COMMUNITY BASED ART + Creative expression emerging from a NEED to
collectively highlight and educate for social improvement. + Involves many
varied social contexts and definitions. + Includes an understanding not only of
geography but also history and tradition, ethnicity and dedication or belief in
spirit. + Includes topics/issues (but not limited to): racism, sexism,
homophobia, ageism, classism, ableism and all forms of discrimination that
create marginalisation in society. COMMUNITY BASED ARTISTS + Concerned
with the functionality of art in public arenas including community development,
corrections, education, intergenerational communications, aging, environment,
conflict resolution, cultural citizenship etc. + Work with all media, in all
disciplines, everywhere. + Committed to bringing arts and education to
highlight and expose the widest possible range of social conditions and
challenges facing our communities. + Seek to create social change on every
level of society, from the most ‘personal’ to the most ‘political’. Activist
Art for Leadership… How do we practice it and what style does it inhibit?
Is it catching? WHAT IS IT ALL ABOUT? A few thoughts… + If you want to change
things you do it with people not to people. + Ongoing revolution. + To service
the greater good activist art (like all forms of expression) should be regarded
according to review, peer assessment, research and budget in order to gauge
it’s effectiveness in society. + A crucial shift in thinking is to involve
people for their abilities, what they can do, rather than build up an attitude
that only aesthetic or technically sound work should be the focus or at the
forefront of the revolution in an ideological sense. Artistic merit should be
judged according to a clear communication of a relevant, centralised and
communal message, no matter the art form or level of artistic development. +
Activist art is concerned with cultural and ideological democracy and the right
of all to have access to services. + Equal rights for one should not come at
the cost of another’s rights. + Activist art is concerned with promoting a
community that encourages ideas and the community leaders who have the courage
to put them forward. A community that takes pride in the way we treat and
include those that need our help. + *Inclusion.* + Apart from enjoying the
right to create art for its own sake, activists are often draw to art. +
Activist Artists are concerned with highlighting technocratic decision making
processes... behind closed doors based on limited information and without
initial intention to consult those whom the decision most affected. + Rather
than fearing our differences, we wish to be a people who celebrate it.
Recognising diversity can give birth to creativity as much as conflict. YET...
We do not seek to be a society that fears rigorous debate. + It is through the
testing of ideas, through endless argument and negotiation that a community
retains it's vitality and survives. + let our debates be based on mutual
respect and the denial of violence. Many great examples of activist art can be
found in our galleries. One REALLY GOOD link: Community-based Art for Social Change
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