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The new number of the philosophic Journal and publishing house Glänta is a proof of creativity, future-looking and humour in a pleasant combination. The new issue of the journal is a Future Encyklopedia of new words in the Swedish language. What words will be
needed in the future? What concepts will be relevant? Over a hundred authors, journalists, artists, researchers, philosophers have contributed to build this future of words. Reading it is a humouristic travel of words used, but still not in use in any encyklopedia, words that don’t exist and made-up words that might be used in the future.
Later on, on this website, we will get answers from the editor Göran Dahlberg on questions like: What inspires you? What do Glänta do to keep high quality and creativity over the fifteen year it has existed? In what ways do the talks of creative industries affect artistic practice in positive and negative ways? How do artistic integrity and entrepreneurship combine, do you think?
So, more to come! Also get a glimpse of the Swedish literary scen, read the article from Glänta editorial staff on Literary perspectives: Sweden at Eurozine. And have a look at Glänta on Facebook.
Categories: Art Artistic practice Blogg Creative spaces Cultural Journals Democracy Economy Entrepreneurship Network Reports, articles and books
Tags: Artist, Artistic practice, Creativity, Cultural Journal, Encyklopedia, International exchange, Philosophy, Publishing
13 October, 2008
Should every artist, dancer, musician, festival manager, poet and writer become entrepreneurs? What is the position of art? Will subsidies to art be taken away? Goodbye to fine arts and the artistic work that can’t survive on the market. Many cultural organisations and institutions, journalists and artists in Sweden discuss the issue these days, among them the Swedish Union for Theatre, Artists and Media, who recently published a book on their views on cultural policy. Igniting the discussion is the work of The Committee of Inquiry on Cultural Policy that has the assignment to overlook and change the Swedish Cultural Policy, a work that during this year has been followed by problems and is being questioned for different reasons; one is for having an unclear distinction in what is art policy and what is cultural policy.
The Department of Culture, Media and Sports in UK, presented in 2007 a model that might be helpful in these discussions. The model explains the economic relation between art,
creative industries and the rest of the economy. It’s a fairly simple model, but useful in understanding why subsidies to art is necessary and effects the rest of the economy. The base, the core creative fields, is the poets, musicians, artists, dancers and choreographers; the producers of art that need public funding to get paid time to do their artistic work. Without them there will be no cultural industry. It’s only if you have the core, that publishers have anything to publish, or museums has anything to show. And without a cultural industry, there will be no creative industries. A publisher needs a bookstore to sell her books. This has a value for the rest of the economy, since for instance manufacturing and service sector benefit from the expressive outputs done by artists.
If values like “Art for Art’s sake” feels a bit dusty and not enough as argument these days, perhaps this model can be of help.
To see the model above in bigger size, double-click on it. Download the UK’s “Staying ahead: the economic performance of the UK’s creative industries”. The study and report was done by the Work Foundation in UK.
The Staying ahead paper is also commented on the Swedish website www.kulturekonomi.se, they comment on the circle model here.
Categories: Artistic practice Blogg Creative Industries Cultural Policy Economy Entrepreneurship Reports, articles and books
Tags: Circle model, Creative Industries, Cultural economy, Cultural Policy, Economy, Entrepreneurship, EU, Literature, London, Publishing
30 August, 2008
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