The Human Rights Arts and Film Festival (HRAFF), which
opens today, aims to “challenge,
touch and inspire audiences from all walks of life” and to provide a “shared
site whereby artists, human rights organisations and the Australian public are
united by their desire to contribute to social change”.
But is it reasonable to expect the HRAFF – or any other
“themed” festival – to lead to any form of lasting change or activism? And if
so, how can that be measured? Such questions are more than hypothetical. As
festivals worldwide respond to austerity cuts – and the impact these have on
their funding models – they are of considerable importance.
Austerity impact
The HRAFF model provides a template for a collaborative
partnership approach to sponsorship and engagement, as can be seen on its website.
However the reality for many arts and human rights
festivals globally has been state and private funding cuts resulting in
significant cutbacks on events and engagement, as seen in Italy,Holland, and Britain. Despite the
strong support of arts by the
general public, the arts sector in Australia has not been immune.
In 2014 the federal government announced a funding cut of A$100 million over four years to
the arts. The principal arts funding body, the Australia Council, lost
more than than A$10 million out of its A$222 million annual budget in 2014 and
A$6.4 million for the following three years resulting in a cut just shy of A$30
million.
In August last year the Australia Council announced
the reduction of grant categories from 154 to five aligned with an “enhanced
peer-review process” and requiring a “stronger evidence base” .
Capturing the impact of arts and cultural activity on the
community is the name of the game.
Funding models
Last year’s boycott of the Sydney Biennale by
artists protesting the event’s ongoing sponsorship by Transfield Holdings made
the point – very publicly – that where festival funding comes
from matters.
Last month, artistic director of the Queensland Theatre
Company Wesley Enoch argued that an “arms length” approach could be taken in
accepting the support of mining company Sibelco to fund his play Black Diggers.
On ABC’s The Drum, he wrote that:
since time immemorial, the artist has relied on the
largesse of the tribe to allow them space to practise their craft. To be
excused from the day to day gathering of food and collective survival
responsibilities so that they can perfect their skills and reflect on tribal
cultural needs.
This
need for patronage - from royals, from governments, from wealthy individuals,
from corporations - has long been a source of tension.
So what are the alternatives?
Many film festivals now use crowdfunding sites such as Kickstarter and StartSomeGood to raise funds. Last October,
following the expiry of a sponsorship by Anil Ambani’s Reliance Entertainment,
the Mumbai Film Festival was in danger of ending.
A supporter of the festival, film critic Anupama Chopra, turned to crowdfunding, which received
huge support from the Indian film and acting industries.
The impact of the initiative has seen other film
festivals – such as the KASHISH Mumbai International Queer
Film Festival, South Asia’s biggest (and India’s only)
mainstream LGBT film festival – adopt a similar model.
In Australia there are also innovative uses of
crowdfunding. In February 2014 the Transitions Film Festival partnered
with StartSomeGood and Cinema Nova to
launch Cinema By Demand,
whereby were paid for and curated through crowdfunding.
Many businesses and corporations keen to embed a
corporate social responsibility ethos have also been integral to supporting and
funding festivals. And – as part of the funding terms and conditions of such
support – there is a focus on gathering stories of change and impact.
Measuring impact
Participant Media, a
not-for-profit organisation based in the United States, in partnership with the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, the Knight Foundation and the University
of Southern California, offers one way (though it’s still in
development) of measuring impact.
The Participant Index compiles
raw audience numbers from the United States for issue-driven narrative films,
documentaries, television programs and online short videos, along with measures
of conventional and social media activity, including Twitter and Facebook
presence.
The project captures:
• What viewers learned while watching
• How viewers felt after watching
• What viewers did as a result
• How viewers felt after watching
• What viewers did as a result
Key findings of
the inaugural report, published last year, found that 77% of viewers placed
human rights at the top of their list of important social issues, followed
closely by healthcare, education, crime, and hunger.
Stories about animal rights and food
production/sustainability were most likely to provoke individual action.
Programs that focused on data and online privacy, economic inequality, and
health care spur the most information seeking behaviours, while global health
and poverty was most likely to inspire individual-driven community engagement.
Emotional impact
Measuring the impact of arts and cultural events requires
long-term tracking and customised tools. We need to remember that a single
numerical figure does not reflect the value of a cultural event that can
inspire others who dream of recognition, human rights and democracy.
Developing those systems, and mapping that impact, is –
in its own way – a path towards social change.
-The Conversation
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