Difference between revisions of "Creative Europe in Slovenia"

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Since the year 1997 hundreds of cultural organisations from across Europe join in for a very special set of administrative and discursive protocols. Each year they compete with their often painstakingly compiled projects as they apply for co-funding from one of the European Union's cultural programmes. As of 2014, these programmes are united under the name Creative Europe.
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Since the year 1997 hundreds of cultural organisations from across Europe join in for a very special set of administrative and discursive protocols. Each year they compete with their painstakingly compiled projects as they apply for co-funding from one of the European Union's cultural programmes. As of 2014, these programmes are united under the name Creative Europe.
  
 
Worth about a billion and a half euros and covering the period between 2014 and 2020, Creative Europe is – to put it briefly – a means to support the creation of a shared European cultural space and identity. It is divided into two subprogrammes, the film-focused MEDIA, and the more diverse CULTURE, further partitioned into Literary Translations, European Platforms, European Networks and Cooperation Projects. It is especially through this latter one that Slovene cultural producers have recently been excelling with considerable ''panache''. In fact, through an impressive performance of their application-genius, they have just managed to claim no less than 1.2 million of the roughly 35 million euros at stake for Cooperation Projects in 2017.  
 
Worth about a billion and a half euros and covering the period between 2014 and 2020, Creative Europe is – to put it briefly – a means to support the creation of a shared European cultural space and identity. It is divided into two subprogrammes, the film-focused MEDIA, and the more diverse CULTURE, further partitioned into Literary Translations, European Platforms, European Networks and Cooperation Projects. It is especially through this latter one that Slovene cultural producers have recently been excelling with considerable ''panache''. In fact, through an impressive performance of their application-genius, they have just managed to claim no less than 1.2 million of the roughly 35 million euros at stake for Cooperation Projects in 2017.  

Revision as of 16:15, 26 June 2017




Creative Europe Desk 2017 Ljubljana Puppet Theatre CE project.jpgNumeric's Art Puppetry Project supported by the Creative Europe programme is led by the Centre de la Marionnette de la Communauté Française de Belgique (BE), the Ljubljana Puppet Theatre being among the 3 partner organisations, 2017–2019.


Culture.si | Editorial


Since the year 1997 hundreds of cultural organisations from across Europe join in for a very special set of administrative and discursive protocols. Each year they compete with their painstakingly compiled projects as they apply for co-funding from one of the European Union's cultural programmes. As of 2014, these programmes are united under the name Creative Europe.

Worth about a billion and a half euros and covering the period between 2014 and 2020, Creative Europe is – to put it briefly – a means to support the creation of a shared European cultural space and identity. It is divided into two subprogrammes, the film-focused MEDIA, and the more diverse CULTURE, further partitioned into Literary Translations, European Platforms, European Networks and Cooperation Projects. It is especially through this latter one that Slovene cultural producers have recently been excelling with considerable panache. In fact, through an impressive performance of their application-genius, they have just managed to claim no less than 1.2 million of the roughly 35 million euros at stake for Cooperation Projects in 2017.



21 years ● 271 organisations ● 1033 projects
    Organisations by status
  • Public
  • Private
    Projects by field
  • film and audiovisual projects
  • interdisciplinary projects
  • multimedia and new technologies
  • books and reading / literary translation
  • cultural heritage
  • architecture, design and applied arts
  • performing arts (theatre, dance, music)
  • visual arts
    Organisation's role in the project
  • beneficiary
  • co-beneficiary



EU funding infographic

An interoperability project carried out by Culture.si and CED Slovenia features data that relates to EU funding for culture as a whole, encompassing the two seven year schemes for culture (these were preceded by some smaller programmes from the late 1990s, for which Slovenia was not eligible yet) as well as for the film and audiovisual media programmes (up until 2014 led under a separate entity known as MEDIA). Note that the blue squares in the infographic fall under this category and are currently still incomplete.

Each square represents one participant organisation. Clicking on them will take you to the more in-depth project descriptions. The infographic itself shows the distribution of projects by art field, by the organisation's role in the project and – interestingly – by the organisation's status as either a public or a private entity.

Natural born cultural managers?

When analysing the results of the previous years (2007–2011 and 2014–2015), Peter Inkei of the Budapest Observatory already stated in 2016 that "Slovenia is the incontestable east-central European champion in the Creative Europe programme". Thus his recent statement is merely a reiteration, as he wrote in May 2017, that "the champion is again Slovenia with a 35% success rate".

What he is referring to with the success rate in 2017 is that out of 20 projects with a Slovene "project leader" (the projects are comprised of one lead organisation and several partner ones), 7 managed to be successful in obtaining funds. The other 74 endorsed projects – chosen out of the 548 submitted applications – feature 10 Slovene organisation as partners (which, between us, can often be the preferable position in terms of the funds/responsibility trade-off). With all this in mind, Inkei rhetorically wonders if Slovenes are "born cultural managers". They might be, but more probably it is the complex historic composition of the Slovene cultural landscape (especially the NGO scene) that should offer interesting clues in this regard.

There is, however, one factor that seems to stand out as rather obviously important – the Creative Europe Desk Slovenia. This is the national information office for such matters, led by the small, but dedicated and trusted, NGO Motovila Institute. Recently, its crew, in a telling phrase that further elaborates Inkei's remark, has been labelled by one of the grant-winning producers as "our mothers". Be that as it may, helping out the applicants with advice, conducting informative workshops and carrying out other matters of general support, CED Slovenia sports a systematic approach towards producing a community-based pool of skills, tricks, contacts, and the like.

Cooperation Project recipients in 2017

Their propositions are naturally very diverse, ranging from exploring technological advancements in puppetry or archiving "the soundscapes of today" to historic research on a certain family of baroque sculptors and painters.

While 7 of the participating organisations haven't had any prior experience in EU's cultural programmes, the same number of others are veterans with at least three or more projects under their belts. What is somewhat striking in their composition is that public institutions have significantly boosted their Creative Europe profile, and have almost caught up with the previously much more industrious NGO sector.



See also

External links

[[Image:Motovila Institute 2020 Results EUMotovila Institute 2020 Results EU Coop Projects.png<small class="imgdesc">The infographic featuring the international impact of 18 successful producers from Slovenia who have received the Creative Europe funds in 2020 for cooperation with 94 partners from 24 countries!ration with 94 partners from 24 countries! +
The infographic featuring the international impact of 18 successful producers from Slovenia who have received the Creative Europe funds in 2020 for cooperation with 94 partners from 24 countries! +