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Conference on CREATIVITY AS A SYNECDOCHE OF THE CITY – MARKETING THE CREATIVE BERLIN When Creative Industries Crossover with Cities 創意產業與城市發展研討會 Ares KALANDIDES1 and Bastian LANGE2 1 National Technical University of Athens, Greece/ InPolis, Berlin 2 Leibniz-Institute for Regional Geography Leipzig / Georg-Simmel Centre for Metropolitan Research, Berlin Abstract In this paper we will take a close look at the field of creative industries in Berlin. Referring to examples of design production, we will highlight the economic mode of this newly emerged segment and try to answer the following questions: How is this specific market constituted by young creative entrepreneurs? How do economic development and place marketing practices by public-private institutions propel urban dynamics? What is Berlin’s specificity between stimulation of creative economies and place marketing on the one hand and the milieu-specific economic modes of making an entrepreneurial living on the other? The paper presents systematic paradoxes that are inscribed in place marketing strategies of Berlin’s creative potential. It provides first steps in better understanding the complex process of place production in the field of creative industries by discussing the model of urbanity that is represented through them. Key Words: Berlin, City Marketing, Governance, Creative Industries 1. Creativity and the city. Preliminaries. Talking about the city as the privileged field of creativity almost seems redundant, when creativity is often seen as a major if not the decisive force of the human (Hall and Pfeiffer, 2000) and would thus appear in every human action. Still, it is worth looking closer at the relations between the two and the way they are mutually constituted. Apart from celebrating the creative city as a wonderland, a critical perspective is applied in the following in order to deconstruct major narratives of hand-knitted, quickly made causalities between them. The international (s. anglophone) discussion in the past few years has been dominated by a delirious, imaginative, and self projected representation of the so-called creative city (Florida, 2002, Florida, 2005, Helbrecht, 1998, Hospers, 2003, Landry, 1996, Scott, 2006). Almost unquestioned, it is supposed to be the solution to all urban problems: economic stagnancy, urban shrinkage, social segregation, technological aging, global competition or more. New efforts by public-private alliances, real estate managers, but also urban professionals focus on place marketing and therefore often tend to work toward establishing the creative city as a future reference model for urban development (Rainisto, 2003, Jessop, 1998, Drake, 2003). In the framework of the so-called creative city concepts place-making strategies refer to it to address community building and neighbourhood integration issues at the same time (Awotona, 1997, Fürst et al., 2004). Contextualizing the production and formulation of place beyond its geographical fixation within the debate on a so-called creative city, only few systematic and critical approaches can be named: (Jessop, 1998, (Binder, 2001, Binder, 2004), (Helbrecht, 1998, Helbrecht, 2004). Critical diagnosis of the societal use of “creativity” and its representatives has been presented by Bröckling, Osten and Peck (Bröckling, 2004); (Osten, 2003); (Peck, 2005). Nevertheless recent concepts on space as the determinate for understanding creative industries and its agents raise the following questions: What is the interconnection between creativity and (urban) space and how are they mutually constituted? How do newly established markets in the field of creative industries operate and how do young entrepreneurs access those informal, ephemeral, and often milieu-specific markets? On the other hand how does public administration concentrate and market the creativity of the place worldwide, when it is the fragmented product of numerous young startup self-employed entrepreneurs? 122 In the first part of this paper we are going to set the conceptual framework in which we understand creative industries, before looking at Berlin in the next section. Understanding Berlin as the site, the imagination and the action field for new professional practices, we shall look into the following: What kind of economic and governance models are put together by young entrepreneurs, entrepreneurial network-based platforms and informal coalitions as well as by marketing departments of public administration, in order to position themselves as representatives of the place/brand Berlin? Based on three empirical case studies in the following section, the notions of place-making and place marketing by newly established informal as well as formal agents will be highlighted from a non-essentialist perspective. This agent perspective will demonstrate Berlin’s specific economic mode but also creative industry in general as an autonomous field of action with all its paradoxes: a self-determinate, autonomous work style within a flexible, unstable, insecure situation, also known as the ‘new precariousness’. The discussion seeks to explore the ways in which hip, trendy and often highly educated, but socioeconomically deprived players, are marketed and exploited because of their creative potential. Finally we will seek to examine how self-governance practices of new entrepreneurial agents in the fields of creative industries can be systematically connected to place marketing. Referring to examples of design production, we will highlight the economic mode of this newly emerged segment and try to explore the following questions: How is this specific market constituted by young creative entrepreneurs and how do marketing and place-marketing practices by public-private institutions even propel urban – often uneven – dynamics? What does Berlin’s specificity between stimulation of creative economies and place marketing on the one hand and milieu specific economic modes of making an entrepreneurial living on the other tell us about the constitution of cities nowadays? Just as a synecdoche is a figure of speech where a part substitutes for a whole, the same way representations of creativity put it in the position of the urban. The paper presents systematic paradoxes that are inscribed in place marketing strategies of the creative potential and discusses what kind of urban model is represented through them. We will discuss how the highly selective and reductionist process of marketing creative places relates to the fragmented, disperse, and quickly changing practices of new agents in Berlin’s creative industries. 