1st Edition

The Creative City Vision and Execution

By James E. Doyle, Biljana Mickov Copyright 2015
    248 Pages
    by Routledge

    248 Pages
    by Routledge

    The Creative City: Vision and Execution, edited by James E. Doyle and Biljana Mickov, challenges the popular understanding of the Creative City, by bridging the gap between the Creative City as concept and the Creative City as practice and, in so doing, provides a contemporary template for policy makers, city planners, and citizens alike. The book will offer researchers and pragmatists a series of real-life examples of successful cultural and creative practice throughout Europe, reflecting on the analysis and thinking that forms our contemporary understanding of the creative city. It will examine and explain the changes to the concept of the ’creative city’, explore its connectivity to the cultural sector as well as other sectors and practices across Europe and will serve to illustrate the perspectives of Cultural Managers, Educators, Professionals and Researchers from the creative sector in Dublin and Europe. This book will present the reader, and the cultural sector at large, with a new reality based on the quality of contemporary creative practice. Doyle and Mickov address cultural trends such as sustainability and social networking and how they value-impact our attitudes towards culture and the creative city By recognizing that we live in a time of rapid change, which affects all systems, financial models, resources, the economy and technology, we also recognize that the creative process is at the heart of our responses to these changes.

    Part 1 Witnessing the Creative City: Culture in the global city.  Creative city: levels of creativity.  Art in public space in the city of Bremen: 40 years of tradition.  Part 2 Assessing Governance:  Community Center Rojc: the creative hub of Pula.  Retooling governance: Ireland and the 'pret-a-creer' Utopia.  The creative city: full STEAM ahead.  A dialogue on cultural precincts: 'teeth will be provided for you'.  Governance in cultural organizations in a creative city: Reims, France.  Part 3 New Policy Paths: Not even wrong.  Sticky culture.  Growing the creative economy: reframing industrial policy objectives.  Culture as a byword for urban development: the Italian experience.  Social participation issues in becoming a creative city: learning from European capitals of culture.  Part 4 Future Voices:  Art and surveillance in the city: we ignored the pre-cogs and never looked up.  Creativity of the audience: saving the world with beauty, that is, with art, is worth trying.  On creativity.  Afterword: extreme future.



     

    Biography

    James E. Doyle is a cultural manager, a practicing artist and one of the Arts Officers for Dublin City Council.  He has recently been appointed as Coordinator for the Dublin bid for EU Capital of Culture 2020. James has qualifications in fine art, European cultural project management, physics and chemistry, and has a special interest in the research, critical analysis and publication of topical cultural themes, particularity in relation to sustainable cultural development.



    Biljana Mickov is a cultural researcher, editor and consultant. She graduated from the University of Novi Sad and also holds a European Diploma in Cultural Project Management from the Marcel Hicter Foundation Brussels (supported by UNESCO and the EU Commission). Biljana is arts, culture and creative industries editor for cultural publication Thought. She collaborated on cultural partnerships internationally and her work has been published in Spain, the UK, France and Serbia. She is a member of the European Expert Network on Culture (EENC), a project that comprises a group of high-level experts who provide assessments and reports in the field of cultural policy.