Eröffnungsrede von Anh-Linh Ngo zum Start von „Re:Create Europe“

Datum und Uhrzeit:2.4.2026, 18 UhrEuropäische Allianz der AkademienKulturpolitik

Mit einer Online-Auftaktveranstaltung, bei der über 100 Teilnehmer*innen zusammenkamen, startete die Europäische Allianz der Akademien das vierjährige Projekt „The Art of Resilience and Resistance: Empowering artists and cultural professionals tackling new challenges in Europe“.

Mitglieder der Europäischen Allianz der Akademien beim Jahrestreffen in Valletta, Malta, 2025
Mitglieder der Europäischen Allianz der Akademien beim Jahrestreffen in Valletta, Malta, 2025
© Darren Agius

Das Projekt wird durch eine großzügige Förderung im Rahmen des Programms Kreatives Europa der Europäischen Union unterstützt und läuft von 2026 bis 2029.

Das Treffen markierte den offiziellen Start des Projekts. Das Partnerkonsortium stellte seine Perspektiven vor und skizzierte seine Visionen für die kommenden vier Jahre. Unter dem Jahresthema 2026 „Transformation der Kulturpolitik“ stellte das Konsortium den konzeptionellen Rahmen für das erste Projektjahr vor und präsentierte die geplanten Aktivitäten innerhalb der verschiedenen Arbeitspakete.

Lesen Sie hier die Eröffnungsrede von Anh-Linh Ngo, Vizepräsident der Akademie der Künste, in englischer Sprache:

 

Dear colleagues, dear members of the European Alliance of Academies,

It is a pleasure to welcome you – also on behalf of Manos Tsangaris, who cannot be with us today.

We are meeting at a moment when artistic freedom in Europe is increasingly being challenged from within the political system itself. In Germany, we are currently witnessing political interference in the leadership of major cultural institutions: attempts to influence decisions at international festivals, to question or intervene in jury processes, and to exert pressure based on perceived political positions. At the same time, funding decisions are being prepared that could significantly weaken cultural institutions, often without transparent reasoning. This is not business as usual, and it is not just a national issue. It signals a shift from supporting cultural autonomy to managing and steering culture politically.

The urgency of our meeting follows directly from this situation. What is at stake is not only cultural policy, but the conditions under which artistic freedom – and with it democratic freedom – can exist.

Our project, RE:CREATE EUROPE, addresses precisely this question: the cultural conditions that will determine whether Europe has a future. Europe is facing external threats: war, authoritarian regimes, geopolitical tension. At the same time, it is under pressure from within: through polarization, through the loss of shared reference points, and through the erosion of a public sphere in which these can be debated. Europe no longer has sovereignty over the spaces where public debate takes shape today: digital platforms. What is eroding is not only trust; what is eroding are the forms of democracy.

Authoritarian politics understands this dynamic well. Its first target is institutions, because they carry the forms and rules that make democracy possible. Procedures are questioned, rules are ignored, and complex issues are reduced to simple narratives. At the same time, politics adopts tools that originate in the arts: staging, strong images, emotional storytelling. This is not accidental; it is strategic.

What emerges is a deeper divide: not simply between political camps, but between two kinds of public sphere – one democratic, based on debate, difference, and judgment; and another driven by emotion, simplification, and algorithms.

Judgment, however, does not arise on its own. It has to be learned; it grows through experience, practice, and cultural formation. Here the role of the arts becomes clear. They are society’s most sensitive instruments of perception, training how we see and understand the world. They function as a laboratory for a key human capacity: judgment. In the arts, we learn to look closely, to distinguish, and to weigh. Only those who develop this capacity can understand what freedom of thought means. Judgment is not abstract; it is a practice. And for that very reason, it can be weakened.

Against this background, the European Alliance of Academies takes on its full significance, and with it, RE:CREATE EUROPE. The project responds directly to the situation we face. It recognizes that artistic freedom in Europe is under pressure – from political intervention, economic conditions, and illiberal trends – and develops a response that is not national but European, not isolated but structural.

