Culture - At Any Price?
December 28, 2015 How does art draw people to a city? Can crowd-funding save a musician? Documentary film maker Reinhild Dettmer-Finke gives a profile of Europe’s theater, art and music industry. He uses the countries and the projects in his film to demonstrate the problems artists face all over the world.
The Netherlands have seen massive cuts to the culture sector. Sophie Lambo, director of Amsterdam’s Internationaal Danstheater, wants to revamp her theater and keep it alive. But she has a battle on her hands – there are grants for projects like these but many have already been scrapped as part of austerity cuts. The right-wing conservative government has cut the country’s culture budget by 40 percent. France, on the other hand, is attempting to consolidate business and culture. The idea came in the early nineties from Jean Blaise, artistic director of the summer event “Voyageà Nantes”. He was the cornerstone in transforming Nantes from an industrial city into one of culture.
People are looking at ways to bring Germany’s cultural institutions up to modern times. The Maxim Gorki Theater in Berlin seems to be on the right tracks. Their political program is a hit with young people of all nationalities and backgrounds. The quality of a society’s art and culture is surely the driving force behind reflection and progress. As the world famous conductor Kent Nagano once said “What’s holding our world together? Not the financial world, that’s for sure.”
Broadcasting Hours:
DW
SAT 26.12.2015 – 19:15 UTC
SUN 27.12.2015 – 01:15 UTC
SUN 27.12.2015 – 07:15 UTC
SUN 27.12.2015 – 15:15 UTC
MON 28.12.2015 – 05:15 UTC
MON 04.01.2016 – 09:15 UTC
SUN 10.01.2016 – 03:15 UTC
Lagos UTC +1 | Cape Town UTC +2 | Nairobi UTC +3
Delhi UTC +5,5 | Bangkok UTC +7 | Hong Kong UTC +8
London UTC +0 | Berlin UTC +1 | Moscow UTC +3
San Francisco UTC -8 | Edmonton UTC -7 | New York UTC -5
DW (Amerika)
SUN 27.12.2015 – 09:15 UTC
Vancouver UTC -8 | New York UTC -5 | Sao Paulo UTC -2