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ELAN History Series: 2018

ELAN History Series: 2018

Guy Rodgers speaking at Quescren Press Conference

Guy Rodgers speaking at QUESCREN Press Conference. 
Photo by: Marc Bourcier 

Inclusive Mandate, Wrapping up AAQ

At the 2018 Annual General Meeting, ELAN renewed its mandate to be more open and inclusive: the use of English was changed from “first language” to more formally include allophones and make common cause with the French-speaking cultural community. The new mandate also included students from all disciplines, not just in the arts, as well as cultural workers and administrators.

Another major change for ELAN was the introduction of Pay-What-You-Can (PWYC) membership. A majority of our members voted for PWYC, with suggested donations, to make membership more accessible and encourage the use of ELAN’s services.

Wrapping up a solid four-year run, ELAN worked with our regular regional partners—and media sponsorship from CBC—across the province to produce the Arts Alive! Quebec festival in summer 2018. The biggest changes for the 2018 edition were the introduction of a small partnership with Arts NDG, and hosting readings and live music at four libraries in the West Island.

Arts Alive! Quebec summer festival in Wakefield.

ACE Initiative

With new funding from the Secretariat for Relations with English-speaking Quebecers, ELAN’s ACE Initiative was able to develop activities for two years. The new funding would go toward creative projects by 10 ACE Artists in schools across Quebec, in 2018/19 and again in 2019/20.

Project Manager Christie Huff, and her team from ELAN’s previous version of ACE, continued to provide  skills in facilitation to connect artists with English-speaking schools and communities. ACE projects empower students to learn with and through the arts.

ACE Project Intergenerational

 Intergenerational ACE project in Knowlton developed by Laura Teasdale. Elementary school children and seniors took classes together in singing, painting and story-telling. 
Photo by: Laura Teasdale

Performing Arts Market Access

The Performing Arts Market Access (PAMA) project concluded with a robust program of workshops and showcases in 2018. The PAMA Showcases, managed by Emilia Alvarez and Mariam Assaf, provided opportunities for tour-ready artists to collaborate with renowned performing arts festivals.

The PAMA project led to national and international festival showcases at Pop Montreal, Fierce Festival (Birmingham, UK), Northside Festival (Brooklyn, NY), with the support of FACTOR: Halifax Pop Explosion Festival, and CINARS. ELAN also published a special edition catalogue, In Quebec and Tour Ready, to highlight a diverse roster of dancers, musicians, new media and sound artists.

The PAMA project’s Savvy Sessions, managed by June Park, offered free professional development workshops for performing artists, aimed at enhancing the skills needed to successfully navigate a career in the arts. Focussing on dance, music and theatre, the Savvy Sessions project produced over 24 workshops led by talented and experienced workshop leaders.

Elle Barbara performing part of PAMA

Performing Arts Market Access Project: Elle Barbara performing live. 
Photo by: Mariam Assaf

State of the Arts

ELAN was conceived in 2004 at the Quebec Arts Summit community consultation, which brought together over 200 English-speaking artists, cultural workers, and decision makers. ELAN’s second community consultation, the State of the Arts summit in 2011, further strengthened these links and sparked ongoing collaborations. In response to changing community needs and priorities, ELAN began planning a third community consultation that would begin in Fall 2018 and culminate in a one-day summit in February 2019.

State of the Arts (SotA) III would open the floor to artists, cultural workers, and other stakeholders in order to facilitate coordinated action towards improved conditions for all artists in Quebec. Designed as a community consultation, SotA aimed to better understand how artists, cultural workers, arts organizers, funders, and audiences are connected, and how we can help each other strengthen our arts community together.

Over the course of Fall 2018, SotA Project Manager Farah Fancy held workshops—also known as Assertion Sessions and Affirmation Workshops—that were focused on particular arts disciplines and regions in Quebec. The sessions, conducted both in Montreal and in the Eastern Townships, would set the stage for the large Activation Conference at the Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec (BAnQ) in February 2019.

