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If
you build it - they will come.
This was the instinctual feeling of the organisers of
the first Cathedral Quarter Arts
Festival, and in the event, the Festivals
success exceeded everyones expectations.
For seven sun drenched days in early May, for the first
time in many years, people from all over the city and
beyond converged on the streets of Belfasts north
city centre to celebrate the best local talent while also
enjoying some of the best new national and international
talent across a wide range of artforms.
The Festival was a joint initiative by Laganside
Corporation and The
Community Arts Forum both of whom have a shared
interest in the regeneration of Belfasts city-centre
through the arts and cultural sectors. The Festival was
based on a perceived gap in arts provision for younger,
less mainstream audiences, a perceived gap in arts provision
during the good weather of early summer and the conviction
that arts should be widely available in centrally located,
accessible venues.
In the Autumn of 1999 a Management Committee was formed
comprising of a number of key individuals from arts organisations
based in the area and Chaired by the distinguished actor
and Director, Ian McElhinney.
The challenge was to devise a programme that would highlight
the social, celebratory and enjoyable aspects of engagements
with the arts without compromising the highest standards
of excellence, professionalism and challenge.
What was perhaps most surprising to the Management Committee
was the tremendous breadth of artistic activity already
happening in the area. This included a circus school,
a musicians collective, two art galleries and a
College of Art, a media resource centre, the Community
Arts Forum, creative writing organisations, as well as
cafes and bars strongly identified with arts activity.
It soon became clear to the organisers that a Festival
to celebrate all this activity was, quite simply, an idea
waiting to happen.
The Management Committee met on a monthly basis during
the winter and spring 1999/2000 during which time it adopted
a formal constitution and applied for Charitable status.
In April this year the Cathedral Quarter Arts Festival
became a company limited by guarantee with an independent
bank account. Charitable status is pending.
The Festival was extremely fortunate in having Laganside
as a core sponsor from the outset, as well as having monies
allocated from the Millennium Festivals. Funding was also
secured from the Arts Council of Northern Ireland, Belfast
City Council, Arts & Business, the Northern Ireland
Tourist Board, Dunloe Ewart, Belfast City Council Events,
The Esme Mitchell Trust and the Enkalon Foundation. An
inaugural Friends of the Festival scheme was
launched which brought support from the Northern Bank,
Harry Ramsdens, the Cutters Wharf and the
Europa Hotel.
With funding of some £80,000 in place, the Festival
Director, in partnership with the arts organisations in
the area began assembling a programme that would take
in music, comedy, literature, film, visual art, circus,
street theatre and traditional arts.
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It
was clear from an early stage that post-agreement Belfast
has a certain cachet amongst artists with performers such
as
Germaine Greer, Rob
Newman, Bill Drummond
agreeing to take part almost immediately,
in some cases for just a nominal fee. Despite having secured
a number of artists of international stature, the Festival
that emerged was in no way celebrity driven
but contained a very strong fringe or alternative
ethos. Indeed it was the very organic, local feel to the
Festival that drew much of the positive comment and goodwill
towards the Festival.
The Festival was also keen to promote a strong hands
on and participative approach to the arts and included
a wide range of workshops in everything from percussion
to digital film-making to stand-up comedy thus ensuring
that audience would be more than mere passive consumers
at arts events. A strong young peoples literature
programme was devised to enhance the teaching of English
and featuring people like
Ian MacMillan, Barnsley
Football Clubs Writer in Residence and the world
renowned author Bernard
MacLaverty.
The organisers also endeavoured to be as creative as possible
in the programming of spaces in the area and as a result
venues ranged from Irish traditional music in a boat on
the Lagan Folk on a Boat, to theatre in upstairs
lounges in pubs, to Opera in St. Georges Market.
In developing a marketing strategy for the Festival, the
organisers felt that in addition to the more traditional
marketing approaches such as newspaper advertising in
the Belfast Telegraph, the Irish News, and the Newsletter,
new and creative approaches to marketing had to be harnessed
to reflect the new and innovative nature of the project.
A web-site was up and running within weeks and began receiving
a steady number of hits. Radio adverts were
played on rotation on Citybeat. Using the award from Arts
and Business, two billboard sites were booked and proved
to be so effective that a third soon followed. 30,000
At a Glance guides were produced and distributed
as inserts in the Community Telegraph. A strong live
mailing list was built by collating the mailing lists
of organisations such as Northern Visions, The Creative
Writers Network and Catalyst Arts. All ticket purchasers
and telephone callers for programmes had their addresses
logged for future mailouts.
Much credit is due to the work of Tonic,
responsible for the design of all promotional material.
The design work was highly attractive, easy to navigate
and captured perfectly the ethos and values of the Festival.
This campaign garnered much positive comment and helped
create what many referred to as a great buzz
about the Festival. Ultimately the Festival almost began
to market itself due to the aforementioned buzz
and very strong word of mouth.
The Cathedral Quarter Arts Festival is now an independent
body with a proven track record and should be well placed
to attract significant outside funding. The Festival now
plans to modestly expand to run over two weekends (May
3-13, 2001). Clearly, artistically, socially and economically,
the case for a Cathedral Quarter Arts Festival has been
strongly made and what remains would seem to be questions
of scale, levels of funding and various other practical
issues. All those who took part had a shared sense of
participating in something new, vibrant and dynamic and
something which perhaps will mark a turning
point in the regeneration of this most historic part of
Belfast.
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