2. Conceptualizing “Action and Space” in creative industries 2.1. Concepts of place-making and spacing A specifically geographical reading of the emergence of a flexible workforce in Creative Industries as a result of socioeconomic transformation processes, has to bring the spatial dimension to the fore and address it explicitly. Within the framework of a theoretically formulated socio-geographically based “cultural turn”, cultural codes, meanings of spaces and processes of evaluations or devaluations have been shifted to central hinges of recent socio-spatial analysis (Cook et al., 2000 for an overview), (Philo, 2000, 27). Within this perspective, the focus of spatial analysis has shifted towards a relational understanding of cultural codes and persistent physical spaces, materialised spatial constructions and culturally coded identities. Central to our understanding of space and place is the seminal work of Doreen Massey. First of all we see place as constituted through human relations and practices, actions repeated in daily routines or habitualized in everyday life. These everyday spaces of action, e.g. do not take place in a fixed and predetermined empty “container” waiting to be filled, but are being produced and contested constantly. Secondly, and this goes far beyond the first point, place in its turn influences the social forces that have created it. It is not just a passive product, but becomes a constitutive agent of new social relations. Thirdly we see place as “relative and relational” (Massey, 2005, Massey, 1994) rather than as a “bounded” location. It is constituted through interconnections with rather than through opposition to other places. Finally, place is not seen as stasis, but as the point of negotiation and mutual constitution of space and time. All of the above leads to an understanding of place as the nodal point of interrelations through space/time. This by no means obliterates power relations as a constitutive element of this interrelatedness, but on the contrary enables us to examine them. Based on the conceptual framework of Doreen Massey, German urban sociologist Löw (Löw, 2001) developed new theoretical tools that can be further applied to the empiric analysis of the diverse social formations of new agents and their place-making strategies in an urban system such as Berlin. Here, space is to be understood as the result of an act of synthesis based on the specific strategies and tactics of individual protagonists. The term spacing describes the active process by which an individual relationally orders social goods and bodies (Löw, 2001, 158). Based on this understanding, space constitutes itself as a process through synthesis of these so123 Conference on cial goods and bodies, by means of perception, memory, and feeling. In the post-industrial city, individual differentiation strategies are symbolically and culturally formulated. The socio-spatial structure expresses itself ever more strongly in local politics through which the individuals not only create a symbolic difference, but also attempt to arouse attention through positioning tactics anchored in the location. Focussing on the applied practices and action patterns in the field of creative industries, milieu and profession-specific governance models can be highlighted. Seeing the spatial dimension as a conceptual background for understand urban practices by different agents around the action field creative industries, we can deconstruct the way urban space is negotiated, coded, divided, and communicated, according to professional demands, administrative logics, as well as milieu-specific demands. 2.2. New governance modes in Creative Industries. Paradoxes, constraints, and divergent patterns 2.2.1 Governance and its paradox One way of understanding governance is as collective action by private, public, and corporate agents regarding public goods, spatially relevant resources, cultural values and action resources (Healey, 2006, Heinelt, 2004). In general what is meant by the use of the word is a mode of decision-making which does not only follow top-down patterns, but that includes these as well as horizontal or bottom-up processes. The groups of players (decision-makers) are usually represented by a triangular scheme, with state, economy and civil society on its three points. We will use the concept in order to examine the forms of collective action, the spatial positioning, institutional set-up and self-understanding within emerging economies. Therefore, we will be able to look closer at socio-spatial power relations that are not equally given, but negotiated and debated by different actors, interconnected through hegemonic relations that create up/down or inside/outside dichotomies. These relations are constantly questioned, contested and renegotiated – in a rather more antagonistic way that the consensus of governance suggests. What should be kept in mind here once again, is the understanding of spatial relations as relations of power (with subsequent inequalities) and the constant re-drawing of ‘maps of power’ or ‘power geometries’ (Massey 1999). 124 Applying this theoretical framework in the field of what we call creative industries, governance strategies are mainly seen as new negotiation-based (or not) approaches by various agents in city regions. At the same time they are often critically discussed because of their lack of creativity, but also because, being new, they lack experience and proof (Balducci, 2004), (Kunzmann, 2004). Less obvious milieu-specific modes of organisation in the field of emerging creative industries might present fresh perspectives on newly invented self-steering and self-promoting practices applied by new professional agents. Who could these new professional agents be? The emergence of new economic field in Berlin after the unification – as well as in other European metropolitan regions – is accompanied by new entrepreneurial agents in the field of creative and culture production (Lange, 2005b, Lange, 2005a). In the context of Berlins economic stagnation, its failed growth expectation and fiscal collapse, new cultural entrepreneurs, the so-called culturepreneurs, in creative industries might demonstrate suitable context-sensitive efforts to establish new markets and construct new