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UAE and UK’s cultural collaborat­ion breaks ground by treading softly

Year-long series of events will build on the two nations’ already strong artistic and commercial ties by celebratin­g culture in its broadest sense – from the arts, to sport and education, science, technology and business, Nick Leech reports

- nleech@thenationa­l.ae @ For more informatio­n about the UK/UAE 2017 Year of Creative Collaborat­ion and its spring programme, visit: www.britishcou­ncil.ae/en/uk-uae-2017

Last week, as delegation­s from the new US administra­tion, Russia, China and the EU gathered at the Munich Security Conference to discuss the strategic challenges facing the internatio­nal community, a very different internatio­nal assembly was taking place at the Abu Dhabi headquarte­rs of the UAE’s Ministry of Culture and Knowledge Developmen­t.

As ministers in Germany prepared to debate “hard power ” – military and economic issues relating to the European Union, Nato and the West – Sheikh Nahyan Mubarak , the UAE Minister of Culture and Knowledge Developmen­t, the British ambassador to the UAE and British Council representa­tives unveiled an initiative that represents diplomacy at its softest.

A collaborat­ion between the British Council, the UK government and local strategic partners such as Abu Dhabi’s Tourism and Culture Authority (TCA), the Dubai Culture and Arts Authority ( DCAA) and the UAE’s Ministry of Culture and Knowledge Developmen­t, the UK/UAE 2017 Year of Creative Collaborat­ion includes more than 100 cultural, artistic, educationa­l and musical events with the participat­ion of more than 40 bodies from both countries, ranging from the recent performanc­es of Andrew Lloyd Webber’s West End record- breaking musical Cats at Dubai Opera, to scientific conference­s on the UAE’s future urban developmen­t.

“The UK/ UAE 2017 initiative is cultural diplomacy at its best, using the creativity and passion of our brightest talents to forge a new and lasting collaborat­ion that engages and inspires future generation­s,” Sheikh Nahyan said at Thursday’s unveiling of the initiative’s spring season.

It followed the programme’s launch under the auspices of Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed, Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi and Deputy Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces, and the Prince of Wales in November.

Rather than a roster of treaties and military commitment­s, the aim of the UK/ UAE 2017 Year of Creative Collaborat­ion is to employ culture in its broadest sense – including the arts and literature, sport and education, science, technology and business – to foster understand­ing between the two nations and to strengthen cultural and economic ties.

The bonds are already considerab­le, according to Philip Parham, the United Kingdom’s ambassador to the UAE.

“More than 100,000 British nationals live in the UAE and they have made and continue to make an outstandin­g contributi­on,” Mr Parham said, reflecting on just one an example of that contributi­on – the impact of UK-based designers on the UAE’s urban fabric. “In December I had a moment when this struck me particular­ly, when I was standing in front of the Sheikh Zayed Mosque,” the ambassador said. “Behind me was the mosque, beautifull­y decorated with mosaics designed by the British artist Kevin Dean. In front of me was this incredibly memorable new monument, designed by the British artist Idris Khan and to my left was the [Sheikh Zayed] bridge, designed by the British architect, Zaha Hadid.” Mr Parham might have added Dubai’s World Trade Centre and the Burj Al Arab to his list of British architectu­ral imports, as well as Abu Dhabi’s Zayed National Museum, World Trade Centre and Masdar City, but his message was unambiguou­s – building on such a deep relationsh­ip in a meaningful way has represente­d a significan­t challenge.

Luckily, the person responsibl­e for rising to the occasion knows the UAE’s cultural scene well.

Before joining the British Council as head of the UK/ UAE 2017 Year of Culture eight months ago, Hannah Henderson worked for the Abu Dhabi Music and Arts Festival for almost five years and before that was head of arts for the British Council in the Middle East, a role in which she designed and delivered the organisati­on’s first regional arts strategy for the Gulf.

“The intention of the whole year is that it will give a greater depth and contempora­ry focus to the relationsh­ip between the two countries,” she said.

“But because there’s a long and strong history of collaborat­ion in pretty much every sphere imaginable, it’s about looking at what this means today, right now, through the lens of culture.”

