Riverside Studios - British and Colombian Chamber of Commerce
Transcription
Riverside Studios - British and Colombian Chamber of Commerce
Riverside Stud ios 3rd November 2007 Working in Partn ership with th e B& CCC August 2007 A. Colombiage What i s Col o mbia ge? • • • The first-ever annual celebration of Colombian arts and culture in Europe A one-day not-for-profit festival offering a glimpse into the contemporary face of Colombia through its music, literature and cinema Presenting the best talent from Colombia in one of the world’s major cultural epicentres – London Why Co lo mb iage ? Our visio n To become the leading platform for the promotion of Colombian contemporary culture in Europe, giving Colombia’s artistic talent a meaningful voice on the international stage Aims an d o bje ctive s • • Colombiage aims to edu cat e, ins pire and ente r tain London’s diverse audiences through an ambitious programme of events showcasing the very best of Colombia The festivals objectives are to: o Raise the profile of Colombia in Europe through the power of the arts o Export our best talent o Create a forward-thinking intercultural exchange between Colombia and the UK Whe n a nd w her e? • • • The first edition of Colombiage will take place at the prestigious Riverside Studios, Hammersmith on November 3 2007 Riverside Studios is West London's leading centre for contemporary and international performance, film, exhibitions and television production Riverside Studios has been one of the most important venues in London for new and international performing arts for over 25 years, bringing to the capital some of the best productions and companies from around the world, often for the first time 1 • For a stimulating overview of the Riverside Studios please click here http://www.theriversidestory.co.uk/ Who ma kes up Colo mbiag e? A team of dedicated volunteers with diverse backgrounds, experiences, a shared passion and a duty to highlight new developments in their culture to the rest of the world. For a full profile on each member of the team please refer to Appendix 1. B. Our partners This year we have the privilege of working in partnership with Cr os sing Bor der (http ://w w w. cro ssing bo rde r.nl ). Crossing Border is the festival where literature, music, film and the visual arts combine to take central stage. November 2007 will bring the fifteenth edition of this festival that has evolved to become one of the foremost international, interdisciplinary literature and music festivals in Europe. With performances occurring simultaneously on several stages, Crossing Border allows the audience to programme their own personal festival. This year’s Crossing Border is partnering with Colombiage to bring the invigorating sounds of Electrocumbé to Europe for the first time. After their premiere in London, Electrocumbé will travel to The Hague, Holland to perform at this all-embracing festival on the 20 November. 2 C. The programme • • • The first edition of the festival will focus on music, literature and cinema, three of Colombia’s richest sources of expression Audiences will have the opportunity to chose from a rich selection of events including high-energy concerts, stimulating readings, world-premier film screenings, free entertainment and a feast of authentic Colombian food and beverages – giving audiences a real taste of Colombia The current line-up includes: Electro cum bé – We have confirmed two bands from the emerging music scene in Bogotá. Led by the famous music producer Ivan Benavides (cocreator of international Colombo-British success, Sidestepper), this is a generation of young musicians who are embracing the traditional sounds of Colombia’s music such as Cumbia and partnering it with the sounds of now: digital, electronic music. In the 14 person collective travelling to London for Colombiage will be Bloque, Benavides’ very popular band which has toured extensively in the US. Then, there is the crazy sound of Malalma, space cowboys from Bucaramunga, Colombia’s ‘pretty city’, who do covers of Femi Kuti and George Clinton but also play their own high-energy sets. For a movement that claims to not be political, Electrocumbé’s togetherness and collective feeling of optimism is a good metaphor for where Colombia is today. Or, as Benevides told Colombiage, ‘right now, we are ready.’ Please refer to Appendix 2 for a preview of the press release. We have talked to many Colombian authors and so far we have secured a commitment from one of the best. Mario Mendoza is one of the leading lights of Colombia’s post-Garcia Marquez generation. The literature scene was dominated by Marquez’s magic realism, but now gritty realism in the ascendancy. And Mendoza, with five novels under his belt, is at the forefront of a group of influential writers that include J org e Fran co (Rosario Tijeras), Juan Carl os B oter o (Las Semillas del Tiempo), Hector A ba d F aciolin ce (El Olvido que Seremos) and Jua n Ga briel V asq uez (Historia 3 ascendancy. And Mendoza, with five novels under his belt, is at the forefront of a group of influential writers that include J org e Fr anc o (Rosario Tijeras), Ju an Carl os Bote ro (Las Semillas del Tiempo), He ctor A ba d Faci olinc e (El Olvido que Seremos) and Ju an Gab riel Va squ ez (Historia Secreta de Costaguana). There will be space for a Q&A and the Colombiage team, with their extensive contacts in the publishing industry, is currently trying to help Mr. Mendoza find a UK publisher for the English translation of his work. Mendoza will be sharing a traditional Colombian moment with the 2003 Booker Prize Winner and Spanish speaker, DBC Pierr e in Las Onces (Colombian