DigiArts Africa, a project of DigiArts, is a platform that aims to research and disseminate information on different practices in the field of art, design, multimedia, and music in Africa. Launched in 2003 in collaboration with the Trinity Session in Johannesburg, South Africa, DigiArts Africa offers a platform for people from Africa to contribute their definition of digital art and to share examples of digital art from Africa. It also serves as a database of people working in digital arts on the continent and provides a collaborative working space to promote digital arts. The project is, therefore, a capacity-building initiative, which aims to broaden and diversify aesthetical, scientific, and technological practices in Africa.
Core project activities include:
The project draws heavily on information and communication technologies (ICTs) to promote research, activities, and conversations relating to digital cultural practices in Africa. The idea is that "Computer design, video, film, stop frame animation, digital photography and creative digital software and hardware experiments have the strong potential of developing digital art with the education of the maker, who, through this production, is contributing a step towards digital art production in Africa."
DigiArts Africa is participatory and interactive, focusing on the creation of a network for experience and strategy sharing among the following groups: artists and their audiences, the digital and technology industries (music, film, multimedia, and web and design and technology providers), and educators in technology, arts, crafts, and design. These personnel exchange ideas and engage in collaborations, drawing in large part on ICTs, such as an email discussion list and access to a global e-directory of contacts who wish to connect, and sustain culture, through art. (The DigiArts Africa page on the UNESCO website provides more information about joining this network.)
Face-to-face interchanges are also organised to draw members of the network together and to build their capacity. For example, for a monthlong period in the summer of 2006, a special programme promoting digital artistic practises in Africa took place in partnership with the Daniel Langlois Foundation. Held at Dak'Art_Lab of the Dak'Art Biennale 2006 (a contemporary arts festival) in Senegal-Dakar, the initiative aimed to provoke communication about, and to promote, African media arts. The experience featured an exhibition, forum discussions and direct interaction with the arts (working in media such as video art), and training workshops on creative digital practises in the African context.
Technology.
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UNESCO explains that, within the DigiArts Africa definition, one needs to acknowledge that - due to the lack of exposure to digital arts because of limited resources and the digital knowledge divide - the scope of this term needs to be extended to include those practices that have the potential for including both digital and artistic production.
DigiArts Africa is being developed in partnership with the Trinity Session, a contemporary art production team carrying out public and new media projects based in Johannesburg, South Africa. The DigiArts project is advised by 4 international advisory groups and partners who provide overall policy guidance. It is coordinated by an interdisciplinary group of UNESCO professionals from different sectors, both at headquarters in Paris and in the Field Offices and also assisted by a network of international institutions.
UNESCO, the Trinity Session.
DigiArts Africa page on the UNESCO website on May 3 2006 and December 6 2006.