SUPPORTS ITEM NO. 2 CS&B COMMITTEE AGENDA NOVEMBER 9, 1995 ADMINISTRATIVE REPORT Date: October 24, 1995 TO: Standing Committee on City Services and Budgets FROM: Director, Office of Cultural Affairs SUBJECT: 1995 Cross-Cultural Initiatives Grants RECOMMENDATION THAT Council approve grants totalling $40,500 to 11 organizations, as listed in Table 1; source of funds to be the Cross-Cultural Initiatives category of the 1995 Cultural Grants budget. GENERAL MANAGER'S COMMENTS The General Manager submits the foregoing for CONSIDERATION. COUNCIL POLICY On January 31, 1995, Council approved an allocation of $50,000 in the 1995 Cultural Grants budget for the Cross-Cultural Initiatives Fund. The purpose of the fund is to encourage and assist cultural organizations to respond to Vancouver's cultural diversity by undertaking appropriate organizational change, intercultural research and training, community outreach, and cross-cultural artistic activities. Approval of grant recommendations requires eight affirmative votes. PURPOSE The Office of Cultural Affairs has received 22 applications for 1995 Cross-Cultural grants, one of which has since been withdrawn. A total of $108,010 has been requested. This report provides an overview of these applications, describes the evaluation criteria applied, and recommends grants to 11 of the applicants. SUMMARY Table 1, which follows, indicates the 11 Cross-Cultural grants recommended by the Director of the Office of Cultural Affairs Planning. Appendix A provides a more detailed description of the projects recommended for funding. Appendix B lists the 11 projects not recommended for funding. Appendix C provides a detailed description of the guidelines and criteria for the Cross-Cultural Initiatives program. Table 1 - Recommendations Amount Amount Organization Requested Recommended Acoustic Connection (Community Dance Project) 4,100 0 Arts Club of Vancouver 4,000 0 B.C. Boys Choir 4,000 3,000 B.C. Touring Council 2,500 0 Children's Arts Umbrella 6,000 0 Community Radio Education Society 3,750 0 Fend Players Association 5,000 0 Firehall Theatre 3,500 2,500 Headlines Theatre 12,550 5,000 India Music Society 8,700 4,000 Japanese-Canadian Studies Society 7,000 5,000 Karen Jamieson Dance Company 5,000 5,000 New Performance Works Society * 7,500 5,000 Powell Street Festival 2,300 1,500 Satellite Video Exchange Society 8,760 0 Sepia Players 2,500 0 Vancouver Art Gallery 5,000 0 Vancouver Holocaust Society 3,100 2,500 Vancouver Society of Storytelling 3,000 2,000 Women in View 7,500 5,000 Women in Music 2,250 0 TOTAL $108,010 $40,500 * Subject to receipt of more detailed budget. Approval of the recommendations in Table 1 will leave an unallocated balance of $9,500 in the Cross-Cultural component of the 1995 Cultural Grants budget. BACKGROUND The City of Vancouver set up the Cross-Cultural Initiatives Fund in 1990 as an incentive program to encourage initiatives in the arts promoting dialogue and collaboration between distinct communities in Vancouver. The program is designed to support new or recent initiatives that are not part of an applicant's normal programming or services (which can be funded through civic operating or project grants). Project and Operating grants are available to a wide range of culturally diverse arts organizations. During its five years of operation the Cross-Cultural program has supported a total of 71 projects by cultural organizations working in a range of disciplines. The projects have helped to expand the information and resources available to artists and organizations interested in working with distinct communities, to encourage outreach and dialogue between communities, to facilitate new employment opportunities through training, and to foster new artistic partnerships and creation. DISCUSSION As in previous years, the applications received for 1995 have been reviewed by a committee of three Office of Cultural Affairs staff and two advisors knowledgeable about the multicultural community. Grants are recommended for 11 of the 21 applications from performing, visual and other arts organizations. In addition, one applicant, High Risk Society, has withdrawn. In making these recommendations, the focus has been on projects that: - have a clear and well-developed plan of action and budget; - have a clearly defined cross-cultural component eligible for funding through the Cross-Cultural program; - represent a new or recent step in cross-cultural development for the applicant, additional to the organization's ongoing activities and operating costs; and - demonstrate appropriate community relevance and involvement, and a potential for long-term