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Background
Philosophy |
Mandate |
Supporting Partners
The concept of True North Foundation has its roots in a 15 year
period from the late 1970's until the early 90's, growing out of the
practical experience of presenting concerts, tours, and festivals both in
Canada and internationally, combined with a perceived need for showcasing
little known works by Canadian composers. Practical
experiences included "Quoi de Neuf?" - an experimental multimedia
performance festival in Montreal broadcast on a local cable television
network, the "ComPoster" education project in collaboration with the
Canadian Music Centre, and "Kanada Muusika Paevad" (Canadian Music Days) a
showcase of Canadian music and film presented in the cities of Tallinn,
Tartu, Pärnu, and Viljandi as the first international festival held in newly
independent Estonia.
True North
Foundation was officially launched in Toronto in 1997. Its first project was
a large scale collaboration with both Canadian and Taiwanese governments in
presenting "True North Festival 1998" in Taipei and Kaohsiung, Taiwan. The
basic components of this project were 12 programs of Canadian concert music,
a 3 month exhibition of Canadian landscape art at the Kaohsiung Museum of
Fine Arts , and a one hour video documentary that was screened across Canada
over a 4 year period on Bravo Cable TV.
In the years
following True North Festival, the foundation has focused more on specific
international collaborations in the Nordic and Baltic countries and in
developing local Toronto-based programs for the regional community such as
The Boreal Orchestra ensemble.
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