they are right: that theatre is indeed a force to be reckoned with, rather than something that is politely paid lip-service, patted on the head, then quietly cut and ignored.

Clampdown in Hungary | The Nation

When the nationalist party Fidesz swept into power in Hungary last April, one of its first acts was to cut funding for the country’s alternative theaters. One casualty was an annual independent theater festival that was to have taken place in Debrecen in September. When the money was abruptly withdrawn in August, remembers one of the festival organizers, Andrea Tompa, head of the Hungarian Theater Critics Association, she and her colleagues were disappointed, but not shocked. Hungary’s economy, after all, had been in crisis for at least two years. But looking back on that moment now, Tompa sees an early warning of the deterioration of Hungary’s fragile democracy.

Media

Fidesz party leader and Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán

About the Author

Alisa Solomon
Alisa Solomon, a drama critic and professor at Columbia University’s School of Journalism, is the author of Re-…

Also by The Author

Dozens of Israeli theater artists are refusing to perform in the West Bank settlement of Ariel. Now they’ve been joined by hundreds of artists and scholars from both Israel and America.

On Caryl Churchill's Seven Jewish Children: A Play for Gaza.

“The amount of money in question was minuscule,” Tompa says, especially in contrast to the untouched, much higher allotments for Hungary’s longstanding system of state-supported repertory theaters, with their buildings and salaried staffs. “But the ruling party was sending a symbolic message. They wanted to shut up the independent theater, which is always more free, less conventional, more subversive.”

Then, in November, the institutional theater came under fire as well, and the theater community couldn’t help but link the attacks to Fidesz’s simultaneous tightening grip on free expression in general.

On January 1—the same day Hungary assumes the six-month, rotating presidency of the European Union—a media law, passed by the Parliament on December 21, goes into effect, essentially reinstating state censorship in Hungary. The law establishes a National Communications and Media Authority to monitor all forms of news media—newspapers, television, radio, even individual blogs. It can impose fines as high as $950,000 on coverage it deems unbalanced or “offensive to human dignity,” seize reporters’ notes, search editorial offices and demand confidential business information. An analysis of the draft legislation by the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe warned that provisions of the law “simply cannot be described as being compatible with the basic principles of democracy.” Luxembourg’s foreign minister even questioned whether Hungary was fit to lead the EU. Prime Minister Viktor Orbán waved off such criticism as so much unseemly Western meddling, but considered alongside the fate of the theaters, the ominous signs are hard to dismiss.

Elected in a landside in the face public disillusionment with the failures and corruption of the socialist party that had been in office for the previous eight years, Fidesz won 263 of 386 seats in Parliament last spring and easily maintains the two-thirds majority required to change Hungary’s Constitution. (Banning abortion and defining marriage as between a man and a woman are high on the party’s agenda for constitutional reform.) If that weren’t enough, Fidesz is being pushed from the right by the neo-fascist party, Jobbik, which shocked the world by winning forty-seven seats last April, having run an explicitly anti-Roma and anti-Semitic campaign. (The ousted socialists held on to fifty-nine seats.) One of the new government’s first official acts was to require that public buildings—including theaters—prominently display a “proclamation” asserting the “constitutional revolution” and “new social contract” that Fidesz claims to represent. The proclamation promises a new future based on “work, home, family, health, and order.”

Jobbik exploited this all-too-recognizable rhetoric in November by mobilizing homophobia, anti-Semitism and ultra-nationalism in a putsch against the highly successful director of Budapest’s National Theater, Róbert Alföldi. Though Alföldi has garnered popular acclaim at home and abroad, won awards from Hungary’s critic
s’ association and from the Budapest city council, and even earned a profit in the first two and a half years of his contract, not slated to expire until June 2013, Jobbik has been denouncing him as a Jew, a homosexual and a traitor, and calling for his ouster. The party seized on Alföldi’s agreement to rent the theater to the local Romanian Cultural Institute for a program on December 1, when Romania commemorates its unification with Transylvania (enshrined by the Treaty of Trianon in 1920), territory that had been part of Hungary until the First World War. Fidesz joined in the condemnation, issuing a statement reminding the director that “for a majority of Hungarians the loss of Transylvania is a cause of deep trauma to this day.”

