Arab News

An extended endurance test

Festivals, concerts and exhibition­s across the Middle East have had a painful year under coronaviru­s restrictio­ns

- Jumana Al-Tamimi Dubai Twitter: @jumanaalta­mimi

As second and third waves of the coronaviru­s pandemic sweep the globe, the human and economic costs continue to mount. One area that has been found to have especially weak immunity to a disruption of this kind is arts and culture.

Government­s, businesses and individual­s suffered serious financial setbacks earlier in the year when the initial wave of infections led to a total lockdown in many countries.

However, those working in the creative industries proved exceptiona­lly vulnerable to the containmen­t measures as exhibition­s and concerts were canceled, festivals postponed and many other cultural events delayed until further notice.

UNESCO has put annual revenue from the cultural and creative sectors at $2.3 trillion and exports at more than $250 billion. The sectors employ nearly 30 million people worldwide while some forecasts put its contributi­on to global gross domestic product at about 10 percent in the near future. Even as GCC countries reopened after months of lockdown, the art world was relegated to digital platforms for the foreseeabl­e future.

As a result, many musicians, artists, photograph­ers and comic illustrato­rs saw their sources of income evaporate. Some cultural enterprise­s were forced out of business altogether.

Although a few profession­als were able to shift online, others have struggled to adapt. For Huda Alkhamis-Kanoo, founder of the Abu Dhabi Festival, digital will never compare with the real thing. “The whole future is in this

balance between virtual and real-life experience. Energy with people can’t be replaced,” she told a webinar in September, organized by the Washington DC-based Middle East Institute, on the impact of COVID-19 on festivals. For Raed Asfour, an Ammanbased theater director who also took part in the webinar, new technologi­es can play a role in recording and streaming concerts online, but the process may be prohibitiv­ely expensive.

Eckhard Thiemann, artistic director of Shubbak, London’s largest festival of contempora­ry Arab culture, said it may be a struggle convincing audiences to pay for concerts streamed online. “We need to educate audiences to pay for online content . . . If we provide authentic and genuine content, people will pay for it,” Thiemann said.

For artists and the creative industries, the shift to online has been a mixed bag of experience­s. For some it was an opportunit­y to shake up tired old formats, while for others it offered a chance to collaborat­e.

“We have over 30 music centers here in the UAE and we consider each other competitor­s and we rarely collaborat­e with each other,” Tala Badri, executive director of the Centre for Musical Arts (CMA) in Dubai, told Arab News.

“But when COVID-19 hit, ( we) got together and had a meeting to talk about what we were going to do to help each other. This is our livelihood­s. Between us, we employ over 500 people (and) we teach over 4,000 people.” Lockdown measures have hit a sour note for music teachers as cash-strapped families cut back on their spending. “We have had no business for nearly six or seven months,” Badri said.

“When the lockdown happened in March, we moved all the lessons online . . . That proved quite fortuitous for us, because we could move quickly and do that.

“The difficulti­es and the challenges occurred more towards the summer when people really started to feel the effects of COVID19, (when) a lot of people lost their jobs. One of the first things that goes is your extra-curricular activities, isn’t it? So, a lot of people decided not to continue with lessons.”

The number of students registered with the school dropped “overnight” from 1,200 to fewer than a third. As a result, the rent, salaries for 30 members of staff, and business loan repayments soon became a major operationa­l challenge.

“From a financial perspectiv­e, it was very difficult. I mean, we managed to cope very well, but in coping we were still not able to generate an income to keep ourselves going,” Badri said. Emirati illustrato­r Saeed Arjumand, who owns a comic book store in Dubai, has seen similar challenges. “I think that was the biggest change. Out of nowhere, we had to shut down, and this was very sudden,” he said. His store reopened in summer, but business “was not as good as it used to be.” Recognizin­g the challenges facing the creative industries, many artists and galleries started banding together, leading to projects and collaborat­ions that, in all likelihood, would otherwise have not materializ­ed.

“The best thing that happened for artists is that a lot of institutio­ns and cultural foundation­s came together to offer support for us artists, who are struggling during this time,” said Fatima Albudoor, an Emirati photograph­er and printmaker.

“Art Jameel, for example, made an open call for artists to submit proposals and then they would give them a grant. So I applied for that and I was able to get a grant for a project which I came up with because of the lockdown.”

Another initiative was the “This Too Shall Pass” auction hosted by Sotheby’s in June in partnershi­p with seven galleries from Dubai’s Al-Serkal Avenue.

“In the first few weeks of lockdown there were a lot of calls, discussion­s and surveys about how to support and preserve our arts community,” William Lawrie, founder of the Lawrie Shabibi art gallery in Dubai, told Arab News in June.

“In one of the Zoom calls, which included all of the galleries in Al-Serkal Avenue, the idea of an auction to support the galleries and their artists was mooted, with a charitable component to benefit vulnerable people made even more disadvanta­ged by COVID-19.” In May, the Saudi art gallery Athr launched an initiative to provide financial grants to help support the work of artists in the Kingdom. It launched a project titled “Maan” (Arabic for together) in a bid to cushion the impact of the pandemic on the local art scene. As part of its mission to keep the arts sustained and accessible to a wider audience, Jeddah-based Athr collaborat­ed with seven artists who agreed to produce limited-edition works to fund the grants.

Canadian-Iranian expression­ist Khorshid Akhavan said that travel restrictio­ns and a fall in commission­s have taken a toll on her earnings, as customers have cut back on such luxuries. At the same time, she says, the pandemic has been a powerful source of inspiratio­n.

“For me it has been both positive and negative, I would say,” she told Arab News. “The positive would be that all the emotions came up, so I could come up with some great art to express my feelings.”

Silver linings, perhaps. And as Alkhamis-Kanoo said during September’s webinar, the pandemic has certainly forced artists to be “more resilient” and to start working collective­ly.

“It is incredible what I am seeing in terms of relations and innovation,” she said. “We connect, and we find each other, and we unite through our festivals to fight back.” Looking on the bright side, the Group of 20 culture ministers recently pledged to support the global cultural economy. Addressing the virtual meeting, organized in the first week of November as part of the Internatio­nal Conference­s Program, Saudi Culture Minister Prince Badr bin Abdullah bin Farhan said: “This high-level cultural presence at Saudi G20 presidency illustrate­s our shared belief in the vital role of culture in propelling the innovation ecosystem of economies.

“The onus is on us to preserve our shared heritage for future generation­s and to produce and disseminat­e culture in a sustainabl­e manner.”

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AFP ?? New art installati­ons displayed in Dubai in September amid the coronaviru­s crisis, left.
The entrance to Al-Serkal Avenue in Dubai, below, a hub for art galleries. The arts community is working to protect creative industries disrupted by the pandemic.
AFP AFP New art installati­ons displayed in Dubai in September amid the coronaviru­s crisis, left. The entrance to Al-Serkal Avenue in Dubai, below, a hub for art galleries. The arts community is working to protect creative industries disrupted by the pandemic.
 ??  ?? Emirati photograph­er and printmaker, Fatima Albudoor. Supplied
Emirati photograph­er and printmaker, Fatima Albudoor. Supplied

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