Filter by France
Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes
Bourgogne-Franche-Comté
Bretagne
Centre-Val de Loire
Corse
Grand Est
Guadeloupe
Guyane
Hauts-de-France
Ile-de-France
La Réunion
Martinique
Mayotte
National
Normandie
Nouvelle-Aquitaine
Occitanie
Pays de la Loire
Provence Alpes Côte d’Azur
Filter by Monde
Afrique
Amérique du Nord
Amérique du Sud
Antarctique
Arctique
Asie
Europe
Océanie
Filter by Types de ressource
À connaître
À écouter
À lire
À voir
Filter by Types d'outil
Fédérer
Agir
Évaluer
S'inspirer
Se former
Filter by Guide
Bourses, prix & résidences
Coopération
Création
Diffusion
Formation
Organisations
Production
Filter by Actualités
Appels à projets
Conférences, ateliers
Expositions, manifestations
Social Kitchen new project : « Sunday Brunch »

Social Kitchen new project : « Sunday Brunch »

Social Kitchen est un café recevant des événements culturels ayant trait à des interrogations sociales et remettant en question le système capitaliste dominant.

du 20 janvier 2013 au 31 janvier 2013

What are the possibilities for small cultural and arts centers to exist in today’s world? Is there a way for them to exist without entering into the never-ending economic game of competition or selling them as social entrepreneurial enterprises?

Social Kitchen, 21st-century Social & Cultural Center, based in Kyoto, run by a group called « hanare, » has a community café and bookstore, a space that can be used for lectures/workshops, debates, study groups, bazaars, exhibitions, meetings and parties, and a shared office. It was founded in 2010, after five years of successfully organizing a weekly café called kissahanare in the home of one of its members.

Our vision has been to serve as a public place in a traditional sense, where people with diverse backgrounds gather, express themselves in creative ways, discuss emergent social issues, learn, and practice the ideas and skills that can transform our society in more just, fair ways.

As we enter 2013, we are struggling to keep our doors open. Yet we hope that our struggles offer the opportunity to think about our common challenges and to build solidarity among like-minded institutions across the world.

What is Social Kitchen?

– A site for convivial living
Social Kitchen is a café where people can relax, enjoy delicious and healthy food, and buy fresh vegetables from our organic farmers. Our kitchen, which makes everyone happy, is the heart of our project. Our upcoming project, « Sunday Brunch » directs small-scale funding for cultural, artistic, and socially charged projects to use community meals as a device for bringing people together. More info

* Sunday Brunch is based on a project called Sunday Soup started in Chicago by InCUBATE

– A site for artistic and cultural events
Many cultural and artistic events take place at Social Kitchen. We particularly support young artists and their experimentation through the project OYE! (One Year of Exploration), carried out over the course of a year and led by an individual or group, selected from artists, researchers, farmers, and activists. More info

– A site for Urban Education
Social Kitchen is also a site for urban education through its Kitchen University series. Education here means both traditional liberal arts, as in the Picasom series (Publicness in Contemporary Art and Social Movements), as well as other workshops aiming to build skills for self-sustaining life, including farming, food preservation, and electricity production sessions.

– A site for long-term projects
In addition to many one-day events, Social Kitchen also supports long-term projects closely connected to everyday life. In the wake of the 2011 earthquake and nuclear disaster, loose collective of citizens gathered to form the first Working Group. Participating members in each Working Group propose and discuss ideas and put needed actions into practice over a one-year period. Working Groups 1 and 2: Earthquake and Nuclear Power Plant have carried out activities with internal refugees and volunteered for the restaurants in the disaster area, among other things, while attempting to integrate related concerns into daily life. These activities led to Working Group 1’s excellent exhibition on the Kyoto mayoral election, conveying critical issues including the nuclear energy to voters and set up opportunities to discuss how citizens are involved in the making of the city, and the meaning of democracy itself. More info

– A site for becoming better citizens
Social Kitchen hosts many gatherings that encourage thinking critically and questioning Japanese society and politics and the current economic system. Those who run Social Kitchen and those who use it together engage in practices to become more critical citizens. This aspect is vital, given that Japanese society is becoming ever more conservative, and « anti-everything » (immigrant, neighboring countries, women’s rights, poor people etc.). It is important to note that our current government firmly supports restarting other nuclear power plants even as the Fukushima catastrophe continues « in progress » and is nowhere near a resolution, and while still no one knows what harm the catastrophe will eventually cause.

