A/HRC/46/34
37.
During these difficult times, wonderful works of art have been created despite the
virus, such as those created by Kashmira Sarode from Bangalore, India, who emphasized the
importance of social networks in the pandemic.96 Kenyan artist Anthony Musiyo explained
his experience in 2020: “This has been a period of self-reflection – to try and understand what
kind of world I’d like to live in, to deeply value and treasure the already beautiful and
meaningful connections I have managed to build with people I care for and finally, to always
hope.”97 Popular cultural initiatives such as music jams on balconies in Sicily, public singing,
including to support health-care workers, in Spain or New York City, and shared chanting
from windows in Wuhan were vital means of bringing people together when they had to be
physically apart. Some academic institutions have promoted the use of culture and cultural
rights as pandemic relief measures.98
38.
Artists and cultural workers and institutions around the world have worked to share
public health messages, such as the song and video “Corona Virus Alert” by Ugandan
musicians Bobi Wine and Nubian Li, which were widely played on radio and television. 99
The lyrics remind us that: “The bad news is that everyone is a potential victim. But the good
news is that everyone is a potential solution.”
39.
Around the world, the arts provide a mirror of what is happening around us, improving
the ability to cope and building connection, including through the work of those who are
themselves ill. For example, Somali artist Nujuum Hashi Ahmed painted while battling
COVID-19, producing a picture of herself punching the virus. She has argued that in a context
where many are illiterate and uneducated, “art reaches many more people… they need art to
understand how dangerous this problem is”.100
40.
Some artists and cultural workers faced the challenge of showing support to
populations simultaneously affected by repression and COVID-19. For example, during the
2020 crackdown on pro-democracy protests and faced with the virus, the severity of which
was denied by the President of Belarus, Alexander Lukashenko, the Belarus Free Theatre
produced “Love Over Virus”, livestreaming free readings of fairy tales by actors so children
could listen and parents could have a break.101 They also launched Theatre Live(s) Online
with a production performed live from bedrooms and kitchens in Minsk by self-isolating
performers. The company’s continued digital work was reported to have been a source of
emotional support for some of those detained during protests.
41.
Cultural workers in many countries also made direct contributions to public health
efforts, such as through the involvement of museum and theatre workers in creating threedimensional and sewn masks. 102 Cultural institutions, such as Kunstmuseum Basel, in
Switzerland, projected public health messages on their buildings.
42.
Cultural initiatives memorialized COVID-19 victims, trying to “humanize the
statistics and create spaces for mourning”.103 One featured an enormous field – 1.4 hectares
– of white flags, one for each victim of the virus in the United States of America; 104 another,
a public installation entitled CoVida, displayed the names of victims on ribbons. 105 In
Uruguay, the World Memorial to the Pandemic, the first large-scale monument to the victims
around the world, is intended to be an environmentally conscious space for mourning and
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
12
See www.cnn.com/style/article/artists-share-artworks-made-during-the-pandemic/index.html.
Ibid.
See www.hrdhub.org/arctivism.
See www.aljazeera.com/news/2020/3/26/ugandas-bobi-wine-releases-song-to-fight-coronaviruspandemic.
See www.dailysabah.com/arts/artists-raise-virus-awareness-reaching-people-with-arts-insomalia/news.
See http://belarusfreetheatre.com/15th/.
See, e.g., contribution 2 from Argentina and contribution from Panama.
See www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/how-art-helps-us-make-sense-of-covid-19-s-incomprehensibletoll/ar-BB1b8YDE?ocid=msedgdhp.
Ibid.
See www.morrisjumel.org/covida.