professional fields. By ‘context-sensitive’ we mean approaches that take into account the specificities of place and the particular ways that certain milieus or economic segments are constituted. Yet, from an analytical perspective, these agents are confronted with structural paradoxes that are inscribed in their entrepreneurial practices. As a major focus group of the so-called creative city, they might be seen in the following as representatives of new modes of labour with their adjacent governance practices in the field of creative industries. In the following section of this paper we shall systematically look at cases of Berlin-based new entrepreneurial agents and formulate empirically rooted questions on labour formation, while highlighting specific paradoxes that characterize them. When speaking about new modes of labour and the procedural forms of market access by new agents we should look at how they are confronted with structural paradoxes of their social and work practices. Very generally speaking, two paradoxes – among others — play a crucial role in the articulation of their work practices: the “Globalization Paradox” and the “Identity Paradox”. The first addresses the ambivalence between local-based creativity and transnational networks of production systems as well as localized production networks that are driven by an ethos of creativity and adhere to an “artistic mode of production”. The latter, the “Identity Paradox” addresses the ambivalence between individual or collective careers, identities, and reputations. Inventing static concepts of entrepreneurs does not lead further, because mavericks and outsiders as well as independent creative artists play the major role in this market (Steyaert and Katz, 2004). The “Globalization Paradox” addresses the ambivalence of these newly emerged knowledge milieus and their territorial embedding practices. Being able – thanks to airline carriers such as RAYNAIR, EASYJET, and AIR BERLIN – to operate worldwide, socio-spatially integrated “communities of knowledge” gained more and more relevance and thus provide the necessary embedding ground for translocal knowledge workers. Based on these substantial paradoxes, different governance modes can be presented, highlighting the degree of irritation, the different interests, and separated logics of action, when promoting creative industries and their creative agents: structural paradoxes demonstrate how the institutional setup “creative industries” is constituted and how difficult it is to invent marketing and place-based strategies to promote creative industries. To sum up these conceptual remarks: Based on an integrative and relational analytical perspective, the production of space (“spacing”) allows us to analyse the forms, practices and strategies of appropriating, defining, using, and coding urban space by either creative agents, corporate companies, stakeholders, and public administration. Therefore, using the analytical categories of “place and space” from a social constructionist perspective, it will be possible on the one hand to understand the performances and social practices that characterize the individual entrepreneurial presence, their perspective on acting on markets, their corporate identity, formulated as a spatially rooted narrative. On the other, widening the perspective by examining the spatial practices of either new (self-organized intermediaries, see cap. 4) or fully-established institutionalized agents (public administration, see cap. 4), matchmaking or misfits constellation can be analysed according to the relevant and used communicative resources, strategies as well as modes of qualification that enables defining, accessing, establishing the “markets” of creative industries. With the help of these empirical insights, new perspectives on the relationship between creativity and the city will be presented. When Creative Industries Crossover with Cities 創意產業與城市發展研討會 2.2.2 The Governance of Place Marketing City marketing is a particular field in urban governance that is directly linked to notions of urban competitiveness and place identity. Cities look (or are supposed to look) at each other as potential competitors (Harvey, 1989) ; (Sassen, 1999); (Lever, 1999); (van den Berg and E., 1999). In the context of international competition as political choice they put together mechanisms to attract tourists, investments or residents (Ashworth and Voogd, 1990); (Kotler, 1999); (Gold, 1994). The mechanisms and actors vary from place to place, but there are certain characteristics that can be identified as common in most countries of the western world. Two of them are relevant to this paper and thus merit closer attention. The first common characteristic is what places city marketing into the context of urban governance. It usually involves actors from different fields – state, economy, civil society – though of course resources and scope of action differ substantially among them, thus creating power discrepancies. The second feature is the focus of place marketing on questions of identity. What we are referring to here is “place identity”, a notion extremely difficult to grasp without falling into the trap of essentialism, historical myths, clichés, and trivial forms of representation (for a critical review of place marketing see Kearns (Kearns, 1993). City marketing strategies as a rule involve defining a place’s identity, tapping it and communicating it in what is then considered appropriate ways for appropriate target groups. Understanding the role that different agents play in place marketing enables us to discern the ways that (place) identity is discursively constructed, selectively targeted and communicated. In this context the state (or region or city), as the key player in traditional governance models, pursues a policy that is supposed to boost a place’s economy. Drawing on existing marketing models, the aim is not just to sell an existing product (the role of ‘sales’), but to form the product to awaken or serve needs. This approach gives city marketing a very active role in shaping the urban and give marketers a position next to this of planners and other policy makers. Although at first sight economic development policies, with project or context oriented support, appear to be a different story, the borders between the two are increasingly fluid: city marketing may dictate what is worth promoting (and financing), because it is deemed consequent with the