Andreas Broeckmann on Sun, 22 Feb 1998 13:23:31 +0100 |
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Syndicate: Independent media culture in Canada |
[this is an excerpt from a longer text, Culture and New Technologies in Canada - Recent Background and Present Initiatives by Michael Century] The culture and communications policy environment in Canada Until 1993, Canada had a federal department of Communications, responsible for both arts and culture, telecommunications, and related research and development. The department, founded in the 1960s, was in today's light a visionary one, since it handled culture and information/communications technologies within a single integrated policy framework. A departmental reorganization took place in 1993 which shut down the Communications Department and established a new department of Canadian Heritage (http://www.pch.gc.ca), responsible for arts, broadcasting, cultural industries, museums, libraries, as well national parks, multiculturalism, and citizenship. Information technology and telecommunications research were extracted and transferred to the Department of Industry (http://www.ic.gc.ca). In the wake of this separation, the field of"new media" or "digital content" became a contested ground, with Industry Canada establishing its own directorates for so called "new media and entertainment" and "information highway applications" (the names themselves being indicative). Independent media culture The Canada Council (http://www.canadacouncil.ca), an agency of Canadian Heritage, finances a network of independent artist-run-centres, which span the visual arts, computer-based media, experimental music and cinema. This well- established, though quite modestly financed network was developed in the 1970s and 1980s, and many of the centres have long histories of interdisciplinary practice which include early experiments in social action media, telecommunications art, telematics and interactive art. Yet the grass-roots practice which the artist-run-centres foster has had difficulty in "keeping up" with changing technologies, particularly with the budget cuts of the 1990s. Little funding is available to them for capital investments, nor can these small-scale centres afford the kind of skilled technical staff needed to support high-end environments. Yet they remain a vital component of Canadian 'media culture'. I can't do justice to the breadth of practices in this network, but will refer you to Mix - http://www.web.net/~mix/ - the journal of artist-run culture - for details. The Canada Council was also very early to recognize computer-based or "media art" as a separate practice, and has financed production and research in this area through its Media Arts department since the mid 1980s. In terms of specialized centres, The Banff Centre for the Arts, in Alberta, became internationally known for its emphasis on media arts research and production, mainly through a program of artists-in-residence. From 1988 to 1994, it sponsored longer term research programs, notably the Art and Virtual Environments Project http://www.banffcentre.ab.ca/mva. This work was made possible by a three-way collaboration, between state cultural funding, university research, and private sector contributions of equipment/software. Treated by public officials as an exemplary project, the Banff Centre in 1992 became the flagship node in a national grouping of so-called "multimedia research centres", through a federal financing scheme which ran until 1995. The other centres were located in Vancouver, Toronto, and Montreal. The Banff Centre now runs a program of training workshops and hosts conferences about art, media industries, and new technologies. Notable university based centres which bridge the arts and design and information technology include the McLuhan Centre in Toronto (http://www.mcluhan.utoronto.ca), the Knowledge Media Design Institute (http://www.kmdi.org) both at Toronto, and the MAGIC lab at Vancouver (http://www.magic.ubc.ca).