Institutes’ joint project ‘pARTir – Creating a Cultural Roadmap Towards Responsible International Mobility’ starts in the spring 2024

pARTir – Creating a Cultural Roadmap Towards Responsible International Mobility is a new collaborative project between the Finnish Cultural and Academic Institutes (SKTI) (opens a new window) and ten Finnish cultural institutes operating abroad. The project aims to promote the sustainable and long-term internationalization of Finnish art.

Scheduled to run until 2025, the pARTir project will promote cross-cultural exchange and facilitate the international mobility of artists through the production of approximately 30 sustainably created performances, exhibitions, and other artworks. These works will be commissioned and developed in collaboration with various international art organisations. The program is designed to strengthen and establish environmentally and socially sustainable practices for international mobility, cultural export, and exchange.

The project operates through a network model, with the Finnish Cultural and Academic Institutes umbrella organization (SKTI) serving as the main coordinator in Helsinki. The ten Finnish cultural institutes involved will collaborate with intermediary cultural organizations in their respective host countries.

The Finnish Ministry of Education and Culture awarded a special grant of €726,000 to the pARTir project as part of the European Union’s cultural and creative industries structural support (Rescue and Recovery Facility RRF) in the fall of 2023. The RRF is one of the programs under the European Union’s Next Generation EU recovery instrument.

In the upcoming phases, the project will recruit and appoint a project manager, and collaboration will commence with translocal partners across the cultural institute network. The program’s actual production is set to begin in the spring of 2024.

Participating institutes include Finnagora – the Finnish Institute in HungaryThe Finnish Cultural Institute for the BeneluxThe Finnish Institute in the UK and IrelandThe Finnish Institute in JapanThe Finnish Cultural Institute in MadridThe Finnish Cultural Institute in New YorkThe Finnish-Norwegian Cultural InstituteThe Finnish Institute in Germany, and The Finnish Institute in Estonia.

The project is funded by the European Union – Next Generation EU.

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