city’s desired image. Businesses will seek to influence the understanding of a place’s identity, since it may mean a direct compensation in form of financial or contextual support. Public-private-partnerships as a particular governance model are a product of this growing interest of businesses in fields that were traditionally the privilege of the state. The concept of “power geometries” as it was 125 Conference on developed above is useful here to look at a certain asymmetry. Who has access to private-public-partnership models as the ones just mentioned? Do large and small, old and new, mainstream and marginal businesses have the same access to such mechanisms? It can be argued (and it will need empirical work to demonstrate it) that the former ones are traditionally more interwoven with structures of power. This leads to the question of how the latter react to it. What forms of self-organisation do they deploy to tackle this type of exclusion? We seem to have here a conflict between two different structures: one represents forms of organization (political or economical) that hold power and the other is those forms that demand access to it. City marketing can be seen as a spatial phenomenon in two ways: First of all it is the constantly re-negotiated product of a conflictual juxtaposition of players, themselves interconnected through ‘geometries of power’. By these we mean both spatially relevant fields of interest and the resources to enforce them. These resources may refer to different types of power – economic, knowledge-based, social or cultural. Secondly, city marketing forges representations of place, notions of identity that go far beyond the place’s physical borders connecting it to others. Thus city marketing with the position it is given today can be understood as a fundamental actor in place-making. 3. Berlin and its creative industries 3.1. Berlin’s departure and its specific prerequisites Taking the difficult historical background as a point of departure, Berlin can be considered as a relatively peripheral metropolis, as a politically divided city with parallel institutions till 1990. Subsidized economies on both sides, few manufacturing industries on the western side and less competitive industries on the eastern side, Berlin’s start in the European arena after 1990 has been framed by structural and economic weaknesses, less-service oriented public institutions and public policy, and entrepreneurial mentalities always awaiting federal subsidies (Büttner et al., 2004). Till today, Berlin demonstrates the paradoxical co-presence of cramped knowledge sites, some excellent science clusters, as well as highly attractive cultural scenes, on the one hand and, severe reduction politics within the realm of universities, research and development on the other. This results in a mostly self-encumbered lock-in situation, which progressively endangers any creative steps into a “knowledge-based future” 126 for the metropolitan area as a whole. The transformation into an independent and less-subsidized urban economy has led to stable 18-20 % unemployment rates, growing social segregation, and slow but detectable urban polarization (Häußermann and Kapphan, 2002). 3.2. Berlin’s new economic fields Only few economic segments, such as creative industries, have evolved positively. Creative industries are defined as a profit-oriented segment and thus cover all enterprises, entrepreneurs, and self-employed persons producing, marketing, distributing, and trading profit-oriented cultural and symbolic goods. In 2005, 21,000 small and medium-sized enterprises produced a GDP of 8 billion € in Berlin, a share of 11 % of Berlins total GDP. In creative industries, 100,000 employees represent a relevant labour market. In 2004, most of the enterprises were in the art market (24 %), book- and publications market (22 %) and the subsegment of architecture (13 %). The strong position of the art market is based on the high number of design offices self-employed artists. The number of enterprises increased between 1998 and 2004 by approximately 4,000 start-ups, (appro. 18%). Especially the subsegments software (+1, 280 enterprises), book and publishing market (+1,120 enterprises) film and television production (+312 enterprises) and music industry (+300 enterprises) performed positively. On the contrary, the number of architectural offices decreased (Senatsverwaltung, 2006, Senatsverwaltung, 2005). Though Germany’s new capital has been suffering under continuous socio-economic crises for the last 8-12 years, new modes of governance appear not only on the political agenda, but foremost, unexpectedly, and in project-based professional fields of creative industries. From an economic point of view, Berlin recently demonstrates that only few sectors (mainly design production, fashion, and music industry) in the field of creative industries have developed positively and not only on an image level: increased number of employees, start-ups in the field of design, fashion, and music production have led to rapid change of the urban fabric. In November 2005 UNESCO appointed Berlin – as the first city in Europe – to the “Creative Cities Network under the framework of UNESCO’s Global Alliance for Cultural Diversity” awarded Berlin the title of “City of Design”. The Creative Cities Network is designed to forge new models of public/private partnerships at city level that can help to unlock the creative, social, and economic potential of cultural industries. As the first German city to be appointed to the Network, Berlin has demonstrated remarkable social, economic, and cultural achievements in the field of design. With a good grasp of the economic impact of its design industry, the city of Berlin stands out as an example in coordinating policy, training and networking support for its stakeholders. Berlin is up-and-coming in many different design sectors. Almost 11,700 Berliners work in fashion, product and furniture design, architecture, photography, and the visual arts, while the roughly 6,700 design companies generate annual sales of 1.5 billion € (Senatsverwaltung, 2006). The surroundings, space, and excellent basic conditions here lay the foundation for creative work and the development of innovative products. Designers, fashion designers, photographers, and architects, according to the UNESCO evaluation of Berlin’s design industry, find artistic freedom, affordable office space and living costs, networks, as well