A/HRC/52/35
Through the paintings, each group can express its identity and the message it wishes to
convey to the community. During the creation phase, pairs are created: for example, members
of the Haitian community are paired with women from the Cercles des Fermières du Québec
and elected municipal officials are paired with people from the French language learning
centre, which brings together students from over 30 countries.29
B.
Challenges of migrant artists
36.
As artistic expressions are vehicles to develop and express one’s world view, feelings
and meanings, they need to be disseminated and made accessible in order to contribute to
communication. However, there is a general underrepresentation of migrants in the cultural
expressions created, produced and disseminated in most host countries, whether in traditional
media or on digital platforms providing cultural content.
37.
Migrant artists face significant obstacles in accessing the appropriate resources, means
and tools to create, produce and share their cultural expressions, both within their group and
within the host society. They often talk about their invisibility in the host society and its arts
world. It is reported that when the State promotes international art and culture and even when
they promote art on migration and displacement, there are extremely few initiatives that
support refugees who are actual artists and whose needs are for professional support as
artists.30
38.
Sometimes, migrants have difficulties in having their status as artists fully recognized.
At times, their precarious financial situation and their difficulties in accessing governmental
financial support programmes for the creation and production of cultural expressions restricts
those expressions. Some arts councils and cultural ministries have a mandate to offer arts
funding only to citizens of their countries.31 Panels deciding on scholarships or funding are
often comprised of experts in the host country’s arts and turn away from foreign or different
art. Bias, conscious or unconscious, about what is good art, as well as priorities set by
governments, for example to promote national history or specific causes, work against
migrants’ artistic expressions.
39.
Migrant artists also do not often have the cultural networks, knowledge or means to
promote their work in a way that is suitable in their new context. Hence, their art continues
to be invisible even in the areas where they live. The positive contribution of migrants to the
flourishing of diversity of cultural expressions, and of cultural diversity in general, within the
territory of a State is not frequently highlighted and cultural policies are rarely mobilized to
emphasize this. However, those policies play a fundamental role in the intercultural dialogue
between the host society and migrants.
40.
Migrant artists have usually fled their countries abruptly and without proper
documentation, so they are forced to go into hiding from the authorities and are thus unable
to access their host country’s social and cultural life. Such migrant artists are in a state of
limbo, unable to fully participate in their host country’s creative economy. Instead, they are
struggling to secure legal documentation,32 emergency funding and, for those artists who are
in a third country where they remain at risk, seeking to relocate to a country where they are
truly safe and secure.33 The difficulties are often even greater when artists and other migrants
settle outside urban centres, as state-of-the-art creative and production tools may be
inaccessible. Barriers to accessing and understanding information on dissemination channels
and establishing relationships with cultural actors are further amplified by language barriers.
Physically accessing places of creation, production or dissemination of cultural expressions
29
30
31
32
33
GE.23-01011
See submission by the UNESCO Chair on the Diversity of Cultural Expressions at Laval University,
Quebec.
See submission by PEN America.
See submission by Mary Ann DeVlieg.
See submission by Artistic Freedom Initiative for examples in the United States of America.
See submission by PEN America. See also Manojna Yeluri and others, “Connecting the dots: artist
protection & artistic freedom in Asia” (2022).
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