Grahamstown comes alive with arts

Thursday, June 30, 2016

Pretoria – The university town of Grahamstown will once again play host to the National Arts Festival.

This spectacular is one of the biggest highlights on South Africa’s cultural calendar. Over 50 000 people flock to Grahamstown each year for the festival, which is organised by the Grahamstown Foundation. For over a week, revellers are spoilt for choice with a range of productions in arts, music, theatre, dance and crafts.

This year, the festival will take place from 30 June to 10 July at various locations around Grahamstown.

This year is extra special though as South Africa commemorated 40 years since the landmark June 16 student uprising in Soweto.

Speaking at the media launch of the National Arts Festival, Arts and Culture Deputy Minister Rejoice Mabudafhasi said arts remain important because the National Development Plan advocates that “arts and culture open powerful spaces for debate about where a society finds itself and where it is going”.

“Promoted effectively, the creative and cultural industries can contribute substantially to small business development, job creation and urban development and renewal,” she said.

In its 42 years of existence, the National Arts Festival continues to attract more audiences both locally and internationally. The festival has a large and diverse programme, featuring all arts disciplines over an 11 day period.

In both its diversity and scale, the National Arts Festival is the only of its kind in the country and it seeks to unleash the economic potential of the arts sector towards job creation, nation building and social cohesion.

The Department of Arts and Culture supports a number of flagship projects and festivals in every province of the country. It provides funding for 22 national and regional festivals and over 80 other cultural events.

The Department of Arts and Culture has signed a three-year agreement with the National Arts Festival organisers and committed R17 million.

Mzansi Golden Economy

The National Arts Festival is one of many annual festivals supported through the Mzansi Golden Economy (MGE) strategy across the country, which includes both small and large scale festivals such as Mangaung Cultural Festival (MACUFE) in Free State; Cape Town International Jazz Festival; Diamonds and Dorings Festival in the Northern Cape; Marula Festival in Limpopo and Buyela’khaya Festival in Easter Cape, among others.

Through the Mzansi Golden Economy Open Call process, the department is establishing a Debut Fund to create opportunities for young artists to publish their first book, produce their first play, cut their first album or host their first exhibition. – SAnews.gov.za