Though other major institutions had rented space to the Romanians for such celebrations in past years—and government ministers have attended as official guests—Alföldi canceled the rental in the heat of the protests.

Nonetheless, some 100 Jobbik supporters showed up to demonstrate outside the theater on December 1 (and the theater community mounted a counterdemo of equal size) and has continued to berate Alföldi inside Parliament, ridiculing him as “Roberta” and accusing him of perverting the noble Hungarian stage. Fidesz has apparently heeded Jobbik’s demand; according to theater artists in Budapest, a party-loyal replacement has been chosen and has been spending time at the National, getting to know the staff and giving interviews to the press in which he scorns Alföldi for the “sin” of reinterpreting the classical repertoire.

Politically opportunistic attacks on art are familiar enough to Americans. Some of the language hurled at Alföldi sounds just like the vitriol spewed against the David Wojnarowicz video that conservatives bullied the Smithsonian’s National Portrait Gallery into removing last month, to cite just our latest example. But such charges are more dangerous in Hungary, most of all because Hungary has so little experience of democracy. “We haven’t developed much civil society yet,” explains László Jakab Orsós, director of the PEN World Voices Festival and, until his term ran out last June (shortly after the election of Fidesz), director of the Hungarian Cultural Institute in New York. (A replacement has yet to be appointed.) “We have a few small, brave organizations, but in twenty years we haven’t built the capability to handle such severe attacks. Everything has changed so quickly in less than six months, and we are losing most of the achievements of the last two decades.”

If the situation is not as dire as in Belarus, where leaders of the Belarus Free Theater were arrested or driven into hiding in late December in Aleksandr Lukashenko’s campaign of repression, Hungarian artists who have forged professional ties elsewhere are talking anxiously about emigrating. “We are halfway to a dictatorship,” says Anna Lengyel, a dramaturg and independent producer at Budapest’s PanoDrama, which fosters international exchange of new plays. “And it is our own fault. There is no Soviet army this time. So we have to take to the street and demand that the government respect our young democracy.”

Hungary’s theater draws attention from Fidesz because, unlike in the United States, it is culturally important. There’s not even a small community in Hungary without a state-subsidized theater within thirty miles, Tompa notes, and amid a population of 10 million, nearly 5 million tickets are sold each year. Even when most of those buildings are presenting light commercial entertainment, the historical role of Hungary’s theater has not been forgotten. “It was the most important forum in the Communist period,” Lengyel says. “Especially in the milder ’70s and ’80s, the censors would allow some kind of freedom as long as there was no open criticism of the regime. Winking at the audience was OK.”

Hungary’s theater artists may have to learn to wink again, but Fidesz seems to have anticipated the possibility. Even as it moves to curtail the press, Orbán’s regime seems to be taking pre-emptive measures against the chance that the country’s stages could, once again, become sites for dissident expression.

Such steps began as far back as 2006, when Fidesz won regional elections all over the country and quickly installed party faithful as heads of the provincial theaters. While such positions had often been subject to political patronage, this was the first time the jobs went to utter hacks, theater artists there say. “The right wing will turn the wheel of time back to 1966, when pink operettas in fluffy costumes with happy endings were all local audiences had a chance to see,” Lengyel wrote in a special, Hungary-focused issue of the American journal Theater in 2008.

Meanwhile, a current generation of artists chronicled by Tompa in that same issue of the journal, and that began to emerge with fresh insights, aesthetics and urgency in the last decade, may take a cue from the artists who found a way to speak out in the 1970s. “We will remember 2010 as a turning point,” predicts Mate Gaspar, deputy director of the Arts and Culture Program at the Open Society Institute based in Budapest. “We have courageous artists in the theater who will reposition themselves as the internal opposition,” he says, citing some young troupes that already are “concretely dealing with the absurdity of the contemporary situation.” But the big question, he adds, given Orbán’s enormous popularity and the support Fidesz maintains, even among Hungary’s youth, is whether they will find an audience this time.

 

Hungary’s theater community initiated a petition, “Hands off culture and media in Hungary,” that quickly drew some 2,500 signatures, mostly from Hungarians but also from international supporters, including such luminaries as playwrights Elfriede Jelinek and Caryl Churchill. To sign, go here.