as a public interested in design. In the segment of design production the number of entrepreneurs has tripled between 1993 and 2003. In 2003, 80% of them act as micro-entrepreneurs with less than three employees, 50 % of them have less than 15.000 € yearly turnover (IDZ, 2003). The crash of the so-called New Economy in the years 2001/2 had tremendous impact on the development of this professional group. In 2000 and 2001, 186 new companies had been founded in the design sector of Berlin; in 2003 only 48 enterprises were founded and many employees lost their jobs and had to move in new directions. Krätke (Krätke, 2002, p. 139) underpins this observation in the framework of his study of Berlin’s media economy: the number of media and communication designers play a key role in this sector, which in Germany grew between 1994-1998 by 6%, and in Berlin by almost 10%. (op. cit.). These key figures demonstrate structural data about a relatively new and in the last years growing professional group. In the last year, the design sector grew substantially without being directly pushed or supported by the city administration. This unexpected and by the Berlin Senate (the city government) in the beginning neglected dynamic field of action has forced the public administration to rethink their political agenda: While focusing on the “potential“ of self-organised and completely independently operating creative-based service segment, the public administrative sector had to find appropriate ways to govern these growing knowledge and creativity based economies. Conceptually, structural paradoxes caused by the challenge of managing and organizing creativity in the cultural industries seem to restrain “traditional” socio-technocratic practices of governing the mobile and autonomy driven creative-based economies (Lampel et al., 2000). When Creative Industries Crossover with Cities 創意產業與城市發展研討會 3.3. The “culturepreneur” – representatives of Berlin’s neo-liberal economic mode? One of the key urban and cultural developments in post-reunification Berlin is the emergence of new hybrid cultural as well as entrepreneurial agents, the so-called Culturepreneurs. (For similar observations see (Davies and Ford, 1998), (McRobbie, 2002 for London); for Berlin: see (Lange, 2005a, Lange, 2007); for Frankfurt on Main: see (Lange and Steets, 2002); for Vienna: (Ellmeier, 2003). On the one hand, this development has led to a substantial reconsideration of “entrepreneurship” and space (cf. (Steyaert and Katz, 2004), on the other, to new thinking on the notion of learning, professionalization, and trust within entrepreneurial networks (Rae, 2004), (Sydow et al., 2004). First of all, the term Culturepreneur is a portmanteau word, comprising both the cultural and the entrepreneur. It was first suggested by Davies/Ford (Davies and Ford, 1998, 13) following Pierre Bourdieu‘s typological notion of an entrepreneur who embodies various forms of capital (cf. (Bourdieu, 1986, 241). The term “Culturepreneur” describes an urban protagonist who possesses the ability to mediate between and interpret the areas of culture and of service provision. There is as yet no adequate professional category for the ”curator”, ”communication manager”, ”trend scout”, ”interaction designer” who is transparently multi-skilled and ever willing to pick up new forms of expertise. He or she may then be characterised, first and foremost, as a creative entrepreneur, someone who runs clubs, record shops, fashion shops, galleries, and other outlets, who closes gaps in the urban with new social, entrepreneurial and socio-spatial practices. Such knowledge and information based intermediaries increasingly emerged in the gallery, art and multimedia scene in different European metropolises, foremost in London in the 1990‘s. Davies/Ford (op. cit.) have characterised this type of people who, in structural terms, are communicative providers of transfer services between the sub-systems “business related services” and “creative scene” and, in doing so, seem to satisfy a necessary demand (Koppetsch and Burkart, 2002, 532). The creative industries’ rapid increase in Berlin is based on the emergence of large quantities of micro-entrepreneurial agents in these professional fields. Because of that, a new structural type acts as a new hybrid player in cultural industries. This type has to balance a high degree of cultural and artistic as well as economic practices with their respective forms of knowledge. It is important to mention that cultural and creative expertise on the one hand, and business expertise pose very diverse forms of rationalities that imply not only systematic paradoxes; they also lead to precarious structural 127 Conference on problems on forming an entrepreneurial identity. Apart from neutral and “objective” descriptions of the novelty, it has to be asked to what degree these agents represent a new prototype as a neo-liberal urbanite? Focussing on new agents in a newly moulded market, it will be interesting to understand how these new agents accumulate appropriate forms of knowledge and expertise in order to act on a still insecure, rather instable and fast-changing market. Codified and formally acquired forms of technical, expert or production knowledge do not guarantee establishing a successful business position. Their situation rather forces them to collaborate, interact and get into exchange with other competitors, always risking and being confronted loosing their primary innovative idea and product. This perspective takes also into account, that, as David Rae puts it, a “new generation of entrepreneurs are little understood by policymakers, and educational policy fails to prepare people for entrepreneurial activity”. That means the mix of creative and business skills of cultural entrepreneurship will be learned rather from experiences and peers than in ‘inflexible’ environment of educational institutions. But where is and who provides the appropriate environment? 