teamtime) when they will discuss Mendoza’s latest novel, The Invisible Ones as well as Satanás, the film adaptation of his famous novel of the same title, which we hope to premier during Colombiage. We are in the process of looking at many new feature films and documentaries for Colombiage. In fact, there were seven films from Colombia that played out of competition at this year’s Cannes Film Festival, a massive milestone in the history of Colombian cinema. We hope to secure the UK premiere of Colombia’s biggest film this year, an adaptation of Mario Mendoza’s novel Sa tan ás, based on the true life story involving a femme-fatal that cons rich men, a priest who's in love with his housekeeper and a tired-of-life veteran of war who has become a teacher and has an affair with one of his female students. Three characters looking for love, redemption and second chances in a world reigned by their own fears, temptations, passions and pains, which will end up in a trigger effect of tragic events. Other influential names who have confirmed an interest in participating in the festival include Ro drigo Tri ana with his blockbuster, Soñar no Cuesta Nada, and the legendary Ser gio C abr era, Colombia’s most internationally renowned film director, who we hope will agree to be a patron for Colombiage 2007. who we hope will agree to be a patron for Colombiage 2007. 4 Other events supporting the programme include: Walk on th e Wild Sid e - A lunch buffet featuring traditional Colombian food in the company of Colombia’s emerging talent; a chance for Colombiage audiences to interact with writers, film makers and musicians and get a feel for Colombia through their eyes, experiences and their art. Col ombi ag e free stag e – A programme of free entertainment will be taking place at the open café of the Riverside Studios during the day and will include live music, talks and family activities. Plea se no te t ha t t he pr ogra mme is subje ct to c ha nges D. Partnership opportunities Colombiage aims to create and develop strategic partnerships, giving companies the opportunity to benefit from: • • • • A powerful association with the first-ever festival dedicated to the promotion of Colombian contemporary culture in the UK A direct and engaging communication channel to a highly relevant audience: 25-45 discerning culturally-aware individuals with an interest in Latin America A unique platform for product differentiation through bespoke branding, London-wide marketing and live interaction with a potential audience of 2,500 An opportunity to grow with a high-quality festival with a vision – a long-term partnership Bri ng i ng t he part ner s hip t o li fe – b enefi ts We are delighted to offer you two options of involvement: Optio n 1 - Maj or Sp on sor £5,000 a. Brandi ng Sponsor’s logo and accreditation on: • Festival Banner – positioned for maximum exposure at the Riverside Studios • Pre-screening holding slide x 2 (shown before each film) • Plasma screens x 2 – opportunity to announce sponsor’s association with Colombiage to the wider Riverside audience; position for maximum footfall b. Mark eting Sponsor’s logo and accreditation on Colombiage promotional print – London-wide distribution: • A5 postcards – c10k • A3 posters – c2k • A2, festival programme – c2k 5 Sponsor’s logo and accreditation on Riverside marketing print • Film programme • Autumn programme 1 c. Onlin e • Colombiage website - opportunity for sponsor’s logo and accreditation with click-through to sponsor’s website (http://www.colombiage.com currently under development) • Sponsor’s logo and accreditation on relevant page of the Riverside website with click-through to your own website (http://www.riversidestudios.co.uk) d. Press a dv ertising Sponsor’s logo and accreditation on: • Targeted ads in selected press e.g. Time Out, The Guide (Guardian) • Cross marketing opportunities with the Tate Modern Gallery (TBC) e . Hos pitality • Exclusive opportunity to go back stage and meet the artists • Complimentary ticket allocation – the best seats in the house (3 pairs of day passes worth £150) • Invitations to the exclusive launch party at the Ambassador’s residence with a special thank you to our major sponsors – 100 VIP guests from the worlds of the arts, business and media • VIP passes to the after-party at a prestigious club in central London d . Pr odu ct Plac em ent • Giving your product/brand exposure to an estimated audience of 2,500 • Personalised stand 2 - maximising interaction with a live, engaged audience • Located in prominent area of the Riverside • Opportunity to educate audiences about Colombia as a key cultural destination e.g. hot tips, your packages • Plea se no te t ha t all be nef its are s ub jec t t o f urt her co nf ir mat io n Optio n 2 - As soci ate Spo nsor £2,000 a. Brandi ng Sponsor’s logo and accreditation on: • Festival Banner • Pre-screening holding slide (shown before each film) b. Mark eting Sponsor’s logo and accreditation on Colombiage promotional print – London-wide distribution: • A5 postcards – c10k 1 2 Subject to deadlines of 25 September 2007 Additional cost met by the sponsor. Stand manned and managed by the sponsor 6 • • A3 posters – c2k A2, festival programme – c2k b. Onlin e 3 • Colombiage website – Sponsor’s logo and accreditation and click-through d. Hos pitality • Complimentary ticket allocation (2 pairs of day passes worth £100) • Invitations to the exclusive launch party at the Ambassador’s residence with a special thank you to our major sponsors – 100 VIP guests from the worlds of the arts, business and media • VIP passes to the after-party at a prestigious club in central London • Plea se no