benefits to the community, as well as to the organization(s) involved. A detailed description of the guidelines and criteria for the program is presented in Appendix C. * * * * * APPENDIX A 1 of 4 DESCRIPTION OF RECOMMENDED PROJECTS British Columbia Boys Choir - Chinese-Canadian cultural exchange In February 1996 the B.C. Boys Choir is hosting a week-long exchange with Vancouver's sister city children's choir, the Guangzhou Children's Palace Choir. In July 1996, BCBC will be hosted in Guangzhou for the second part of this project. Each choir is preparing to present music from both cultures, and a new work by a Chinese- Canadian composer will be commissioned and presented as part of school and public concerts during the February event in Vancouver. Requested: $ 4,000 Recommended: $ 3,000 Firehall Theatre Society - audience forums, study guides, and information exhibit The Firehall Theatre Society will be presenting two plays focusing on family life and intercultural relations. "Someday" deals with a Native mother whose daughter, raised by non-Natives, is returning to visit her. "Mom, Dad, I'm Living with a White Girl," deals with inter-racial relationships in a comedic yet meaningful manner. The project provides for two post-performance forums allowing the audience to discuss issues with the cast, a set of school study guides offering background on the issues, and a lobby exhibit underlining the intercultural nature of both works. Requested: $3,500 Recommended: $2,500 Headlines Theatre Company - Latino Theatre Group development Headlines is sponsoring and supporting the development of the Latino Theatre Group, whose members are from Mexico, Argentina, Guatemala, Nicaragua, Dominican Republic, Argentina and Chile. The group, which performs in English and Spanish, is seeking assistance with the development and presentation of three half-hour plays on the topics of machismo, violence against women and racism among Latinos. The plays will be longer and more complex than any work the group has done to date, and represent a significant step forward. Requested: $12,550 Recommended: $ 5,000 Appendix A 2 of 4 India Music Society - cross-cultural dance workshop and performance The India Music Society is undertaking a cross-cultural project that will explore the similarities and differences between Kathak, tap and Flamenco dance. The program will include verbal presentations, demonstrations and workshops with opportunities for participants to interact and exchange their skills. The project will culminate in a performance at Robson Square. Requested: $ 8,700 Recommended: $ 4,000 Japanese-Canadian Studies Society - "Hong Kong 1997" As part of a recent undertaking to be more pan-Asian, the society is sponsoring "Hong Kong 1997", which will gather writers, artists and critics from Hong Kong and elsewhere to share insights and work pertinent to the transfer of Hong Kong to China. The project will includes a group exhibition, forums, video screenings and readings, and should contribute to the Vancouver public's ongoing efforts to come to terms with its relationship the Pacific Rim. Requested: $ 7,000 Recommended: $ 5,000 Karen Jamieson Dance Company - collaborative dance and music project with Native community Karen Jamieson continues to explore appropriate ways to work with Native people and culture. "Stone Soup," her current collaboration with urban and non-urban Native people, will focus on the development of contemporary songs and dances related to traditional forms. The project will involve significant additional costs related to the number of participants and extended development time. Requested: $ 5,000 Recommended: $ 5,000 Appendix A 3 of 4 New Performance Works Society - workshop and media arts project for culturally diverse teenage girls "Turning Point" is a two-phase project consisting of a look at the situation of teenage girls, media representations about them, and the creation of an arts-related media event to respond to the media images. The first phase will include a workshop for 30 culturally diverse teenage girls who will become the core youth leadership for the project. Artists will be involved in presenting information at the workshop, and as partners in the creation of the media event. In the second phase, youth and artists will collaborate in a large-scale theatrical performance intended to reframe perceptions about the creativity, needs and abilities of teenage girls in Vancouver. This project, which has both social and cultural implications, has evolved in consultation with community services agencies, the Women in View Festival, New Performance Works Society, the Vancouver Art