– A site for neighbors
Neighborhood associations use Social Kitchen to discuss local topics and to socialize. School kids utilize Social Kitchen too, by using our restroom and drinking water, and sometimes playing games.

Social Kitchen Organizational Forms

Participants? Users? Citizens?
Rather than having a small number of curators/organizers plan projects, Social Kitchen encourages people with great ideas to plan and realize the projects themselves. We aim to eliminate the standard hierarchy between organizers and participants.

Financial Independence
Freedom of expression is hardly existed in official institutions in Japan. In order to provide a space where freedom of expression is protected, and to support activities with the potential to transform society regardless of their « financial value, » Social Kitchen finances itself primarily through its independent profitable activities (café, farmer’s market, and catering; design and translation jobs; space rental; giving talks at cultural institutions), relying on a grant from the Ministry of Environment for only 15% of our income last year.

Workers’ collective and non-profit
Social Kitchen operates as a workers’ cooperative. A workers’ cooperative is based on the idea that all workers are also owners; everything from daily affairs to finances, work environment, and the future direction of the organization is discussed and decided by the workers. Social Kitchen has three full-time and and three part-time staff members. While workers engage decision-making processes, non-profit board members are also involved in shaping these decisions.

After two years, where we are now?
While there are many great projects being created at Social Kitchen, as our financial situation worsens, it has become indispensable to think about how we can survive. Yet, thinking about our survival gives us an opportunity to think about the fact that the visions we have for life, art and culture, free public space, new ways of working, new types of organization, and an economy based on fair exchange have little power in today’s society.

Yes, we want to continue Social Kitchen, and need to sort out how to improve our financial situation. But besides entering much-hated grant competitions, what can we do? Instead of becoming a part of the cycle of « upgrading » constantly, and of selling our uniqueness (eg: human networking, creative skills, and even social consciousness!) what are the possibilities? Why should art and culture always be defeated by logics of the economy? What would it look like to create our own logics of economy?

 

Sunday Brunch starts Sunday, January 20, 2013, 1:00 to 4:00 p.m. at Social Kitchen.

Social Kitchen
699 Sokokuji monzen-cho
Kamigyo-ku, Kyoto Japan, 602-0898

info@hanareproject.net
www.hanareproject.net


A voir aussi

Exposition Météo des forêts
Earth Ears : écouter la Terre avec Pauline Oliveros
Suzanne Husky : Castor, l’amant de la rivière

  • Actualités
    Actualités

    L'actualité française et internationale des rendez-vous de l'art et de l'écologie : manifestations, appels à projets, rencontres...



  • S’impliquer
    S’impliquer

    Les bonnes pratiques, guides et outils pour réduire ses impacts.



  • Se ressourcer
    Se ressourcer

    Les ressources théoriques et inspirantes sur les enjeux croisés culture et écologie.



  • Fédérer
    Fédérer

    Le répertoire des acteurs de l’écologie culturelle en France et dans le monde.



  • À propos
    À propos

    Ressource0 est le premier média et centre de ressources français réunissant les univers des arts et des écologies. Ressource0 relaie l’actualité française et internationale consacrée à l’art et à l’écologie, diffuse les outils et bonnes pratiques, centralise l’ensemble des références intellectuelles sur cette thématique et recense les acteurs clés. 


This site is registered on wpml.org as a development site.