culture bridges
Culture Bridges is a three-year programme which supports the development of the cultural sector in Ukraine by enabling it to engage more effectively with cultural organisations and operators in the European Union (EU). Culture Bridges is funded by the EU to support the implementation of the Association Agreement between the EU and Ukraine and is managed by the British Council in partnership with the European Union National Institutes for Culture (EUNIC) network in Ukraine. It has both a grant component and an educational component.
Clymene is currently an advisor to the Culture Bridges project sharing her transnational experience as director of D6. Click here to view a broadcast of Clymene in Kharkiv, discussing her knowledge about the programme and building links with Ukrainian cultural organisations.
This June Clymene has led workshops taking place in Kyiv and Khmelnytskyi with participants from municipal functions and spaces, NGO’s and universities. The cultural sector was represented by performing artists, animation and TV studios, visual artists, publishers and musicians. The workshops covered: how to make projects work in an international context; the ways in which organisations might find new European partners; what participants had to offer as well as what they needed from others, and how their work and their ambitions for a future transnational programme would meet the priorities of the Creative Europe Programme. These priorities (transnational mobility, audience development and capacity building) were considered and explored, to better enable cultural organisation in Ukraine to engage with organisations in the EU.
Clymene is currently an advisor to the Culture Bridges project sharing her transnational experience as director of D6. Click here to view a broadcast of Clymene in Kharkiv, discussing her knowledge about the programme and building links with Ukrainian cultural organisations.
This June Clymene has led workshops taking place in Kyiv and Khmelnytskyi with participants from municipal functions and spaces, NGO’s and universities. The cultural sector was represented by performing artists, animation and TV studios, visual artists, publishers and musicians. The workshops covered: how to make projects work in an international context; the ways in which organisations might find new European partners; what participants had to offer as well as what they needed from others, and how their work and their ambitions for a future transnational programme would meet the priorities of the Creative Europe Programme. These priorities (transnational mobility, audience development and capacity building) were considered and explored, to better enable cultural organisation in Ukraine to engage with organisations in the EU.