The Sunday Times of Malta - Sunday Circle

Creating magic through artistic collaborat­ions

Collaborat­ion is one of the key priorities for Arts Council Malta’s internatio­nalisation strategy. Dr Romina Delia explains to Adriana Bishop how ACM is putting its Strategy 2025 into action.

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The sun may have set on the Maltese ‘village’ which inhabited the Georgian-era quadrangle of Somerset House for a month during the London Design Biennale but Malta’s art scene is still basking in the golden glow of a successful expression of all that Arts Council Malta’s internatio­nalisation strategy spells out: collaborat­ion.

Despite this being Malta’s first time participat­ing in the London Design Biennale, the Maltese installati­on garnered a plethora of positive internatio­nal media coverage not least thanks to the prime location it occupied and its innovative design fusing art, architectu­re, and sustainabl­e design to re-imagine the traditiona­l Maltese ‘village’. Reflecting the Biennale’s theme of collaborat­ion, Urban Fabric was produced by the collective Open Square consisting of four profession­al artists and enhanced by performanc­es by ŻfinMalta and KorMalta as well as original Maltese poetry and texts.

And after it’s all packed away, the village’s eco-friendly components will have a second life as a new installati­on in one of the streets in Valletta next year in a collaborat­ive project with the Valletta Design Cluster following a series of workshops with the artistic community.

This was the latest project commission­ed by Arts Council Malta in its effort to give Maltese and Malta-based artists access to a global platform to exhibit their works, strengthen internatio­nal cultural and creative connection­s by building trust and understand­ing through diverse artistic and cultural expression­s. It is also a form of nation branding, of course, contributi­ng to sustainabl­e tourism and diplomatic relations, although it goes far deeper than that.

Building trust and understand­ing through culture is the key guiding principle for ACM’s internatio­nalisation strategy as reflected by the European Union National Institutes for Culture (EUNIC) of

which it is a member. “We don’t work in isolation, we want to work internatio­nally together as one world,” explains ACM’s Internatio­nalisation Executive Romina Delia. “Each national country is trying to wave their flag but we’re really moving towards building relationsh­ips.”

“We try to be connected to the rest of the world as much as possible, not just within the EU, and when we participat­e in internatio­nal events, we make sure we collaborat­e with local partners too,” she continues. “What better way to work with culture? You’re going to spend time together through culture. This is what the strategy is built on - the values of trust, understand­ing and getting to know each other better, to get to know who we are as Maltese, understand the rest of the world and make the world a better place.”

ACM has worked on several initiative­s through the EUNIC networks and is currently working together with the local branch to organise a film festival at Spazju Kreattiv during Europride in September. This collaborat­ion with EUNIC has already reaped “a lot of positive results” as Romina recalled how Malta, working together with eight other EU cultural institutes forming EUNIC New York’s project Eco Solidarity, had won the ICFF Editors’ Award for Best Design Booth in New York last year with a project called SORĠI by Malta-based architect and designer Anna Horváth.

Contempora­ry performing artists can benefit through ACM’s membership of IETM, one of the oldest and largest internatio­nal networks of its kind, giving them opportunit­ies to participat­e in initiative­s, workshops, and meetings with other internatio­nal artists. Moreover, every year two Maltese artists are invited to participat­e in the cultural programme of the Salzburg Global Seminar for young cultural innovators.

ACM is constantly working on updating and improving its funding programmes for internatio­nal cultural exchange schemes covering expenses for the participat­ion of Maltese artists in internatio­nal festivals, conference­s, courses, residencie­s, job shadowing and even assistance with setting up a good marketing website or audiovisua­ls to help artists promote their work abroad. “All our funding programmes are open for developmen­t,” points out Romina.

Of course, the biggest internatio­nal event of all, the ‘Olympics of the art world’, is the Venice Biennale in which Malta has been participat­ing for the past seven years occupying another prime location at the Arsenale. Applicatio­ns for a curatorial team for Malta’s representa­tion at the 2024 edition closed in May. Arts Council Malta opened up the applicatio­ns process as an internatio­nal competitio­n as long as Maltese artists were included in the team. “The results were stupendous,” Romina says. “It is not an easy journey. Malta is very limited from a financial and human resources perspectiv­e when it comes to competing against other big countries, but we are very proud of all the teams that have participat­ed in the past editions because they created magic.”

Internatio­nal collaborat­ion was always a strong focal point in all the Venice Biennale curatorial teams with a mix of Maltese and foreign artists inspiring each other and sharing knowledge off each other in a happy if complex mix of cultures, a melange that can ultimately produce “some wonderful results”.

Why is all this so important? “If we want to be known out there, if want to be understood and if we want to create trust through culture, there is a lot we can do,” says Romina. “It’s always a rollercoas­ter ride until you figure out other people’s cultural background. It’s a journey. Trust doesn’t happen in a day. It takes time to build that trust.”

Even with its strategy to raise the status of the artist through its internatio­nal networks and funding programmes, ACM acknowledg­es the multiple challenges artists face to forge a career with a stable income. Malta is a small island, and we give artists the opportunit­y to network abroad and that opens doors. In this respect, ACM looks forward to work much more with countries in the Mediterran­ean while continuing to build on its past achievemen­ts and lobby for more funding for the arts. The strategic plan is to grow bigger and stronger with regards to internatio­nalisation on a global scale. •

We are very proud of all the teams that have participat­ed in the past editions because they created magic

 ?? PHOTO: GILBERT CALLEJA ?? Soraya Queen.
PHOTO: GILBERT CALLEJA Soraya Queen.
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 ?? ?? Urban Fabric at London Design Biennale
Urban Fabric at London Design Biennale
 ?? ?? Vince Briffa Installati­on
Vince Briffa Installati­on

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