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CULTURE, ARTS AND SOCIETY

Past Program

Nov 03 - Nov 05, 2021 Session 717

The Creative Power of the Arts: Reimagining Human and Planetary Flourishing

Online

Overview

As the world confronts the compounded impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic, climate crisis, and structural injustices, societies are bracing for a protracted and complex period of reassessment, reimagination, and restructuring. The culture and arts sector must be at the table and included in decision-making processes as societies seek to eschew a return to “normal” and instead reimagine more creative pathways towards human and planetary flourishing.

With its broad program portfolio and its expansive arts and culture network, Salzburg Global is uniquely positioned as a strategic platform to support and advocate for these much-needed creative, cross-sectoral, and holistic approaches to systemic transformation. By strategically engaging pivotal international stakeholders across all sectors, this program will connect research, policy, and practice to advance the systemic relevance of culture and the arts for creative and innovative reforms across sectors.
 
By invitation only.


The power, influence, and creative imagination of the cultural sector needs to be inserted in upcoming worldwide efforts to reframe systems that were already in need of complex reform before being further disrupted by COVID-19. The pandemic has brought into painfully sharp focus the inequalities and urgency of existing problems confronting our societies. It has also made the basic human need for artistic and creative expression more apparent and palpable than it has been in decades.

The humanizing, transformative and enabling power of the arts therefore represents a foundational principle for regeneration. Far from being the “non-essential” workers they have so inappropriately been classified as by many governments during the pandemic, artists, culture bearers, and culture workers will have essential contributions to make in coming years to new strategies for societal and planetary wellbeing. Cultural considerations should not just be “add ons” or afterthoughts to policy development, rather they must be central to the formulation of imaginative, just, and sustainable approaches if they are to succeed.

The Creative Power of the Arts program will therefore focus on the systemic relevance of the arts and culture sector for creative reforms in the four target areas of climate, health, education, and justice. The program will promote and catalyze the intersections between the arts and culture sector and the following four interrelated strands of work: 

  • Reimagining a Greener Planet: Mitigating climate change and furthering sustainable design 
  • Reimagining a Healthier Planet: Promoting health and well-being through the arts
  • Reimagining a Smarter Planet: Fostering creativity in education and learning
  • Reimaining a Fairer Planet: Advancing social justice and processes of decolonization

With its broad program portfolio as well as its expansive global change network, Salzburg Global is uniquely positioned as a strategic platform to support and advocate for these much-needed creative, cross-sectoral, and holistic approaches to systemic transformation. The Creative Power of the Arts program will embody a translational model that connects research, policy, and practice by strategically engaging pivotal international stakeholders across all sectors.