3.4. Formats, agents, and practices of marketing Berlin as the “place of creativity” Creativity has been a constant ‘message’ in Berlin city marketing since the late 1990s. What professionals see in it, is the possibility of creating a symbolic distance between the Berlin of World War II or of the Wall and the “New Berlin” as the campaign of the 1990s was called. Creativity seems a very fertile ground for re-defining a city’s identity as its connotations are only positive: dynamism, youth, growth, emotions, experiences, fantasy etc. thus it is often hard to tell what the product of efficient place marketers is. Groups that are targeted through such campaigns are “firms, workers and residents” as Schrock and Markusen put it (Schrock and Markusen, 2005, 51). To understand why these groups are targeted and through what institutions that takes place, we need to take a closer look into Berlin’s particular situation. Tourism services in the form of information offices is something very common even in the smallest German town. Active marketing policy, including campaigns of all types, are usually to be found in regions or larger cities. In Berlin it is the private-public-partnership organization called BTM (Berlin Tourismus Marketing) responsible for promoting Berlin as a tourist destination. The main city marketing organization is Berlin Partners, another public-private-partnership, where the 128 city of Berlin, the Chamber of Industry and Commerce, the Berlin state bank, almost 150 mostly medium size companies, but also universities and other educational organizations participate in a broad network of partners. Their scope of action is very wide: it includes promoting Berlin as a business location and a political decision-making centre, as a city of creativity, technology and education, but also assist potential investors and enhance export. Besides these two larger organizations, the administration itself, both at federal, state and municipality level pursue their own city marketing policy, have their own contacts and political agendas. Cultural foundations as for example the Goethe-Institute or organizations such as the Berlin Trade Fair Centre, that both do their own place marketing, add to the complexity of the picture. Creativity is central on the agenda of all the institutions mentioned above. Through its connotations of young and diverse, creativity suits perfectly well the city that defines itself through the same terms. But what formats are used to promote creativity? A large portion of the literature on city marketing focuses on events (Kearns, 1993), (Waitt, 1999), (Stevenson et al., 2005), (Gotham, 2002, Gotham, 2005) and advertising (Gold, 1994) as the main instruments of city marketing. Large public space events, such as the Love Parade, Christopher Street Day Parade (the gay and lesbian pride parade), the Carnival of the Cultures of the World are only some examples from Berlin. Interestingly enough, all of these were originally initiatives of (more or less) marginalised groups, that were subsequently tapped and marketed, thus contributing to Berlin’s image as a colourful, tolerant and creative city. But these are just the obvious ones. There is a lot more to city marketing, not always visible from the outside. Business development works through networking, relations, lobbying and promises. Tourism through contracts, business policies and events far outside the physical borders of the city. Inhabitants are attracted by complex things like “quality of life” or “lifestyle”. Is there be such a thing as “creative city” in the first place? Some kind of elusive quality, an “air”“atmosphere”, “ambiance” (all of them words that try to grasp the ungraspable) that makes one place more creative than another? One risk in city marketing is that it essentializes such qualities, ignores their conflictual nature, oversimplifies them and fixes them in time. Looking at city marketing in the context of power relations, we can discern not only what is highlighted, but also what is not said. Which spaces, people and lifestyles are communicated and which are silenced? Creativity as the new ‘buzz word’ is always in the front – but which notion of creativity targets or reaches what kind of spaces, agents and economic fields? What about the spaces of migrants? The spaces of the urban poor? Spaces constituted through gender relations? Spaces of everyday life, which, we will argue, can be very creative? City marketing will by-pass anything that does not fit the picture. 4. Case studies in design production A preliminary methodological remark: individual cases, groupspecific self-descriptions, as well as statements made by public authorities mentioned below aim at generating themes, categories and narratives from sequences of guideline-supported and semi-standardised interviews. What will come to the fore are above all living world-related aspects as well as situational and socio-spatial ascriptions that provide a superior-level explanatory basis for certain actors, their associated professional groups, and their social and professional networks as well as their professional and institutionalized logics. They do not provide information about an individual case or an individual opinion, nor will they be understood proverbially, but they will provide systematic empirical material about the specific social networks, its milieus, social arenas, as well as its institutional local, regional and supra-regional intertwining, which are articulated in the sequences of the case. 4.1“Greige”: Practicing the beginning of entrepreneurship, positioning on markets Some indisputable key features of the first case: it deals with three men, aged 27, 32 and 35; two of them studied graphic design in Cologne until 2000. They worked there parallel during their studies in different offices and agencies and gathered additional experiences after graduating as employees with far-reaching competences and tasks in other – also international - agencies. In late 2001 they move from Cologne to Berlin, search for office space in Prenzlauer Berg borough, find something suitable and found their own office. It has a floor space of approx. 