Mind the Gap

Garsington Opera Adult Company performing on Zoom
Garsington Opera is proud to be a part of Mind the Gap, a new European project that aims to explore digital participatory work with diverse communities.

Mind the Gap: Creating Digital Bridges to Community, is a two-year international research project bringing together six European arts organisations to explore digital arts education and how educators can work effectively with diverse communities. The project aims to identify best practices for digital engagement, provide educators with tangible resources and offer guidelines for policymakers. The Mind the Gap consortium is composed of six partner organisations, of which we are one, from Belgium, France, Italy, Ireland, the United Kingdom and Norway. We will work together over a period of two years to explore methodologies for working digitally with disadvantaged communities, offering training, case studies, online tools and a study of how arts workers, educators and teaching artists can support communities affected by the digital gap.

“I’m really pleased that Garsington Opera is taking part in our first European research project.  We are passionate about reaching everyone within our communities and creating digital bridges.  The pandemic has forced all of us to find innovate new digital ways of working and I’m excited to share experiences with our European partners and enable artists to develop skills further to deliver innovative digital projects.”

Karen Gillingham (Creative Director of Learning & Participation)

What is Mind the Gap?

Mind the Gap will explore methodologies for working digitally with disadvantaged communities, offering training, case studies, online tools and a study of how arts workers, educators and teaching artists can support communities affected by the digital gap. 

Why do we need Mind the Gap?

Throughout global lockdowns, arts educators used creativity and resourcefulness to work with their communities in the face of significant restrictions and limited resources. As the sector gradually reopens, what will the future of digital engagement look like and how can educators involve a diverse range of beneficiaries? 

The impact of the Covid-19 crisis on the creative and cultural industries has been significant to say the least. Across Europe and the world, social distancing measures led to the closure of venue-based culture spaces, the cancellation of events and the suspension or profound upheaval of community-based education projects. Eighteen months into the pandemic, what will be the long term impact on the European arts education sector?

Tackling the digital divide in arts education

Restrictions have led to the emergence of new forms of cultural engagement, in which audiences and communities interact with cultural works and practitioners entirely or partially online. Recent research has found that post-pandemic, audiences may be interested in continuing to engage with artistic experiences online. However, the crisis has made the shortcomings of digital (lack of access for learners and practitioners, digital fatigue, and narrow audience reach) increasingly apparent. Communities such as migrants, senior citizens, people with disabilities and those from rural communities are not only disproportionately affected by the pandemic, they are also among the most affected by the digital divide, or gap between those with knowledge of and access to technology and those without.

 

For more information, visit mindthegap-project.org

 

Mind the Gap is co-funded by the Erasmus+ programme of the European Commission.

 

PARTNERS

  • RESEO (Belgium)
  • Les Clés de l’écoute (France)
  • Irish National Opera (Ireland)
  • Western Norway University of Applied Sciences (Norway)
  • Materahub (Italy)

DURATION 

Two years (March 2021 – February 2023)