NAF launches Creative City project with EU
The National Arts Festival has announced
the launch of a new partnership with the European Union (EU), which will see
over R6m invested in the City of Grahamstown’s ‘Creative City’ project over the
next two years.
The partnership, through which the EU will
support the Festival’s “Makana Arts Academy” project, was announced in
Grahamstown yesterday evening.
“We’ve seen from the Rhodes University
Economic Impact Study also released today that the Festival makes a
contribution of around R360m to the GDP of the Eastern Cape. That’s just from
the staging of an annual, 11-day event. Long-term projects such as the one with
the EU will enable us to affect the sector and the broader economy positively
over a longer period of time, and will result in a more sustained drive to
create jobs in the cultural sector,” Festival CEO Tony Lankester said.
The Makana Arts Academy is a “virtual
institution” which will institute training programmes across the city in
various arts disciplines, creating opportunities for Grahamstown residents to
become active participants in the national arts economy. It will also establish
a shared space in Grahamstown for artists, and which will act as a public
creativity hub.
“We know that there are hundreds of
talented people living in this City who have never been given the opportunity
to explore their full potential. This programme will help identify, nurture and
mentor this talent to the point where they are active in the sector and
deriving an income from the arts,” Lankester said.
“In putting the grant proposal together we
drew in partners such as ASSITEJ South Africa (the International Association of
Theatre for Children and Young People) and Kuns Onbeperk – the company behind
the annual ABSA Klein Karoo Nasionale Kunstefees in Oudtshoorn, who face many
challenges similar to the ones we face in Grahamstown,” Lankester said.
The Makana Arts Academy is part of a
broader “Creative City” project, spearheaded by the National Arts Festival in
partnership with Makana Municipality, Cacadu District Municipality, and the
Eastern Cape Department of Sports, Recreation, Arts and Culture, which aims to
establish Grahamstown as a Creative Capital of South Africa over the next 5
years.
“A couple of years ago the National
Minister of Arts and Culture challenged the sector to use the arts to drive
‘Mzansi’s Golden Economy’. These projects are inspired by that call and are
part of our response to the challenge. We have seen first hand what a Festival
can do for an economically depressed part of the country. We see that every
year. This takes things to the next level – we want to invest in the arts and
its capacity to create jobs and support a whole range of industries, including
tourism and hospitality. We want Grahamstown to become known as a South African
cultural and creative hub. There are a number of projects, both established and
new, which will help steer us there, and which when galvanized will build on
the positioning that has already been established in the City by the Festival
and various institutions over the years,” Lankester said.
Ambassador Roeland van de Geer, Head of the
EU Delegation to South Africa said: "The European Union is delighted to
partner with the National Arts Festival in this very innovative project. The
Makana Arts Academy may well become a model for "Creative Cities"
that foster creativity and innovation, and economic growth. With a combination
of arts education in schools, training and mentoring for young artists, the
setting up of production companies and the creation of a public art space,
Grahamstown is about to set the standard for how creative industries can lead
society".
The Makana Arts Academy is funded by a
grant from the European Union.
The Creative City project is managed by the
National Arts Festival in partnership with ASSITEJ South Africa, Kuns Onbeperk,
Makana Municipality, Cacadu District Municipality, and the Eastern Cape
Department of Sports, Recreation, Arts and Culture.
Further support for the Creative City
project is drawn from the broader contribution to the Festival of the National
Lottery Distribution Trust Fund (NLDTF) and the National Department of Arts and
Culture.
The National Arts Festival is sponsored by
The National Lottery Distribution Trust Fund, Standard Bank, The Department of
Arts and Culture, The Eastern Cape Government, The National Arts Council, City
Press and M Net.