What takes shape here goes beyond cooperation. It is the beginning of an infrastructure of solidarity: networks that support each other in times of crisis, exchange across borders, and shared strategies that can lead to action. In this sense, RE:CREATE EUROPE strengthens Europe’s cultural public sphere.

Europe does not lack knowledge; it lacks a strong public sphere. There is no shortage of voices, but there is a lack of shared spaces where these voices can meet – spaces shaped by open debate rather than controlled by platforms. What is also lacking is the capacity to act together.

For this reason, we need what Manos Tsangaris calls a democratic league. This does not mean consensus. It means something more demanding: sustaining differences and still acting together when the foundations are at risk. This concerns states, institutions, and all of us.

Academies have a particular role to play here, not because they are more political than others, but because they work on something fundamental: forms. Forms of representation, forms of critique, and forms of public exchange. These forms determine whether democracy can function.

The central question, then, is: Who shapes the forms through which Europe understands itself? If these forms break apart, Europe loses its ability to act – politically and culturally.

RE:CREATE EUROPE is therefore more than a project; it is a test. Can networks become structures? Can exchange become commitment? Can solidarity become action?

The Akademie der Künste was founded 330 years ago, on the eve of the Enlightenment, in a time when form primarily served power. With the founding of institutions like the Akademie, something fundamental changed: form became a subject of critique. It had to justify itself and became the place where judgment is formed.

Today, we face a similar moment. The task is no longer critique alone. The task is to create forms that can sustain democracy.

RE:CREATE EUROPE can be part of this effort. The European Alliance of Academies can be its backbone. It is up to all of us whether this becomes more than a project: a structure that can contribute to Europe’s ability to act in uncertain times.

Thank you.

Über das Projekt

„Re:Create Europe“ ist nicht nur ein Förderprogramm, sondern eine klare institutionelle Antwort auf den wachsenden Druck auf die künstlerische Freiheit und kulturelle Autonomie in ganz Europa. Künstler*innen und Kulturschaffende arbeiten zunehmend unter Bedingungen, die von Krieg und Aggression, politischer Instrumentalisierung, wirtschaftlich prekärer Lage, ökologischem Zusammenbruch und schrumpfendem zivilgesellschaftlichem Raum geprägt sind. In diesem Kontext kann Resilienz nicht allein als Anpassung verstanden werden, sondern als kulturelle, ethische und zivilgesellschaftliche Verantwortung.

Durch eine Kombination aus Mobilitätsprogrammen, Blended-Learning-Formaten, Residenzprogrammen vor Ort, digitalem Mapping und internationalen Konferenzen zielt „Re:Create Europe“ darauf ab, Künstler*innen und Kulturschaffende über Disziplinen und Regionen hinweg zu stärken. Das Projekt stärkt die transnationale Solidarität, unterstützt künstlerisches Schaffen unter Krisenbedingungen und fördert den Austausch zwischen Institutionen, Fachleuten und politikorientierten Kulturschaffenden.

Das Partnerkonsortium besteht aus dem Arts Council Malta, dem Kroatischen Verband der bildenden Künstler*innen, der Akademie der bildenden Künste und des Designs in Bratislava, dem Círculo de Bellas Artes de Madrid, der Nationalen Akademie der Künste in Sofia, der Nationalen Akademie der Künste der Ukraine, dem Ungarischen Autorenverband, der Villa Decius Krakau und der Akademie der Künste (Berlin).

„Re:Create Europe“ markiert eine wichtige nächste Phase in der Arbeit der Allianz zur Verteidigung der Bedingungen, unter denen freie künstlerische Ausdrucksformen, kritische Reflexion und kultureller Austausch in Europa weiterhin möglich sind.

Weitere Informationen: www.allianceofacademies.eu

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