Geelong Advertiser

Embracing our creativity

- JENNIFER CROMARTY Jennifer Cromarty is chief executive of the Committee for Geelong

DURING lockdown periods, many of us drew comfort and joy from reading books, purchasing artworks and well-designed products, watching movies, and listening to music. The creative arts kept us connected. They spoke to us of times gone by and of our hopes and fears for the future. At a time when performers and artists were most hard hit, with their livelihood­s shut down overnight, creative works and voices kept us entertaine­d, soothed and informed.

In Geelong, the talents of the Piano Bar’s Andy Pobjoy were live-streamed to our screens at home. Many cultural venues digitalise­d their works so we could access them remotely. Some artists were compensate­d financiall­y, while others performed as a gift to the public and as a salve for themselves.

As we move into a vaccinated economy, the creative industries sector will need all of us to dive back in to support its recovery.

I recently attended a performanc­e at Costa Hall as the Geelong Arts Centre dips its toes into hosting live audiences again. I’m sure I wasn’t the only one to shed a tear hearing Silvie Paladino sing. Moved by the beauty of her voice, it was also poignant for

Silvie to be back in front of a live audience. We all were able share the energy and emotion of being physically together again (while masked).

The creative sector is a significan­t economic driver and source of innovation.

In the 2020 A New Approach report, it shows the creative industries sector employed 8.1 per cent of the Australian workforce, contributi­ng 6.4 per cent of GDP. For a significan­t period of the past decade, employment in the creative industries grew at three times the rate of the rest of the Australian workforce.

Our region is changing and growing, bringing with it an influx of knowledge workers, digital natives and creative migrants. They bring their work with them and choose to live in environmen­ts they enjoy.

This growth is supported by our well-known and loved cultural institutio­ns.

As a UNESCO City of Design, we need to take that step further and embrace the role of creativity and design, and live the principles of sustainabl­e growth.

During 2020-21, I was privileged to chair the steering committee that developed the region’s first creative industries strategy – Making Change. Produced by Tony Grybowski Associates, the five-year strategy aims to spark leadership, inform government, and work with the creative community to build skills, attract investment, and grow the economic and social benefits of the sector.

The Making Change strategy was funded primarily by the Victorian government via

Regional Developmen­t Australia Committee Barwon South West, with financial contributi­ons from a unique collaborat­ion of project members including the Committee for Geelong, G21 Geelong

Regional Alliance, Geelong Arts Centre, Geelong Gallery, Creative Geelong Inc, Platform Arts, Back to Back Theatre and Geelong Regional Library Corporatio­n.

THE CREATIVE INDUSTRIES ARE REPEATEDLY PROVING AN IMPORTANT PIECE OF A FRAMEWORK TO TRANSITION FROM A RELIANCE ON HEAVY INDUSTRY AND OTHER FORMS OF LABOUR-INTENSIVE PRODUCTION. THIS IS THE STORY OF OUR REGION NOW, AND INTO THE FUTURE.

A new taskforce is being formed to support implementa­tion bringing together a range of cultural institutio­ns, advocacy groups, creative sector organisati­ons and community to: ACTIVATE the existing wealth of current skills;

BRING this sector to life and prominence;

SIGNIFICAN­TLY contribute to economic prosperity and community resilience;

DEVELOP a unique identity for the region (and that unique identity will be a crucial element in enhancing tourism across the region); and,

FULLY optimise the potential of the region.

All over the world, the creative industries sector has been identified as a key opportunit­y to achieve economic prosperity, community wellbeing and a creative ecology.

The creative industries are repeatedly proving an important piece of a framework to transition from a reliance on heavy industry and other forms of labourinte­nsive production. This is the story of our region now, and into the future.

Download the Making Change strategy from the Committee for Geelong’s website.

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