December 30, 2010  

ATCA International: LETTER: Response to Hungary Media Law‏

ATCA International

a blog for the international committee of the American Theatre Critics Association

Saturday, December 4, 2010

LETTER: Response to Hungary Media Law

Andrea Tompa, President
Hungarian Section
International Association of Theatre Critics

Dear Andrea,

The International Association of Theatre Critics fully supports your section’s fight for freedom of expression in theatre and arts. The new media law of your government is dangerous, anti-cultural and anti-intellectual, which obviously attempts to go back to that archaic practice of censorship.

Theatre has always reflected human societies and one of its essential functions is to criticize social complacency to better recognize and understand the world and the humanity. IATC deplores strongly any governmental attempts to control the arts, culture and media, whose critical performance has become even more important in this 21st century of globalized culture.

It is a great pity that such a culturally advanced country like Hungary is trying to implement its control over the arts, artists, and the media. IATC strongly demands that the Hungarian parliament and government withdraw this shameful media law and guarantee its artists freedom and independence.

Otherwise, we will make this issue big and global so that the world may know the danger and corruption in this new media law and its implementation in the form of replacing legally appointed, competent and ambitious artists with docile figures.

Sincerely,
Yun-Cheol Kim
President, International Association of Theatre Critics
Dean, School of Drama, Korea National University of Arts

0 comments:

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This ATCA logo is the central figure of an Honoré Daumier caricature

This ATCA logo is the central figure of an Honoré Daumier caricature
La Promenade du Critique Influent (1865)

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Canary in the coal mine: Theatermaking gets scary in Hungary

Imagine living in a country where not toeing a party line can get you fired from your job. Where a growing nationalism seems to encourage rants against homosexuals and Jews. Where cultural institutions post manifestos of national solidarity on their front doors. This isn't a period piece or a fictional dystopia, it's Hungary today.

Imagine living in a country where not toeing a party line can get you fired from your job. Where a growing nationalism seems to encourage rants against homosexuals and Jews. Where cultural institutions post manifestos of national solidarity on their front doors. This isn't a period piece or a fictional dystopia, it's Hungary today.

Completely apart from its recent environmental disaster, something terrifying is seeping into Hungary's soil. After a stunning election success in April, the center-right nationalist party Fidesz has wasted no time in clamping down on that old, familiar scapegoat, theater. Something about theater makes authoritarians furious-it's notoriously anarchic, and often the first thing to feel the sting of censorship when a  regime gets nervous. Is Fidesz a "regime?" Basically, yes. Fidesz now controls so much of the national and regional government that essentially Hungary is now a one-party system, and the abrupt swing to the right is making a lot of Euro-observers very, very nervous. [2]

According to those familiar with Hungarian politics, the result has been a wave of bills constraining freedoms, installing a "media presidaeum [3]," legislating against journalistic independence [4], undermining the judicial structure, and consolidating power.

One unintentionally ridiculous (but very frightening) manifestation of the government's drive to consolidation is the party's Manifesto, which must be mounted [5] in most public buildings, including  theaters, museums, and concert halls. Imagine walking into the Public and seeing something like this (translated from the Hungarian):

"The National Assembly declares that a new social contract was laid down in the April general elections through which the Hungarians decided to create a new system : the National Cooperation System. With this historical act the Hungarian nation obliged the incoming National Assembly and Government to take the helm in this endeavour, resolute, uncompromising and with deliberation, and control the construction of the National Cooperation System in Hungary."

When the manifesto mentions "work, home, family, health and order" are the pillars of this renationalized society, surely we should hear alarm bells signalling all the terrifying code words of the past.

So why write about this on a theater blog? That strangling canary. Fidesz has refused to disperse a third  of the monies already allocated for independent theaters. Major festivals have been cancelled as promised funds vanish, which may not-in our own funding climate-seem so appalling. But independent companies are also getting "content recommendations" asking that art reflect positively on Hungary, and high-profile resignations are often attributed [6] to "government meddling." Frighteningly, many prominent cultural figures in Hungary have found themselves on an anonymously published list of "Jews, Bolsheviks and Homosexuals." [7] Two internationally known directors, Janos Szasz and Robert Alfoldi, are on that list.

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11/10/2010 – 09:01