te t ha t all be nef its are s ub jec t t o f urt her co nf ir mat io n E. Summary • • • 3 A unique opportunity to be associated with the first edition of the first-ever festival dedicated to Colombian culture and talent in Europe A platform to promote your brand and services to a highly relevant and receptive audience A partnership with a vision – a festival that is here to stay Currently under development 7 Appendix 1 – The team Landa Acevedo-Scott, Artistic Director – Colombian, based in London Landa has spent the past three years working as Business Development Manager at one of the world’s leading arts centres, the Barbican Centre, where she has successfully secured funding for high profile projects of the likes of Tropicália, a major multi-arts festival showcasing Brazilian culture, through innovative partnerships with major sponsors. Landa studied European Business Management & French at Lancaster University, spending her second and fourth year at leading business schools, ICADE Madrid and Ecole de Management de Lyon respectively. She was also awarded a post-graduate diploma in Marketing by the CIM (Chartered Institute of Marketing). During her studies, Landa combined her interest in business with her undeniable passion for the arts by working for prestigious festivals like Jazz á Vienne in France whilst immersing herself in extensive travels throughout Latin America, Africa and Asia. It is during these extended periods abroad that she developed an eclectic taste for World music; an interest she was able to nurture during a three-year sojourn in Paris, where she combined her professional life working for telecommunications giant Cable & Wireless with the organization of cultural events. In 2002, she created Caméleon, a bi-mothly happening which fused a diversity of art forms, cultures and artists onto a central stage, attracting audiences from all over Paris. Today, Landa wants to draw on this experience to bring her native Colombia together with her adoptive home for the past 20 years – England -- in a celebration of art, diversity, talent and intercultural exchange. Diego Medina, Music Programmer – Colombian, based in London Diego has been at the forefront in the origin and development of the Latin American music since his arrival in the UK in 1986. He was involved in the foundation of the London School of Samba as musician, carnival organiser, fundraiser and event co-ordinator. In the Latin American House he was Administrator, Events Programmer and Arts Officer in their Management Committee. From 1989 to 1996 he became Programmer and co-producer for La Gran Fiesta Festival at the South Bank Centre; then in 1996 he programmed and coproduced Colores de Colombia festival at the Barbican Centre. More recently under the name of his own company, Diego has produced a Latin stage at the Thames Festival, copromoted the concert of the Aterciopelados (one of Colombia’s most established music groups) at the Royal Festival Hall and last year co-produced the To Dentro Festival, the first open air-Brazilian Festival in London and the River Tango Festival outside the Tate Modern Gallery. Kevin Conroy Scott, Literary Programmer – American, based in London Kevin is a literary agent at AP Watt, the longest established literary agency in the world. There he represents literary novelists and non-fiction authors, including Hisham Matar, who was shortlisted for the 2006 Man Booker Prize for his debut novel In the Country of Men. He is also the editor of Screenwriter’s Masterclass, a collection of interviews published by Faber & Faber in 2005, and the author of the forthcoming Paris on Film: A Walking History of the City of Cinema (Simon & Schuster, 2008). Born in Chicago, Kevin began his career in the mailroom at New Line Cinema in Los Angeles before becoming the script editor at their London office. He earned his MA in Film History at Birkbeck College, University of London and has directed two short films. Sa ndr a T ab are s Duq ue , Film Pr ogra mm er – C olom bian , bas ed in L ond on Sandra began her working life as a Respiratory Therapist while at the same time trying to fit in her two big interests, film and literature. Her passion for these fields inspired her to pursue a degree in Literature, develop cinema clubs and broadcast programmes on 8 cinema, back in her hometown, Armenia. Since her arrival to the UK in 2001, Sandra has dedicated her time to academic activity in Latin American Studies at Birkbeck College, University of London where she is currently researching Latin American Cinema. Since 2004 she has worked with the ONG Discovering Latin America and became the Documentary Programme Director of the DLA Film Festival in 2005. Jua n Camil o Pa z, De vel op me nt M ana ger – C olom bian , ba se d in Lon do n Juan has over 12 years of professional experience working in different roles ranging from project management and IT consultancy, to artist manager, concert producer, music programmer, night club entrepreneur and journalist. Juan has a BA in Business Administration from the ICESI University in Cali, Colombia and a MA in Music Business Management from the University of Westminster, London. He also studied productivity at the Japan Productivity Centre for Socio Economic Development in Tokyo and has a diploma in International Cooperation and Development from the Complutense University in Madrid - Spain. After finishing his MA, Juan joined the Music Department at the British Council and became a member of the editorial and programming team of Apple’s iTunes in London. He currently works as Research Officer at MusicAlly, a London based think-tank and research company focus in digital