The Japan Foundation Prizes for the Promotion of Community-Based Cultural Exchange (2003)
The Japan Foundation Prizes for the Promotion of Community-Based Cultural Exchange (2003)
Mino Paper Art Village Project
Executive Committee
Address: Izumi-cho 45-3, Mino City, Gifu
Prefecture 501-3729
Representative: Michimasa Ishikawa, Chairperson
Founded: 1997
The characteristics of the Artist in Residence Program in Mino Paper Art
Village is to provide foreign artists access to the Japanese handmade paper,
Mino washi, which possesses 1300 years of history as a traditional craft.
Members of the local community comprise the core of the Mino Paper Art
Village Project Executive Committee and of the volunteer services that
support the creative activities of the artists. These include providing
home stays and language interpreting for the three months that the foreign
artists reside in Mino, creating a newsletter and other information materials,
holding workshops with children at local elementary and junior high schools,
providing opportunities for the artists to try papermaking, and organizing
exhibitions and other activities that broaden the scope of international
exchange.
Artists from abroad experience the superb qualities of Mino washi and are
encouraged to use it in their creations, incorporating the unique and inventive
ideas for its use, once they have returned to their home countries. Likewise,
members of Mino community have been energized by the experience of communicating
with artists whose cultural backgrounds imbue them with a free creative spirit
that is not constrained by the local tradition.
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Takefu International Music Festival Board
Address: Takase 2-chome 3-3, Takefu City,
Fukui Prefecture
915-0832
Representative: Masaharu Ueki, President
Founded: 1990
The Takefu International Music Festival is held annually in early June
in Takefu City and the surrounding municipalities. Taken with its predecessor,
the Finland Music Festival in Takefu, the last year marked the 14th of
the music festival. The Takefu International Music Festival Board is an
organization consisting entirely of local volunteers and undertakes the
planning of the festival, raises funds and runs the actual festival. The
festival today is the product of years spent experimenting with and implementing
new ideas in order to develop a program of high quality that includes performances
of modern music pieces.
During the eight days of the festival, performances are held not only at the
Main Hall of the Takefu Bunka Center, the primary event venue, but also at
schools, temples and shrines, hospitals, restaurants, and a host of other
locations that serve to envelope the town in music. The passion of the Takefu
International Music Festival Board’s local volunteers to have others
share in the pleasure of enjoying superlative performances and communicating
with musicians and composers from abroad is what maintains the world-class
level of this music festival.
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The International Symposium on the Okhotsk Sea & Sea Ice Executive Committee
Address: Kaiyou Kouryuukan, Motomonbetsu
25, Monbetsu
City, Hokkaido 094-0023
Representative: Masaaki Aota, Chairperson
Founded: 1985
The International Symposium on the Okhotsk Sea & Sea Ice was started
in 1985 to commemorate the 20th year since the establishment of the Sea
Ice Research Laboratory (Ryuuhyouken) in the Institute of Low Temperature
Science, Hokkaido University, which is located in Monbetsu City—the
city of sea ice. The international Symposium on the Okhotsk Sea & Sea
Ice Executive Committee was formed to draw upon the resources of the city
to make this symposium a success. The Executive Committee is composed of
townspeople from diverse sectors of society and, with the aid of more than
300 volunteers, has been conducting the symposium with the support of the
entire town for 18 years.
Researchers from around the world join in the symposium, and presentations
are given of the results of scientific research related to sea ice and the
Okhotsk Sea. It is also a staging area for grassroots international exchange,
and opportunities are created for researchers from abroad to visit local schools
and take part in events designed to foster cultural exchange. During the term
of the symposium, lectures not only for researchers but also for local residents
and a children’s symposium are held to teach how closely related sea
ice is to the phenomenon such as global warming.
Local residents and the International Symposium on the Okhotsk Sea & Sea
Ice Executive Committee are united in supporting the international scientific
exchange, with its close ties to local features, and they have been provided
with the opportunity to reevaluate local culture while enjoying the stimulation
of international exchange.
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