Gallery, as well as individual artists, with support from the Park Board and Social Planning Department. Funds are recommended for phase one of the project, subject to the provision of a more detailed budget, to the satisfaction of the Director of The Office of Cultural Affairs. Requested: $ 7,500 Recommended: $ 5,000 Powell Street Festival - steps to include other Asian-Canadian artist in the Festival The Powell Street Festival is Vancouver's major Japanese-Canadian cultural event. The society wishes to include representation from Asian-Canadian women artists, performers and writers in future Festivals, and will facilitate this through an "open call" process and workshop/planning sessions where past experiences and ideas for future collaboration can be explored. A grant to ensure that this opportunity is widely advertised and well facilitated is recommended. Requested: $ 2,300 Recommended: $ 1,500 Appendix A 4 of 4 Vancouver Holocaust Society - "Visas for Life" exhibition and concert The Vancouver Holocaust Society and the Human Rights Committee of the Japanese Canadian Citizens Association of Greater Vancouver are co- sponsoring an exhibition, "Visas for Life," about the life and times of Japan's consul general to Lithuania during WWII, who saved the lives of thousands of European Jews. The project includes docent training to assist in presenting and responding to issues of racism and discrimination, as well as a gala concert of Japanese and Canadian music using traditional instruments and art forms to explore the Jewish/ Japanese connection. Requested: $ 3,100 Recommended: $ 2,500 Vancouver Society of Storytelling - oral history symposium The society intends to hold a symposium on the critical issues and practical techniques associated with community oral history projects. The need for documentation and preservation of life stories is shared in mainstream and culturally distinct communities, and is a key ingredient to cross-cultural under-standing. Individuals and organizations working with interview subjects will receive advice and access to further information through the symposium, which is being developed by a culturally diverse planning committee in collaboration the Museum of Anthropology and the Japanese Canadian National Museum Archive. Requested: $ 3,000 Recommended: $ 2,000 Women in View Society - non-traditional production of "Lear" The Society will assist in the development and presentation of "Lear," which will use non-traditional casting, crossing outside of the norm in gender, age and ethnicity. The play will also incorporate traditional taiko music and movement as an integral theatrical element of the production. "Lear" will open the 1996 Women in View Festival, and will follow with an extended run at the Vancouver East Cultural Centre, that includes a series of special student performances. Requested: $ 7,500 Recommended: $ 5,000 APPENDIX B 1 of 2 REQUESTS NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FUNDING Acoustic Connection Music & Cultural Soc. Request: $4,100 Community dance project featuring a series of family dances in the Grandview-Woodlands area and Kensington Community Centre. Arts Club Theatre Request: $4,000 Subsidized tickets for Arts Club's student and community outreach program. B.C. Touring Council Request: $2,500 Showcase and provincial tour of young Vancouver writers from diverse cultural backgrounds. Children's Arts Umbrella Request: $6,000 Recruitment and bursary program for students from different ethnic and cultural backgrounds. Community Radio Education Society Request: $3,750 Sponsorship of an Edmonton-based radio artist to create programming that pairs youth and seniors for broadcast on Co-op Radio. Fend Players Request: $5,000 Open forums related to a theatre production of Mark Leiren-Young's "Dim Sum Diaries," previously produced as a radio play. Satellite Video Exchange (Video in Studios) Request: $8,760 Further training and inclusion of individuals from culturally distinct communities, who having received intermediate level training, are now ready to apprentice in digital editing systems, media arts, and technician functions. Appendix B 2 of 2 Sepia Players Request: $2,500 Expansion of this small company's annual Youth Workshop Production to other communities. Vancouver Art Gallery Request: $5,000 Provision of an interpretive program element, "The Open Studio," offering interaction opportunities and staff informed about the Gallery's current contemporary Japanese photography exhibition. Women in Music Request: $2,250 Research and development of an ethno-musicology resource library with an emphasis on women in music. * * * * *