What is Community Arts

Broadly defined, community arts is a collaborative creative process between a professional practising artist and a community. It is a collec-tive method of art-making, engaging professional artists and self-defined communities through collaborative, artistic expression. It is as much about process as it is about the artis-tic product or outcome. Community arts provides a unique way for com-munities to express themselves and enables artists, through financial and other support, to engage in cre-ative activity with communities.

This broad definition identifies three elements which separate com-munity arts from other methods of art-making:

  • the co-creative relationship between artist and community;
  • a focus on process as an essential tool for collective, collaborative, mutually-beneficial results;
  • the active participation of artists and community members in the creative proces
Community arts is not new. Since the beginning of time, artists have worked closely with communities to creatively educate and build bridges of dialogue, understanding and con-nection in communities where they have been torn down or never exist-ed. Community arts activities can touch communities and artists deeply by highlighting or exploring a particular aspect of a community in a creative way. Its socially-engaged nature differentiates it from other art forms.
 

Baboro Childrens Festival, Galway Community Arts Network

County Galway Community Arts Network.
What is new about community arts is the recognition of this art-making method as a means by which to dissolve the divisions between art, society and life; between the artist and the community. Given the breadth of its definition, community arts is sometimes diffi-cult to distinguish from those pro-jects that may have components of community activity. What separates genuine projects from others is the nature of the collaborative process and the active, co-creative involve-ment of artist and community.
Evolution of Community Arts Creative expression has always been a powerful element of the social, economic and political landscape of most societies. Art , in one form or another, is an element of daily life in the majority of the world s cultures and civilizations. It has been argued that Western society has gradually removed the artist from that integral role in society, formalizing the arts and isolating the individual creator as artist , rather than thinking of him or her as part of the integral make-up of society. Community arts makes it possible to remove that isolation; community arts projects put the artist back in the role of co-creator and facilitator of public artistic expression.

Baboro Childrens Festival, Galway Community Arts Network

County Galway Community Arts Network.
In the past 20 years, community arts has evolved differently in the English-speaking world. In the United Kingdom, for example, signi-ficant financial resources allowed community arts projects to develop on a grand scale until the Thatcher years, which saw severely curtailed cultural spending. In Australia, the concept of community arts has been woven into the federal and municipal fabric, with paid community arts facilitators at the local government level creating an infrastructure for community arts activity. In Canada, the community arts movement has been emerging at different rates throughout the various provinces.

In each country, including Canada, common elements have contributed to the development and growth of community arts, including the:

  • recognition that arts activity, when integrated into the every-day lives of people, is an effective means of addressing social and cultural concerns;
  • need to make the arts accessible, supported and appreciated by larger segments of society through more public and local exposure;
  • increased use of public and com-munity- based venues for artistic expression;
  • need for funding institutions to recognize artists whose work is culturally/socially engaged;
  • influence of non-Western artistic activities and art forms.

Baboro Childrens Festival, Galway Community Arts Network

County Galway Community Arts Network.
The last point above is especially sig-nificant when we think of the notion of equity and community arts. For many First Nations artists, artists of colour and immigrant artists, community arts is the manner in which they have worked and developed as artistic creators throughout their lives. Their struggle with arts institutions and agencies for access and recognition of their arts practices has largely paved the way for community arts. As you read the Community Arts Workbook, it is our hope that some of this background and context will help you think about what community arts means to you and provide ideas or inspiration for projects you undertake.

Community Arts Workbook

This is a workbook for artists, com-munities and the public for anyone engaged in or who wants to become involved in community arts. It is designed to give some background on the application of community arts as well as provide hands-on tools advice, frameworks, techniques to help artists, cultural workers and com-munities plan, begin, complete and evaluate a community arts project.

 

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