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Creative strand unravels
Published on 01/05/08
by matt
As if that wasn’t a headline waiting to happen.
Western Sydney community arts manager Lena Nahlous hinted all was not as it seemed with the 2020 Summit creative strand when she appeared on Canvas last Sunday morning. Nick Pickard’s article in today’s Crikey makes it explicit, saying the Initial Summit Report censored ideas discussed and included ideas never broached.
Oz theatre reviewer (and writer) Alison Croggon said:
Some points seemed disappear completely in the process: among them, a strong call for rethinking public broadcasting and the issue of responsibility towards climate change. Others surprisingly appeared: when Mr Rudd mentioned summer schools, the entire Creative stream went blank (“summer schools? who said summer schools?”) More generally, some concerns never quite made it to the whiteboards: a major oversight in the general debate was the digital gaming design industry, supposedly an area slated for discussion.
That shift came up in Pickard’s piece too:
What has amazed the delegates is that the initial report somehow changed ideas like develop “closer links between industry professionals and schools” into “Creativity Summer Schools”.
“No-one ever mentioned summer schools,” Crikey has been told by another delegate. “And the first time I heard about the Indigenous proposals was when the report was released on the Sunday.”
This is not to mention the contentious idea (also published in the initial report) which proposed that creative endeavours be funded “through a 1% creative dividend from all Government Departments for expenditure”.
“Everyone in that room knew that Queensland had tried that idea and that it had failed. I don’t know how that got put forward either,” the delegate explained.
Pickard’s source noted it wasn’t all negative:
“The summit has created a motivated group of diverse people who realised that we all have a lot in common,” another attendee has told Crikey. “Everyone realised that other people outside the stream were saying they needed the arts.”
Another attendee, the prolific (check his CV) Marcus Westbury, posted a blog entry saying much the same thing a week earlier.
Meeting people. The summit was a rare opportunity that brought together a wide range of people from across the creative, arts, cultural sector. Contrary to popular belief we don’t all hang out together all the time – particularly outside of narrow artform communities. It was both inspiring and practically quite useful to meet those people, realise that several issues cut right across the boundaries or artform or medium and begin to pull together a bit of a community going forward.
Understanding the power of symbolism has been crucial to Rudd’s government. But with this and the frankly bizarre delineation between gay unions and straight marriage – I’m married and certainly not “before God” – the government is showing the first signs of stumbling.
That's it. What Next?
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Comments on Creative strand unravels
3 Responses
Shannon
01/05/08
‘Going forward’. I love Marcus, but hate that term so much I once named a track after it.
It was obvious that 2020 would be little more than a photo op for KRudd & co while co-opting the ‘best and brightest’ for political capital. It seems that many participants were flattered into buying it.
I’m waiting to see if anything significant or useful comes from the process…
The govt had already shown signs of stumbling tho. Proposed Internet censorship and surveillance have done little to endear it to me.
Being slightly better than the Liberals is not good enough.
matt
02/05/08
Don’t you think that getting all those people together, in one town, for a weekend, is a pretty good thing (even if it’s not the thing they were aiming for)?
Shannon
11/05/08
Yes, I’m sure it was a good networking opportunity.
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