145 sqm and is a disused shop near Helmholtzplatz. The rental is quite cheap, they redecorate the rooms themselves, bring their equipment, ‘organise’ table boards, an Internet connection is established via a free hanging cable from their window across the courtyard to another next door office. Work commences with an enormous party. “Universal dilettanti” Their identity-creating work is rooted in their training as graphic designers at the University of Applied Sciences so that they may be called – in the widest sense – design intensive symbol producers. They define their contentual specifications with the term “holistic designs”, which for them implies a nec- When Creative Industries Crossover with Cities 創意產業與城市發展研討會 essary high design standards as well as an artistic self-image in the performance of their activities. This contentual specification shows, on the one hand, artistic motives, on the other it is unspecific in terms of content, adjustable and extremely variable. The project studies trained them to become “universal dilettanti”. Their project-based studies at the University of Applied Sciences was characterised by open structures till to ’quasi pre-programmed independence‘. These self-ascriptions show learned but also unquestioned flexibility demands aimed at attaining the necessary and profession biographically desired expressivity as well as absolute professional but also contentual self-control. “Regaining action security” Conditioned by the outlined socialisation patterns of their education, the transition to their pure working life appears to be basically successively prepared from their living world. Actually, there is no well-defined entrance into the working life; education and working life are rather entwined over several years. The continuation of those parallel phases systematically manifests itself in the conceptualisation of their business: It will be established – besides a thematic openness – also in socio-organisational terms as an interaction platform and docking station for third, friendly, acquainted and professionally associated actors that are deemed of interest. The consequential “working in a team“ entails a professional integration of like-minded friends, partners and even lifetime companions. Consistently, the name of the “Greige“ office does not cite the names of the owners as is customary in Germany, e.g. Springer & Jacoby. The name “Greige“, a reference to a colour between grey and beige as coined by Le Corbusier, is not to point to persons but to the socio-organisational idea of interdisciplinary work in network structures. Work in networks is structured systemically where every actor from different European cities who temporarily collaborates on a project contributes his or her skills. This organisational structure can be highly, swiftly and flexibly to any external requirements: Thus, new enquiries and orders can be responded to within a few hours or days by putting together appropriate teams and present itself to third-party clients not only as a quantitatively large but likewise perfectly suited design office. Organising networks, inventing places Consistently, this organisational model combines and links working and private spheres. Strictly speaking there are no classical working time models and time structure models, the previously separated living world spheres of “work” and “leisure” are defined according to specific order and employment situations. The organisational structures of actors in the field 129 Conference on of symbol-intensive service providers analysed in this paper swiftly point to parlous subsistence conditions of urban cultural-economic transformation structures but also to strategic responses. Hence, the further course will focus on questions of tactics and strategies in order to establish their entrepreneurial practices on a flexible, quickly changing market in times of extremely tough competition (due to hardly any order intake). The necessary organisational competitive character of the ‘Greige’ enterprise highlights communicative strategies to make proactive use of the micro-location ‘office’, in the sense of place-making, as a hub for fluid social communalisation and cultural scenes. 4.2 Create Berlin – formalising professional networks The next case, this of the network CREATE BERLIN, should help us understand better how Berlin designers understand themselves and their role on the one hand and what strategies they deploy to participate in place-making on the other. CREATE BERLIN is an association of designers, founded at the beginning of 2006 only a few months after the UNESCO awarded Berlin the title of “City of Design”. It is worth looking at the exact wording of their self-description and read its rhetoric : “CREATE BERLIN is an initiative both by and for Berlin Designers. CREATE BERLIN unites creative minds and design producing talent from agencies, companies and institutions in Fashion Design, Product / Interior Design and New Media / Graphic Design as a network spanning all design disciplines. As ambassador of Berlin Design, CREATE BERLIN presents the creative variety of the Berlin Design Scene and promotes with national and international engagement the economic potential of Berlin’s design industry and strengthens Berlin’s reputation of a unique and aspiring design metropolis and of “City of Design”, as awarded by the UNESCO. CREATE BERLIN lives on the engagement of the people of Berlin’s creative industry - their energies invested in the city have a trend-setting effect on Berlin and accelerate the heart beat of the city.” (www.create-berlin.de) There are several elements here that are relevant to this paper: First of all the use of words such as “initiative” and “network”. This shows a self-definition which focuses on informal, more flexible forms of organization, very much like the players identified in new governance models – also emphasized by the inclusion of both “companies” and “institutions”. Secondly, CREATE BERLIN sees its role as a “national” and “international” promoter of the city’s “economic potential” and “reputation” – both notions directly linked with the idea of place marketing – thus aspiring at becoming a prime player in governance 130 structures. And finally, it is recognized here that place-making occurs through “energies” or people’s actions. The birth of CREATE BERLIN can be seen as a reaction of the designer scene to their exclusion from traditional state-regulated forms of power. It is one of the forms of self-organisation mentioned above, to ensure that young, small and marginal businesses are taken seriously as equal players in economic development and city marketing policies. 