Welcome to all of you.
And thank you for joining us today to celebrate Canadian arts and culture and
to showcase some fine young artists and emerging stars.
In the last election campaign, I had the pleasure of attending many events:
visits to factory floors, centres of high technology, partisan rallies,
television debates. But when I look back on the campaign there are two things
that stand out.
First, my visits to schools, where I saw the vitality and the talent of our
young people and their commitment to building a very distinctive, modern Canada.
Second, I was part of an extraordinary event at the Conservatory of Music in
Victoria one beautiful Saturday morning late in the campaign. It was a morning
to reflect on the importance of the arts and culture to the fabric of Canada.
Last fall, and in the Speech from the Throne in January, we made very firm
commitments to act to promote the arts and culture in Canada. Today we are
delivering on this commitment.
Last fall also, the CBC began its highly successful Canadian History Series,
which touched something very deep in Canadians. On behalf of all Canadians, I
want to congratulate the director of the Canadian History Project, Mark
Starowicz. And I also want to quote what he wrote on January 29
of this year in Time Magazine:
"The major legacy of the Canadian History Project may not be its
programmes or its books or web sites. It may lie instead in the fact that
while drilling in the fields of national memory and identity, the producers
struck a vast pressure dome which erupted with such a volcanic intensity of
yearning, determination and pride that it left them dazed...The most
frequently heard phrase in our office is ‘something very big is happening
out there.
’"
Well, I completely agree. And today it is with very great pride that I am
announcing something very big indeed. The biggest new investment in the arts in
Canada that any government has made since the creation of the Canada Council
more than forty years ago. More than $500 million of new money over the next
three years alone.
Investments for the future based on excellence in the creative process,
diverse Canadian content and access to the arts for all Canadians. From
traditional works to new media. From classical music to rap and rock and roll.
What I am announcing today would not be possible without the support,
encouragement -- and yes -- the pressure from many in this room today. It would
not be possible without the support of my Cabinet colleagues, who have made the
promotion of Canadian culture a priority of this government.
But, above all, I want to pay a very special tribute to Sheila Copps. Without
her guts, commitment and determination what we are doing today simply would not
have happened. Years from now, when she looks back on her career, today will be
a very special day, indeed.
I will let Sheila describe today, and in the days ahead, the details of our
arts and culture investment.
Let me, instead, set out some of our overriding goals and objectives.
We will provide greater support to our artists through a substantial increase
in the funding of the Canada Council for the Arts and through enhanced training
opportunities for young artists.
We will invest in the renewal of cultural infrastructure across Canada. We
will help communities across Canada to build and sustain art and heritage
programmes relevant to their diverse aspirations and circumstances. We will help
our book and sound recording sectors make the transition to the new economy. And
we will help Canada be a world leader in new media and content on the Internet,
in both French and English.
We will also begin our re-investment in the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation
-- both radio and television -- with an immediate increase of $60 million to its
budget for this year.
We recently announced the establishment of a National Portrait Gallery in
Ottawa. Which is a major step towards the creation of an institute of Canadian
history. And we will soon be announcing our plans for a new War Museum.
Arts and culture are important to us in many ways. To attract the talent and
investment we want for our communities. To expand tourism. To brand Canada and
sell Canadian goods and services abroad.
But arts and culture are about more than economic growth. About more than the
Gross Domestic Product. Our artists, writers and performers enrich the quality
of our lives. They can inspire and challenge us. They can help us understand our
past. They can help us know who we are. They can help us to imagine new
possibilities, new choices for the future.
Arts and culture are not for the few. Cultural participation develops our
creativity, enriches our citizenship, feeds the spirit. Arts and culture must be
integrated into our lives and our communities. Arts and heritage organizations
must reach out to their communities. Build partnerships with business and
academia. Engage the young and build audiences for the future.
And the Government of Canada must, and will, help.
Arts and culture are not just for today. We have a responsibility to preserve
our heritage and to promote the creative arts for future generations. An
important measure of a great civilization, of a great society, is its
contribution to humanity through the sciences and the arts; through its
discoveries, its inventions, its cathedrals and canvasses, its stories and its
music.
Please enjoy the show. And join us in celebrating Canadian arts and artists.
Today, certainly, but also tomorrow.
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