2018 SOTA prep_Emily and Farah Fancy_Photo_Amy Macdonald

Membership Coordinator, Emily Enhorning and SotA II Project Manager, Farah Fancy brainstorming session.
Photo by: Amy Macdonald

Digital Solutions

In 2018, ELAN’s Digital Solutions project entered Phase 2. Project Manager Daniel Webster continued research for Digital Solutions, funded by Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada (ISED). Earlier research developed and tested ideas about a promotional app with the collaboration of a cohort of producers, presenters and publicists from the English-speaking community. Surveys and focus group sessions for artists, arts organizations and media workers were conducted between January and March 2018.

Phase II, funded in August 2018, would test a prototype app from a consumer perspective, to introduce a more effective digital marketing system for Quebec-based English-language arts producers. The prototype would compile information about arts events into a structured database and feed this info to media for display on their websites, and directly to arts audiences. This would save producers time and by-pass dominant arts marketing intermediaries like Facebook. The prototype, called ARTS2U, would be launched in 2019.

ISED Meeting

Focus group on Digital Shift that lead to the ARTS2U project. Project Manager Dan Webster, assistant Rio Victoria Jestin.  Present at the meeting: Richard Burnett who was project manager for the 2014 Digital Shift Report at Norman House.
Photo by: Guy Rodgers 

Advocacy and 2018 Provincial Action Plans

ELAN participated in national consultations for the renewal of the 2018-23 Action Plan for the Official Languages Act in Ottawa and Montreal, alongside the National Film Board (NFB), Telefilm, and the CRTC, as well as the Plan’s unveiling in Ottawa. The Action Plan received a 20% increase in funding for minority language communities across Canada.

ELAN facilitated a meeting between the English-speaking theatre community and the Conseil des arts et des lettres du Quebec (CALQ) to review problems in funding. A number of theatre companies (including the Quebec Drama Federation, Teesri Duniya and Repercussion Theatre) had their funding cut or severally reduced without warning. These cuts were out of step with positive evaluations from the Canada Council for the Arts and the Montreal Arts Council. The theatre community suspected that CALQ staff and francophone juries did not understand the different working environment for English theatre in the province (with PACT companies working under Actor’s Equity rules).  ELAN contacted CALQ and arranged a meeting with the entire English-speaking theatre community that laid the foundation for some funding to be restored and future juries to be given a document explaining the context of English-language theatre.

Just prior to the provincial elections in October 2018, the Quebec Liberal Party made the announcement of a new Cultural Policy accompanied by a $600 million budget. Presented by Premier Philippe Couillard and Culture Minister Marie Montpetit, the cultural policy acknowledged the contribution of English-speaking Quebecers, but was vague in how English-speaking arts institutions could make use of the budget.

Based on the success of MAtv, ELAN intervened in the license renewal hearings (CRTC 2017-183) for Quebec’s educational TV channel, Télé-Québec (TQ). ELAN took the position that Télé-Québec is the national broadcaster of all Quebeckers and therefore should actively engage in telling stories by and about the English-speaking community to encourage a positive public conversation between minority and majority language communities. The English-speaking community represents 10% of Quebec’s population and should therefore receive 10% of airtime.

A headline in La Presse reported that English-language producers were demanding 10% of TQ’s budget, which sparked an emotional response on social media and a heated debate in the National Assembly. The CEO of TQ admitted that it was already part of TQ’s mandate to include the English-speaking community, and that many English-speaking artists were already featured on popular variety programs such as Belle et Bum. The intervention enabled ELAN to play a leadership role in promoting an important public discussion about inclusion and representation in TQ’s programming.

The Secretariat for Relations with English-speaking Quebecers’ funded project, initially called Un Nouvel Élan Pour les Artistes Anglophones du Québec (A New Momentum for Québec’s English-Speaking Artists), was renamed Québec Relations. The project worked to connect community needs with government resources by identifying more than 130 funding programs available to not-for-profit arts organizations (CALQ, SODEC, the Ministries of Culture and Education, as well as other ministries, agencies and departments).  Québec Relations also sent out surveys to more than 250 arts organizations on their specific needs in order to match needs with new funding sources.

 

2018 AGM, Sufia, guy, Amy, Emily

ELAN’s 2018 AGM permanent staff photo. Left to right: Sufia Duez, Guy Rodgers, Amy Macdonald, and Emily Enhorning. 
Photo by: Nasuna Stuart-Ulin