Cultural Entrepreneurship: What Matters? Insights from around the world

Cultural Entrepreneurship: What Matters? Insights from around the world

Event Type
Masterclass
Date
17 October 2024
Time
7:00 PM
Location

What matters in cultural entrepreneurship? What could we learn from practices across borders?

Synopsis: The masterclass will help students (potential cultural entrepreneurs) think about and navigate often missed critical success factors including authenticity, community relevance, networking, collaboration, trust and leadership by reflecting on inspiring stories from across the globe and spanning the spectrum of formality and informality. This spectrum has universal significance in relation to the precarious nature of careers, the fast-paced, fluid environments in which companies operate, and the patchwork of contract, self-employment, and enterprise development experienced by creative entrepreneurs in the global labour market. This analysis draws on experiences from diverse countries such as Brazil, Czech Republic, China, Colombia, Egypt, Indonesia, India, Jamaica, Kenya, Kyrgyzstan, Nigeria, Peru, and South Africa.  What matters for cultural entrepreneurs are the unique stories that inspire people to purchase the product or service and the availability of soft and hard infrastructure that support robust cultural economies.

This event is free and open to the public.

Avril Joffe

Avril Joffe

Speaker

Avril Joffe is an associate researcher and UNESCO Chair in Cultural Entrepreneurship and Policy in the Cultural Policy and Management Department at the Wits School of Arts, University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg. She is an economic sociologist with independent professional research experience in the field of cultural policy, culture and development and the cultural economy. Avril works at the intersection of academia and practice in fields such as culture in urban life, culture and the cultural economy in realising a just and sustainable development, fairness in international cultural cooperation, decent work and the rights and status of artists and cultural professionals as well as teaching pedagogy for post graduate studies in the cultural economy. Avril is an active member of UNESCO’s Panel of Experts for Cultural Policy and Governance, the Global Creative Economy Council, the International Cultural Relations Research Alliance and on the external international advisory panel for the Horizon Europe programme IN SITU - Place-based innovation of cultural and creative industries in non-urban areas coordinated by the Centre for Social Studies at the University of Coimbra, Portugal. Recent public research related to inequality includes Informality and the cultural economy in the Global South, the Not a Toolkit for EUNIC’s Fair Collaboration project, Promoting Decent Work for the African Cultural and Creative Economy for the ILO and China’s Institutional Cultural Engagement in Africa for Ifa.

Sunitha Janamohanan

Sunitha Janamohanan

Moderator

Sunitha Janamohanan has worked in the arts since 1999 with a portfolio that covers a range of art forms and creative industries. She has been an arts manager, curator, producer, venue manager and heritage manager in Kuala Lumpur and Penang, Malaysia. She has an MA in Arts Administration from Columbia University, New York, and is presently teaching Arts & Cultural Management at LASALLE College of the Arts, Singapore. She has been a member of the Heritage Advisory Panel for the National Heritage Board of Singapore since 2018, serving on a sub-committee for Intangible Cultural Heritage. Sunitha’s research interests include community and socially engaged arts practice; local arts management models in Southeast Asia; and the intersections of social practice, labour, organizational behaviour and cultural leadership.