The Russian Cultural Centre and the Innosocium Foundation, the social platform of the Roscongress Foundation, have announced the results of the first Art Team National Contest of Creative Industries Projects. The final round featured 80 projects from 36 regions of the Russian Federation. Creative young people and specialists in the 20 to 35 age range who work in cultural and creative industries were invited to participate in the contest.
The authors of the 80 projects selected by a panel of experts will take part in a two-day in-person educational intensive workshop in Moscow and also have the opportunity to present their projects to potential investors at the Russian Creativity Week Festival, which is scheduled to be held in Gorky Park in September this year. The authors of the 20 winning projects will take part in a competition to receive a grant from the Tavrida Youth Forum.
The contestants’ projects were evaluated by an expert council that includes more than 30 representatives of cultural and creative industries, business, and the public authorities. Some of the notable experts include:
·
Nikolai Palazhchenko (Spider), Producer and Curator of Art Projects; Chairman of the Expert
Panel
·
Tatyana Mrdulyash, Deputy General Director for Development, Tretyakov
Gallery
·
Elena Marinina, Deputy
CEO, Roscongress Foundation; Director, Innosocium Foundation
·
Vadim Duda, General
Director, Lenin Russian State Library
·
Anton Belov, General
Director, Garage Museum of Contemporary Art
·
Roman Karmanov, First
Deputy General Director, Komsomolskaya Pravda Publishing House
·
Victor Michaelson,
Managing Partner, Communicator Group
·
Vladislav Blumenkrants, Producer
and Founder, Event Agency
·
Misha Most, Graffiti
Artist
The
following regions produced the highest number of finalists: Moscow, St.
Petersburg, the Sverdlovsk and Tomsk Regions, the Republic of Tatarstan, and
the Perm Territory.
The ‘Event Management’ category had 24 finalists and
was followed by ‘Creative Location’ with 18, ‘Education and Art’ with 18,
‘Digital in Art’ with 12, and ‘Tourism’ with 8.
The expert panel was particularly interested in the
following projects:
Ö
The creation of the KAMENKA|ART Centre for
Contemporary Youth Creativity based at a cultural space with the same name in
Krasnoyarsk. The centre’s activities include:
o
putting on and showcasing plays, concerts, and
performances from scratch;
o
recording songs, sound production, producing
television programmes, media content, and film production;
o
collaborations with representatives of various
art trends;
o
opening of a centre to provide grant support
for creative projects.
Ö
The modular ‘My Cinema’ project in St.
Petersburg. The idea involves using sea containers as cinemas, bars, co-working
spaces, or other types of creative spaces for small groups of up to 10 people.
Ö
The ‘Fashion Fool’ project from Khabarovsk,
which involves the resale of second-hand clothes and items without the sellers
participating, as well as the organization of thematic events (photo sessions,
displays of altered clothes, the installation of drawers to store things, etc.).
Ö
The Franema and the Cinema Club Leader film
projects by authors from Kaliningrad, which include specialized educational
programmes and the establishment of creative locations for filming and
collaboration.
Ö
The Delo School of Entrepreneurship for
Children and Teenagers in Perm. The creators focus on the concept of mentoring
and organize practice-oriented lectures and intensive workshops, which enable
young students to find their first partners and customers.
Ö
KzGallery – a virtual gallery of contemporary
art by authors from St. Petersburg. Virtual copies made from real works by
artists are placed in fictional locations (abandoned atriums, breathtaking
landscapes, etc.). The exhibition is only available for individual viewing: on
a computer, laptop, smartphone, or using a VR-helmet.
Ö
The modern ‘Guide to Interesting Places’ from
a creative agency from Kazan. In addition to standard tourist routes, the guide
contains a selection of cafes, panoramas for selfies, various myths, and
interesting facts about the city, and it uses author’s illustrations instead of
photographs of landmarks. The participants implemented the project in their
hometown and now intend to expand its geography.
Learn more about the finalists’ projects on the official Art Team website. In June, the resource will become an
educational platform that will feature a free online intensive course that aims
to educate authors of creative projects and improve their managerial skills.
“Among the finalists’
projects, we noted several interesting, unconventional ideas as well as
creative initiatives that are already being implemented, but locally, in a narrow
format. We believe all of them have great potential. The programme we developed
for the authors of creative projects and talented young people who are
interested in further development in this field, for which we engaged leaders
in the creative and business sectors to create, will enable the participants to
not only receive tools to implement their ideas, but will also provide skills
that will help them develop in any professional field,” said Marina Abramova,
Director of the Russian Cultural Centre.
“Our goal
is to help young talents shape a sustainable future. We need to become a bridge
between the great minds of our times – philosophers, sociologists, designers,
architects, artists, writers, and opinion leaders – and promising
representatives of the new generation. By organizing exhibitions, discussions,
and awards, we are creating opportunities for the development of unconventional
thinking and creativity. Supporting aspiring talents is all the more important
because this is how young people can become intrigued by fresh modern ideas
based on which they will subsequently create their own bright future. I am
certain that the Art Team contest, the Russian Creativity Week festival, and
the other projects that we are implementing together with the Russian Cultural
Centre will become incubators and fertile ground for innovative ideas and
creative developments. As part of the Art Team contest, the Innosocium
Foundation has initiated a separate category dedicated to the 75th
anniversary of victory in World War II. The authors of the projects ‘Leningrad.
Point of Return’ and ‘Interuniversity Literature Ball’ will join the ranks of
those who will participate in the Russian Creativity Week and will be included
in the talent pool,” said Elena Marinina, Deputy CEO of the Roscongress
Foundation and Director of the Innosocium Foundation.
“I have always believed in the creative potential of our young people.
Russia is rich with talent, and all the activities of the Centre for Film
Festivals and International Programmes aim to find and promote capable,
creative young people as well as create and implement new, interesting, and
innovative cultural projects. The finalists of the Art Team project are
certainly talented individuals. This project provides them with a unique
opportunity to turn a new page in their creative life and to contribute to the
development of culture and the creative industry, not only on a nationwide
scale, but also internationally. The Art Team project is igniting new stars,
and I sincerely wish the finalists success, to engage in creative
self-improvement, and to create new interesting projects,” said Tatyana
Shumova, Director of the Centre for Film Festivals and International
Programmes.
The Art
Team project aims to seek out promising socially significant projects in
creative industries and create conditions for the professional fulfilment of
creative young people through training in managerial skills and providing them
with tools to launch creative projects with economic potential on the market.
More information about the contest, including the full list of nominations, is
available on the official Art Team website (art-team.moscow).
The Art Team project is being organized together with the Centre for Film Festivals and International Programmes, with the support of the Presidential Grants Fund.