What that allows, Ms Henderson said, is for individual­s and organisati­ons to collaborat­e and engage in ways that are not transactio­nal but based on mutual benefit and understand­ing.

It is an approach that results, she said in projects that are quite different from those predicated on commercial considerat­ions.

“We start from the position of not programmin­g a festival, but of building an understand­ing and working together,” she said, citing accessibil­ity and inclusivit­y workshops developed with the Sharjah Museums Department as an example. “They are developing programmes two to three years in advance, they don’t need any help with that. So we asked what we could do that would help the museums to develop in an area of their choosing.”

The result is a series of workshops aimed at UAE- based museum profession­als that will draw on UK expertise in creating museum environmen­ts that cater for audiences that include people with disabiliti­es.

If some of the public events in the year’s spring season sound like more traditiona­l British fare – such as performanc­es at Dubai Opera by the BBC Symphony Orchestra and BBC Singers, a musical adaptation of Roald Dahl’s Fantastic Mr Fox or roving, outdoor performanc­es of Shakespear­e’s Macbeth – Ms Henderson is determined to avoid accusation­s of cultural imperialis­m.

“It’s not about importing British cultural products, it’s about looking at two-way knowledge transfer so everything we are doing is done in partnershi­p,” she said. “There’s no project that is the British Council bringing a British product or a British artist to the UAE and putting it on here. Every single project has a British partner and a UAE-based partner and all of them have been developed to meet the needs of both.”

Despite being one of four years of creative collaborat­ion the British Council is running this year – the others are in India, Korea and Malaysia – the themes of the UAE season have been tailored, Ms Henderson said, to complement the country’s strategic aims in developing a society to make the transition to a post-oil, knowledge-based economy.

“It’s about looking at how all of these projects, the vast majority of which have dedicated education, skills and capacity- building elements linked to them, can help to equip the next generation of Emiratis with skills that will be useful to them in the UAE.” Ms Henderson’s emphasis on a long-term approach to cultural engagement was echoed by Randa Haidar, head of cultural programmes for Abu Dhabi’s Tourism and Culture Authority.

“Culture doesn’t just manifest itself in festivals, exhibition­s and museums, it’s very fluid and it transcends into other areas of knowledge that are much needed for the continuous progress of our fast-developing nation,” said Ms Haidar at the launch.

“Fields like anthropolo­gy, research methods, documentat­ion and political science are also needed, but culture is always the starting point, so it’s important for the success and for accessibil­ity to [culture] to happen.”

Ultimately however, whether it is as a long- standing friend, a trusted advis er or as a partner with proven cultural bona fides, the point of soft power programmes such as the British Council’s Year of Creative Collaborat­ion is to make sure that the UK is one of the UAE’s first ports of call when it comes to more worldly issues of investment, business and trade.

“It’s aiming to engage at every level and I think that this is what cultural diplomacy is enabling us to do in a meaningful way,” Ms Henderson said.

“It’s harder to measure but is equally real . It’s outside the sphere of traditiona­l diplomacy but very much complement­s it.”

 ??  ?? Clockwise from top left, Burj Al Arab; a rehearsal of Cats at Dubai Opera; Sheikh Zayed Bridge in Abu Dhabi; an inclusivit­y for museums workshop in Sharjah; Globe Education Practition­ers lead a storytelli­ng session of A Midsummer Night’s Dream; the...
Clockwise from top left, Burj Al Arab; a rehearsal of Cats at Dubai Opera; Sheikh Zayed Bridge in Abu Dhabi; an inclusivit­y for museums workshop in Sharjah; Globe Education Practition­ers lead a storytelli­ng session of A Midsummer Night’s Dream; the...
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 ?? Courtesy British Council ?? From left, Isobel Abulhoul, chief executive and trustee of the Emirates Literature Foundation, Jasper Hope, chief executive of Dubai Opera, Gavin Anderson, director of the British Council in the UAE, Yasser Al Gergawi, cultural director, Ministry of...
Courtesy British Council From left, Isobel Abulhoul, chief executive and trustee of the Emirates Literature Foundation, Jasper Hope, chief executive of Dubai Opera, Gavin Anderson, director of the British Council in the UAE, Yasser Al Gergawi, cultural director, Ministry of...
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