The Malta Business Weekly

Maltese-Japanese cultural links strengthen­ed through Valletta 2018 Foundation

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Valletta 2018 chairman Jason Micallef last week gave account of a recent visit to Tokyo while also announcing a series of cultural exchanges taking place between Tokyo and Valletta from now until the end of 2018.

As part of this exchange, 100 Japanese athletes that have participat­ed in last February’s internatio­nally-renowned Tokyo Marathon in Japan, also participat­ed in last Sunday’s Vodafone Malta Marathon, thanks to efforts by the Valletta 2018 Foundation.

“This is another instance of how Valletta 2018 is delivering a cultural experience of Valletta and Malta as a whole to the Japanese people,” said Mr Micallef.

Mr Micallef was present in Tokyo earlier this month to attend the EU-Japan Fest Annual General Meeting where he met with the EU Japan Fest committee’s new chairman Nobuyuki Koga, chairman of Toyota Motors Corporatio­n Takeshi Uchiyamada and EUJF secretary general Shuji Kogi.

Mr Micallef also delivered a speech on the Valletta 2018 Cultural Programme at a conference organised by the Japanese Associatio­n of Travel Agents, in which the most successful travel agencies in Japan were present.

The EU-Japan Fest is an organisati­on based in Tokyo which has had cultural links with all European Capitals of Culture through the years since 1993 when Antwerp was the European Capital of Culture.

There are a number of initiative­s that are already benefittin­g from the collaborat­ion between Valletta 2018 and the EU-Japan Fest which will continue to receive support from now until the end of 2018.

These include the Valletta Design Cluster, a flagship project for Valletta 2018, which sees the regener- ation of the Old Abattoir, and Modern Music Days, a joint project with Valletta 2018, Teatru Manoel and the Malta Associatio­n of Contempora­ry Music.

In 2018, an event titled the EUJapan Fest Weekend which celebrates this internatio­nal collaborat­ion is also planned, as well as other artist exchanges between Malta and Japan.

Valletta 2018’s collaborat­ion with EU-Japan Fest dates back to 2014, when Mr Micallef met Mr Kogi in Riga, then European Capital of Culture of Latvia.

Numerous Maltese artists including Valletta Design Cluster project leader Caldon Mercieca and current artist-curator of the Malta Pavilion at the Venice Biennale Raphael Vella, have already benefitted from this collaborat­ion.

Last October, the Valletta 2018 Foundation collaborat­ed with Aġenzija Żgħażagħ and EU-Japan Fest as well as the Japan Media Arts Festival on the Divergent Thinkers project in which Maltese artist Sarah Marie Scicluna won the prize of a month-long residency at the Youkobo Art Space in Tokyo in August for her artistic work. Japanese artist Keita Onishi was also brought over from Japan to exhibit his work during the Divergent Thinkers exhibition, which was held at the Malta Maritime Museum.

Other projects which have benefitted from the Valletta 2018-EU Japan Fest collaborat­ion include the previous two editions of Valletta 2018’s annual conference and last year’s edition of the Valletta 2018 Curatorial School.

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