4.3 Initiative “Projekt Zukunft” (initiative „project future) From the administrational side, there have been serious attempts to identify, support and market the city’s creative potential. The Berlin Senate (local government) and especially the Department of Economy, Technology and Women’s Issues has initiated a project called Projekt Zukunft (=project future), aiming at creating networks among media and IT business on the one hand, and at linking them with science, politics and the administration on the other. Through marketing and information campaigns, public-private-partnerships, publications or events, it promotes economic and cultural innovations. The fields targeted here range from information technology, telecommunications, e-government and up to the cultural economy. As a fully institutionalized administrative body, “project future” distributes financial aid for future-oriented economic fields and their agents. This administrative mode is closely connected to fordistic principles: it redirects money. A closer look demonstrates that the field it is supposed to support represents a rather unspecific portfolio: technology support, marketing, providing information via databases etc. The wide range of support for new technologies highlights paradoxical circumstances. When, in the past, public administration had to support one company with 1000 employees, today, it has to demonstrate responsibility for 1000 companies with one ‘self-employee’. Besides, creative agents mostly represent a generation of 25-40 year olds, often associated with quickly changing trends in style, taste, habitus, location preferences, etc. Seeing it as a typical generational behaviour with high rates of residential mobility, changing workplaces etc, why should an urban administration invest in these fluid, self-seeking, experimental life-worlds? The future orientation of the well formulated and suitable “project future” appears to be caught in the trap of creativity. Distributing money in highly risky, less established delete space and unproved entrepreneurial and creativity-based endeavours of emerging projects leads to constraints especially for young agents. How can a young, aspiring creative entrepreneur convince an administration whose logics of distributing its resources is rooted in the fordistic past? 5. Discussion Marketing the creativity of Berlin is considered by many as very promising for the city’s future. Not only does it fit Berlin’s selfunderstanding as part of international knowledge-based networks, it also places the city as the avant-garde of a particular economic restructuring in the framework of capitalist globalization. As we already mentioned above, marketing is a highly selective process, in which places are seen as homogeneous, unchangeable and bounded entities. It reproduces representations of place with very concrete material consequences: it addresses, with the best intentions, a young, suitable group of agents, while silently excluding, neglecting, and marginalizing others. Using creativity as the ‘synecdoche’ of the urban, we need to recognize how this cements or challenges relations of power. In other words we need to discern the ways in which it also reproduces winners and losers. Berlin’s particular position in the context of creative industries can be seen as a direct result both of its own economic/political restructuring of the post-reunification era and as part of a worldwide reorganization of work and governance models. Berlin’s economic hybridity makes it difficult to use obvious categories such as Fordism vs. post-Fordism or neo-liberal vs. regulative to describe processes taking place. The culturepreneur is one possible answer to this growing hybridization, a flexible and precarious urbanite caught between the paradoxes of different systems: on the one hand a state that by and large follows a Fordistic organizational principle and on the other hand the reality of a market that is abandoning it. Reacting to this discrepancy the culturepreneurs create their own spaces of interaction where borders blur: competition and cooperation, exchange and isolation, private and public, work and leisure co-exist and are hard to tell apart. They invent forms or self-organization to gain access to power structures, based on informal conglomerates and extensive networks. They represent a new (or is it old?) way of making one’s living. Based on the already mentioned theoretical reflections about the way we understand space, we can conclusively recognize two divergent, yet interwoven and highly dynamic patterns: The first one concerns the way we understand place marketing: it formulates bounded concepts of spaces – such as precise historical spaces or clear entities of creative production – while seeing spaces as homogenized and fixed entities. Marketing has to exclude “others”, such as the indefinable, the hidden spaces, the precarious, the dark side of a new economic mode. In doing so, an image and spatial representation of the exiting, desirable and aesthetically clean is being transported as the product of marketers around the globe. Creative economies When Creative Industries Crossover with Cities 創意產業與城市發展研討會 with their ‘attractive’ life-worlds, hidden spaces, ‘exiting’ work conditions and their new ever-lasting consumptive demands seem to be the ready-made image for marketing. The second pattern seems to be the negation of the first: the sketched empirical results demonstrate that those targeted creative ‘objects’ are of a rather different constitution, perpetually changing, continually instable, highly mobile and operating in temporary projects. Their socio-economic mode of the urban does not seem to fit into the image of the marketers. While looking closer we have detected forms and representations of self-governance (case Greige) as well as institutionalized forms of representation and organization (case Create Berlin). Their spatial action patterns change, and thus constantly redefine their identity. And, we will conclude, identities are only understandable through their changing nature. The most obvious forms of paradoxes can be found in the efforts of the public administration stimulating the creative economy. It is now widely accepted in the administration that context-improvement seems to be the only legitimate form of ‘helping’ creative agents. Projekt Zukunft, as we have seen targets a wide range of future economic fields, but seems to be trapped in traditional forms of economic development derived from the industrialized past. We could interpret the project as a rather timid attempt of the administration to adapt to a different organization of economy. While city marketing is selling the specific creative ‘air’ and atmosphere of Berlin’s newly emerged economy, it leads to an acceleration of spatial dynamics: international tourists, consumers from around the globe are not only desired consumers and clients – they indirectly boost the speed of necessary innovation and production cycles. 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