distribution of music, and writes in Spanish about the future of the music business for several leading newspapers and magazines in Latin America. Thomas Jacquart, Marketing Manager – French, based in London Thomas has a successful career in marketing and currently heads the marketing team at Efinancial Careers, a leading European online recruitment specialist. He has extensive experience in implementing online strategies, including web design and viral campaigns, and earlier this year launched his new company, Wanteed, a European portal for classified ads, in France and the UK. 9 Appendix 2 – Electrocumbé press release Electrocumbé A New Movement in Colombian Music ‘In Italy for 30 years under the Borgias they had warfare, terror, murder, and bloodshed, but they produced Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci, and the Renaissance. In Switzerland they had brotherly love - they had 500 years of democracy and peace, and what did that produce? The cuckoo clock ...’ - Harry Lime, The Third Man Every once in a while a rupture occurs in our collective culture and something new and important rises to the surface, ready for the world to take notice. In the late 1950’s it was fresh faced film critics turned directors of the French New Wave. In the late 1960’s it was Brazil’s turn as Gilberto Gil and a handful of artists were responsible for Tropicalia. More recently, the Danish filmmaking collective, Dogme 95, proved that cinematic purity can be provocative and successful. And now, as we approach the second decade of a new millennium, it is Colombia’s turn to take center stage in the world theatre: this is Electrocumbé. After spending eight successful years working as a producer in New York and touring America with his band Bloque to great critical acclaim, Ivan Benavides decided it was time to return to Bogotá to see what was happening in his home country. When he arrived he noticed that things had changed, the big band sounds of Cumbia and the traditional folk sounds of the Gaiteros were being fused with electronic music. And what’s more, a new generation of musicians were emerging who had grown up with MTV, myspace.com, house music and the stigma of Colombia’s negative global image of cocaine and civil war. They were ready to do things differently, in fact they already were. Benavides gave this moment a name, Electrocumbé, and a collective was born. ‘We are looking for a place with diversity around culture. A place in the world where we are normal,’ he said recently. ‘Not an exotic culture of the past or a vital culture of the periphery. Electrocumbé is not a political movement; it is a celebration of culture.’ And what a culture it is … not only is Colombia arguably the most diverse country in the world in regards to climate and topography (a nation the size of France that sits on the equator, with the cool Pacific on the west coast, a gateway to North America through Panama, and the hot Caribbean on the east coast, Colombia also boats snowy mountain ranges and a capital city that is cooler in the summer than London), Colombia is also diverse in its racial composition: descendents of the Spanish slave trade thrive on the coasts and in some places still speak their native African dialect while in the big cities of the mountains descendants of Indian’s mix with ancestors of the Spanish colonists. Each culture has their color and their sound, but now those colors and cultures are mixing together to form a new look and sound with a powerful feeling of optimism: Electrocumbé. Amongst the bands featured are Benavide’s Bloque, but also new bands like the Gaitero and Cumbia inspired Pernett. There is also the British invasion guitar sound of the ironically titled Sicotrópico, a band from Barranquilla on the Caribbean coast that is keen to show 10 that with a guitar, a bass and drums you can say as much about Colombia and the world as a sixteen piece salsa ensemble. There is also the surreal sound of Cabuya, space cowboys from Bucarmanga, Colombia’s ‘pretty city’ in the Santander region. Watching them update Femi Kuti’s ‘Bang, Bang, Bang’ is like watching the Colombian footballer Carlos Valderrama and his big hair head-bang with the back-up singers from George Clinton and the P-Funk All Stars. Electrocumbé claims as their patron saints traditional Colombian musicians like Lucho Bermudez, Alejo Duran, Jose Arroyo and the Gaiteros de San Jacinto. But they are also inspired by their coastal African roots and the rhythms of Fela Kuti, Caeteno Veloso, Hector Laude and even James Brown. In Colombia there has been a history of political troubles and violence during the 20th Century. But visit Colombia now and you will realize that is now almost a thing of the past. But there has also been a history of musicians toiling away on their own, not working together as they looked for a record deal from America or Europe, another case of Colombia giving away its riches. Now, the country that has brought the world the recent global TV success of Ugly Betty has the musical infrastructure to produce and export their own talent, and for the first time in a long time in Colombia, young musicians are working together. For a movement that claims to not be political, Electrocumbé’s togetherness and collective feeling of optimism is a good metaphor for where Colombia is at today. Or, as Benavides succinctly states, ‘Right now, we are ready.’ Electrocumbé will be touring Colombia in July with their new compilation and will be performing in New York in August and performing at the Colombiage festival in London in early November, the first ever European festival dedicated to Colombian contemporary arts. 11