Festive News 2017 | Page 22

PAGE 22 • FESTIVE NEWS • DECEMBER 2016 Why Should Hereford be the 2021 UK City of Culture? Abigail Appleton, Principal of Hereford College of Arts and a member of the team bidding for the accolade explains why: The title of UK City of Culture title is awarded every four years by government and recognises the role that culture can play in transforming the profile and prospects of a city in countless ways. It is not a prize for existing cultural achievement, but goes to a city that makes a compelling case that a year in the spotlight, with all the funding and sponsorship opportunities ensuing, will be genuinely transformational. Hull is in countdown for its year as UK City of Culture 2017 with a high-octane programme of local, national and international arts and culture, and Hereford is preparing to submit its case to win the title for 2021. HEREFORD BUTCHERS Locally sourced, high quality meat      Christmas meat orders now being taken Delicious Sausages – lots of flavours Freezer Packs & Ready Made Meals Hot Rolls & Cooked Meats Hog Roasts Telephone (01432) 272357 44-45 Bewell St, Hereford HR4 0BA Badder Fabrics of Hereford The One-Stop Shop for all your Dressmaking needs 36a Aubrey Street, Hereford HR4 0BU Tel: email: 01432 379137 [email protected] Hereford is up against stiff competition; there isn’t a city in the UK that couldn’t argue it would benefit from winning the title, but our pitch is exceptional in a number of ways. Hereford is bidding not simply for the city alone but on behalf of the whole region. Unlike larger cities Hereford has a real relationship with the market towns and villages. The countywide bid is led by Herefordshire Cultural Partnership, a new dynamic coalition of arts, cultural and heritage groups, local authority and businesses, with a shared vision to create amazing opportunities by working together. Resources are limited compared to funds available to bigger cities competing for the title, but Hereford’s case represents the powerful grassroots energy and resilience that underpins much of the county's existing cultural activity. The partnership is ambitious and credible and has already secured funding from the Arts Council of England to develop a longer term cultural strategy for the area and from the Elmley Foundation to develop a website. Other funders are needed to help develop more concrete plans. One of Herefordshire’s great assets is its vibrant culture, rich in tradition and innovation, from a wealth of outstanding heritage sites to a dynamic contemporary arts scene. More can be done to build on this strategically and strengthen the attractiveness of Herefordshire as a place to live, work and visit, underpin the area’s ambitions for growth in Higher Education, develop our young people’s confidence, creativity and skills through arts and culture, and make Herefordshire an internationally recognised beacon for arts and culture enhancing well-being. The timing is critical. The hugely ambitious new University Project, NMiTE, hopes to open its doors in 2019. City of Culture 2021 would help secure the cultural infrastructure to attract staff and students to the new institution, with all the economic and educational benefits the university's success would bring. But let’s turn the argument around and ask not what would the title mean for Herefordshire but how would Hereford as City of Culture 2021 benefit the whole of the UK and beyond? Our programme would be a catalyst for fresh insight and urgently needed debate about the changing dynamics o