People
Partners
Program
Related News
Participants
Anna Abraham
E. Paul Torrance Professor, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia, United States
Emily Akuno
Professor of Music & Deputy Vice-Chancellor , The Cooperative University of Kenya, Nairobi, Kenya
Kiley Arroyo
Executive director, Cultural Strategies Council, United States of America
Jordi Albareda Ureta
Founder and Director, FairSaturday, Bilbao, Spain
Richard Crooks
Curriculum Specialist, Ministry of Education, Ras Al Khaimah, United Arab Emirates
Jordi Baltà
Consultant, Trànsit Projectes, Barcelona, Spain
Suramya Bansal
Heritage Consultant
Khaled Barakeh
Founder and Chairman, coculture e.V., Germany
Anna Beech
Managing Director, Governance, C40 Cities Climate Leadership Group, London, United Kingdom
Werner Binnenstein-Bachstein
Director of Community Arts Lab, Porticus Vienna GmbH, Vienna, Austria
Jasmine Blanks Jones
Postdoctoral Fellowship, Program in Racism, Immigration, and Citizenship, Johns Hopkins University, Edgewood, Maryland, United States
Antonia Boemeke
Program Development Associate, Salzburg Global Seminar, Salzburg, Austria
Shaina Brassard
Writer and Economic Development Specialist, Brassard Group, Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States
Ananda Breed
Professor of Theatre, University of Lincoln, Bracebridge Heath, United Kingdom
Joe Caron Dawe
Content creator, Salzburg Global Seminar
Verónica del Carril
Chief of Institutional Development, Brotes Atelier, Buenos Aires, Argentina
Vishakha Desai
Senior Advisor for Global Affairs to the President; Chair of the Committee on Global Thought, Columbia University, USA
Alan Dix
Artistic Director, 509 Arts, Shipley, United Kingdom
David Fakunle
CEO, DiscoverME/RecoverME: Enrichment Through the African Oral Tradition, Associate Faculty, Department of Mental Health Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, and Adjunct Assistant Professor, University of Florida Center for Arts in Medicine
Rose de Wend Fenton
Freelance Arts Producer and Advisor, Netheravon, United Kingdom
Maria Fernandez Sabau
Director of Education and Public Programs, Strategy and Alliances, SEL, Madrid, Spain
Aimee Fullman
Assistant Professor / Director NRC, George Mason University/Creative Forces, Plainsboro, New Jersey, United States
Pavlos Georgiadis
Ethnobotanist, Sustainability Consultant and Social Entrepreneur, Freiburg, Germany
Karima Grant
Founder and Executive Director, ImagiNation Afrika, Dakar, Senegal
Katie Green
Executive Director, inPath, Montreal, Canada
Jenny Grettve
Project Lead, Dark Matter Labs, Malmö, Sweden
Marcus Hagemann
Director, ARS Baltica Secretariat, Rendensburg, Germany; Artistic Director Nordlichter Biennale, Berlin, Germany; Cellist
Gry Worre Hallberg
Artistic director PhD, Sisters Hope, Copenhagen, Denmark
Xenia Hanusiak
Festival Director, Curator, Writer; Senior Policy Officer for the Netherlands Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Australia
Mariale Hardiman
Vice Dean, Academic Affairs; Professor of Education; Director, Neuro-Education Initiative, Johns Hopkins University School of Education, Baltimore, Maryland, United States
Faye Hobson
Director, Culture, Salzburg Global Seminar
Abid Hussain
Director, Diversity, Arts Council England, Birmingham, United Kingdom
Singh Intrachooto
Head of Creative Center for Eco-Design, Kasetsart University Architecture, Bangkok, Thailand
Pedro Ivo Franco
Consultant, Culture, Creativity and Development Consulting, Germany
Nike Jonah
Director, Connecting Dots, Croydon, United Kingdom
Patrick Kabanda
Artist / Author / Consultant, USA
Karima Kadaoui
Co-Founder and Executive President of Tamkeen Community Foundation for Human Development, Tangier, Morocco
Sukyeong Kang
CEO & Music Director, Seoul Artistic Orchestra, Republic of Korea
Elizabeth Kelly
Senior Programme Manager, C40 Cities Climate Leadership Group, London, United Kingdom
Marco Kusumawijya
Director, Rujak Centre for Urban Studies, Jakarta, Indonesia
Jigyasa Labroo
Co-Founder/CEO, Slam Out Loud, Dharamshala, India
Beatrice Lamwaka
Director, Arts Therapy Foundation, Mukono, Uganda
Ke Leng
Programme Coordinator, UNESCO, Paris, France
Soo-Siang Lim
Director, Science of Learning Centers Program, National Science Foundation, Washington, DC, United States
Julia Lipton
Director of Climate Action Planning & Innovation, C40 Cities, Copenhagen, Denmark
Yolanda Lopez-Maldonado
Specialist for the Local and Indigenous Local Knowledge Systems (LINKS) Programme, UNESCO, Vienna, Austria
Erwin Maas
Artistic director, Unites States of America
Brandie Macdonald
Director of Decolonizing Initiatives, Museum of Us, San Diego, California, United States
Susan Magsamen
Executive Director, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, International Arts + Mind Lab, Center for Applied Neuroaesthetics, Cockeysville, Maryland, United States
Andrew Manning
Director, European Union National Institutes for Culture (EUNIC), Belgium
Georgia Manolopoulou
Museologist/PhD Candidate in Cultural Diplomacy, Archaeological Museum of Patras/Ministry of Culture, Patras, Greece
Elena Mavromichali
Advisor on Arts & Culture, Hellenic Republic, Athens, Greece
Anne-Marie Melster
Co-Founder & Director, ARTPORT_making waves, Paris, France / Stockholm, Sweden
Mercy Nabirye
Director and Creative Producer, Kauma Arts, London, United Kingdom
Fari Nzinga
Independent curator, writer and educator, Oberlin, Ohio, United States
Kajsa Paludan
Founder of Growing Pathways & Climate Policy Advisor, Stockholm, Sweden
Clive Parkinson
Director - Arts for Health and the Manchester Institute for Arts, Health & Social Change, Manchester Metropolitan University, Lancaster, United Kingdom
Jeff M. Poulin
Managing Director, Creative Generation, Frederick, Maryland, United States
Rika Preiser
Associate Professor, Stellenbosch University, Stellenbosch, South Africa
Lydia Ruprecht
Team Leader for Global Citizenship Education, UNESCO, Paris, France
Roberta Sandri
Experience Design Manager, The LEGO Foundation, Billund, Denmark
Susanna Seidl-Fox
Program Director, Culture and the Arts, Salzburg Global Seminar, Salzburg, Austria
Anasuya Sengupta
Co-Director and Co-Founder, Whose Knowledge?, London, United Kingdom
Litha Sokutu
Cultural Analyst; Director, SLC Associates, Cape Town, South Africa
Pireeni Sundaralingam
Behavior change scientist: Center for Humane Technology & principal at "Resilient Brains, Resilient Society - Consulting"; adjunct Associate Professor at California Institute of Integral Studies, San Francisco, California, United States; poet.
Aleksandra Uzelac
Head, Culture and Communication Department, IRMO - Institute for Development and International Relations, Zagreb, Croatia
Patricia Vazquez
Founder and CEO, CRUYUU, Mexico
Katelijn Verstraete
Freelance / Cultural Researcher and Evaluator, Singapore/Belgium
Kira Wisniewski
Executive Director, Art+Feminism, Baltimore, Maryland, United States
Caroline Woolard
Organizer, Artist, Art.coop, New York City, United States
Stephania Xydia
Governance & Social Innovation Officer, ICLEI Europe, Freiburg, Germany
Ayaka Yamashita
Co-founder and Director, Edaya, Japan
Ege Yildirim
Independent Heritage Planning Consultant / Scholar, Istanbul, Turkey
PARTNERS
Format

