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Cultural intermediation & the creative economy

Cultural intermediation & the creative economy

Tag Archives: geography

Reflections on the ECE 6th Conference, University of Toronto, and Artscapes, University of Kent

09 Tuesday Jul 2013

Posted by saskiawarren in Conference, Meetings

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Art, Birmingham, cities, communities, conference, connected, Creative economies, geography, Intermediation, Policy, Richard Florida, Toronto

At the end of summer term the academic calendar segues into conference season. First was the ECE 6th Conference at the Martin Prosperity Institute (MPI), University of Toronto from 18-21st June. A highly stimulating yet exhausting programme ran from 8.30am till we had finished up to 7 courses of our dinners (around 9.30pm, depending on stamina). The conference was designed as a way to bring early career academics together from around the world in a process of field-rebuilding on the creative economy.  Generosity of funding by MPI enabled early career academics with limited or non-existent research budgets to attend – although Canadian immigration prevented two of the speakers joining us in person (Ammar Palik, Pakistan, and Andrés Goméz-Liévano, Colombia).

Richard Florida gave his time to meet one-on-one with each of the participants as part of a game in academic speed-dating. He also led a discussion on revisiting the creative class where he rightfully noted that 100s of trillions is invested in urban spending and urban practice therefore focus needs to be concentrated on how spending is translated into pragmatic strategy. Casinos, stadiums and bike lanes are not, of course, the simple solution. Issues of inequality and disadvantaged communities in urban space were discussed in the session and throughout the conference, with common agreement that the pay and conditions for the service sector were unacceptable. A set of fascinating papers ensued. In particular I was impressed by the potential of Dr Xingiian Liu’s data visualisations which showed how creative cities are networked in terms of level of workers and interdependence.

The next week it was onto a very different but interesting conference Artscapes: Urban Art and the Public at the University of Kent, 27-28th June. As an example of where site-specificity falls down, Dr Rob Knifton discussed David Mach’s Polaris (1983) which was set on fire by a protester on Southbank who suffered fatal burns. The paper recalled the type of intense public participation, and ‘radical decommissioning’, that artist Simon Pope articulates in the burning of Raymond Mason’s Forward in Birmingham City Centre in 2003 (see my artist talk with Simon here). Of particular note was an excellent keynote talk by Dr Jonathan Vickery which read Jochen Gerz’s 2-3 Strassen in relation to creative cities literature.  Vickery’s consideration of how culture in public space has to map itself onto broad objectives of governance and government usefully brought together the strands of thinking from both conferences which feed into our governance work. Exploring culture as a function of policy is one of our lines of thinking, and, taking a multi-level approach, in the next academic year we will be working with communities to learn more about how they connect into cultural and creative practice. More on this soon.ImageImage

RGS-IBG Annual International Conference, London, 28-30 August 2013

25 Friday Jan 2013

Posted by saskiawarren in Uncategorized

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conference, geography, RGS

Hello, I just wanted to draw attention to a session a couple of the team are organising as part of the RGS-IBG Conference in London. Please get in touch if you’re interested in taking part whether you’re a geographer or other…

RGS-IBG Annual International Conference, London, 28-30 August 2013

Second Call for Papers

Title: New frontiers of connecting communities in the creative economy

Organizers:

Saskia Warren, School of Geography, Earth and Environmental Science, University of Birmingham Phil Jones, School of Geography, Earth and Environmental Science, University of Birmingham

This session explores the research theme of Connected Communities, a major AHRC-led cross-Research Council programme, with address to the creative economy. The vision of the programme is to mobilize the potential for increasingly “inter-connected, culturally diverse communities to enhance participation, prosperity, sustainability, health and well-being by better connecting research, stakeholders and communities” (AHRC 2012). There is little research, however, on how geographers would conceptualize the theme of connected communities in the creative economy. Of particular interest to the session is work on the creative economy that engages with policy-making, inequalities and/or ‘hard to reach’ communities.

Policy associated with the ‘Big Society’ (Cameron 2010), with emphasis on localized and distributed forms of governance alongside reductions on public spending, is transforming the role of the state and cultural organizations. Contradictions of increased expectation placed on community-driven initiatives and a climate of major cuts to public services need to be addressed to understand the future of participation in the creative economy. It is also clear organizations that are not usually associated with the creative industries are employing creative practices to connect with new individuals and groups. Research on forms of cultural intermediation (Bourdieu 1979) in the creative economy has shown recently that activities are usually multi-level and networked, involving individuals, communities, institutions, agencies and local/national government (Woo 2012; Baker 2012; Wright 2005). This broadening of scope on the work of the creative economy has stimulated the provocation ‘we are all cultural intermediaries now’ (Maguire and Matthews 2012: 552).

This session will investigate theories and processes of connecting communities in the creative economy considering: its meaning; its value; the ways in which it operates today; who is included and excluded; and whether it can operate more effectively, particularly in the context of public sector funding cuts.
We invite papers that focus on any aspect of the creative economy, including: cultural promotion and preservation; creative activities; creative communications; and creative interfaces. Contributions could explore (but are not limited to):

– Governance and localism in the creative economy
– The ‘Big Society’, communities and the creative economy
– Changing policy and the creative economy
– The meaning/s of community
– Evaluating the impact of the creative economy (e.g well-being; sickness; resilience; skills-building; networking; regeneration; gentrification)
– Inequalities in the creative economy
– Creative economy in city-regions or urban-rural networks
– Digital and connected/disconnected communities
– Theoretical and/or practical innovations on connected communities (e.g cultural intermediation; participatory methods; evaluation models)
– Other spaces of the creative economy
– Gender, sex and difference in the creative economy

Please send an abstract of 250-300 words to Saskia Warren S.Warren@bham.ac.uk and Phil Jones P.I.Jones@bham.ac.uk by January 31, 2013.

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