This three-day hybrid meeting program (online, accompanied by a small regional convening in Salzburg) is the culmination of a succession of online focus group consultations that were held in the spring and summer of 2021 and were framed around the intersections between the arts and culture sector and the following four interrelated strands of work: 

  • Building Back Greener: Mitigating climate change and designing a greener planet
  • Building Back Healthier: Promoting community health and individual well-being through the arts
  • Building Back Smarter: Reimagining creativity in education and learning
  • Building Back Fairer: Advancing social justice and processes of decolonization  

Over the three days in November, the focus group Fellows and additional invited participants will share insights and learning across the four strands of work. The highly interactive program will be structured around an inspiring mix of presentations, curated conversations, knowledge exchanges, and interdisciplinary work in small groups. The process seeks to develop a common strategy for inserting cultural knowledge into decision-making processes and to identify specific areas for future collaboration within and across the four strands going forward. A rapporteur will capture the main findings of the multi-faceted program in a publication, which will be presented to key stakeholders and policymakers.

Goals
  • Establish a louder and more persuasive voice for the culture and arts sector at the policy level and increase its impact on policy development and implementation through sustained cross-sectoral engagement with major institutions at local, regional, and global level and by facilitating effective connections between research, policy, and practice. 
  • Explore, analyze, and better understand the creative potential for the arts to promote planetary flourishing by facilitating more effective connections between research, policy, and practice. 
  • Create and curate an active and engaged global advocacy alliance for the cultural sector by facilitating cross-sectoral connections via Salzburg Global's new Mobilize! online platform and inspiring unconventional partnerships for creative policy reform and change. 
  • Communicate and scale the systemic relevance of the arts and culture sector for achieving planetary and human well-being through public awareness-raising and influential strategic partnerships.
Key Questions
  • How can we advance cross-sectoral links between arts and green practice to mitigate climate change and design a more sustainable planet?
  • How do we build our understanding of how to harness the arts and creativity to drive better community health and individual well-being?
  • How can we better support the development of creativity in children, particularly through educational systems?
  • How can the culture and arts sector contribute most effectively and creatively to advancing social justice and supporting complex processes of decolonization?
Participant Profile

The hybrid program will convene an interdisciplinary and inter-generational group of approximately 60 creative practitioners, researchers, and policymakers from around the globe to forge a crucible for strategic dialogue.

The four focus group Fellows include experts in research, policy, and practice from the four respective focus areas: climate, health, education, and justice. They will also be joined by invited key cultural influencers and policymakers.