ABOUT
Urban Storytelling School is an Erasmus+ partnership program by Center for Social Vision / Sofia and C*SPACE / Berlin. It focuses on urban storytelling as a participatory tool for activating communities, connecting neighbours, and making cities more inclusive. The program is aimed at artists, educators, urban experts, activists, and community leaders, who would like to envision and reshape urban spaces through international learning and hands-on storytelling projects such as interactive walks, experimental guides, interventions, and mapping. Activities include residencies in Berlin and Sofia, mentoring sessions and group project work.
JOIN US FOR Q&A
Join us for our Q&A session on January 8, 15:00 CET, we provide a detailed overview of the program and answer your questions concerning participation & the application process.
program theme
In Bulgaria, a country with one of the lowest levels of voter turnout in Europe, political scientist Ivan Krastev recently referred to it as a „frozen democracy.“ This reflects a broader sense of apathy toward political processes, coupled with low levels of civic engagement, as highlighted by the Index vor Civil Engagement. A pervasive lack of trust also marks Bulgarian society – according to the initiative Vision for Sofia, more than 40% of people do not trust their neighbors. In the light of this, we began to ask ourselves as to what kinds of relationships, stories, sounds, touches and shared imagination might help us care more.
In Berlin, the constant state of transition and redevelopment poses its own set of challenges. For residents — whether new or ‘old’ Berliners — these rapid changes make it challenging to identify with their surroundings and foster a sense of belonging. The current cultural cuts, political transformations, wars, forced migration, and climate change add layers of uncertainty and pessimism about the future.
When discussing both contexts, we ask: how do we ensure these voices and perspectives, so often marginalized, find a place in the larger urban narrative? How do we weave them into the fabric of a city’s story? We wonder, too, how multiple voices in a city come together to form a collective narrative? And how does an artwork convey this polyphony of voices? Is there a narrative in silence? Can the silence of a summer afternoon speak? What stories do young people tell about the places they love to be? Are they the ones who are most often in streets and squares, inhabiting schoolyards, promising futures?
When we ask about the stories of a city, we also ask: Who is telling the story? How does a city narrate itself? Is it through its people, its living and non-living organisms, its roads, signs, or its history? Can we record the stories that the mosses and grasses tell, and what would they sound like? Can we capture the stories of infrastructure told through the inhabitants of a place? Do neighbourhoods have a shared identity and who knows what it is?
Participants in this program are invited to actively engage in creating these urban narratives, drawing from their ideas about the present and their visions for the future. Through their storytelling projects, they can amplify diverse voices and offer new perspectives on the evolving identities of cities. Topics such as local and global identities, heritage, commemoration culture, gentrification, communication with non-human entities, care, access to public space, and inclusion can serve as starting points for exploration. Participants can discuss and build on their ideas for future or existing projects, with the possibility of developing projects from scratch.
Tools and topics
Program
February 2025
Kick-Off meeting (online)
March 10-15, 2025
Educational and research school in Berlin
March 2025 - July 2025
Online project work
july 2025
Second exchange in Sofia & project presentation
August - October 2025
Publication
October 2025
Presentations in Sofia & Berlin
What We offer
- Mentoring sessions (conducted by Center for Social Vision and C*SPACE)
- Residency in Berlin at C*SPACE (March 2025)
- Public presentation in Sofia within the Nine Elephants festival (July 2025)
- Covering of expenses: Fee and production grant; travel costs (up to 275€), food & accommodation during the exchanges
partners
Center for Social Vision, Sofia, Bulgaria
Center for Social Vision is an idea space and platform fostering exchange of experiences, policies and action towards socially-related art practices. Established in 2021, it brings together curators, artists, researchers, writers, architects and designers to explore the intersections between art and society, looking for opportunities for dialogue and reflection. Since 2022, we publish the online media Journal for Social Vision that is open to research and discussions related to topics of community, environment, urban space and cultural heritage. It is run by the The Blue Cube Foundation and partners with the art space Swimming Pool as well as the festival Nine Elephants, also run by the same organization. www.centerforsocialvision.org
C*SPACE, Berlin, Germany
C*SPACE is a purpose-driven creative space for co-working, projects and events in Berlin-Weißensee. We also initiate cultural and learning programs, co-creating and connecting ideas and encounters across borders. C*SPACE is a hub for social innovation, where global and local neighbors come together across cultural and sectoral boundaries to develop critical awareness and solutions for new forms of regenerative work and learning, as well as celebrate cultural diversity and exchange. C* stands for curiosity, courage, community and collaboration.
www.c-space.eu
project team
Curator, founder of the art space Swimming Pool and its artistic director, initiator of diverse educational programs and research initiatives, including The Center for Social Vision. Recently, she launched Nine Elephants, a festival for art interventions in urban space. Viktoria also contributes to cultural policy development through her participation in working groups and committees. Based in Sofia, she holds a PhD in law and legal history.
Designer, C*SPACE program & communications manager, and co-founder of re:imagine your city. She coordinates and creates projects with a focus on community building, urban projects and participative creative methods including storytelling, photography, and food design. Katya holds a degree in Teaching Languages and a Bachelor of Arts in Visual Communications at HTW Berlin.
Co-founder of C*SPACE and program curator, Katja has been active for 20 years as an intermediary actor in transcultural cooperation at the intersection of economy, society, and culture. She is a trained process facilitator trained with the Presencing Institute @MIT and certified by the GFI – Generative Facilitation Institute Berlin, and a passionate curator of creative and cultural projects.
Apply
Who can apply
12 participants based either in Bulgaria or in Germany who would like to learn to use storytelling methods for community engagement and social cohesion.
The following criteria are relevant for the selection process:
- Strong interest in using creative storytelling methods to explore cities and their potential futures and a potential project idea/theme
- Readiness to take part in all the project activities and willingness to develop a bilateral audio project
- Age: 18+
- Participants should be based in Germany or Bulgaria
- Language: English, so the minimum expected proficiency is B2, based on self-evaluation.
Particular attention will be paid to the educational and professional interests of the applicants, in order to ensure an interdisciplinary approach and include diverse backgrounds. No previous experience with working on audio projects is needed. The applications are evaluated and considered to the same extent in a non-discriminatory manner.
Results will be communicated to all the applicants through email by January 16, 2024.
Submission opens
December 20, 2024
Submission closes
January 16, 2025, 23:59 CET
Results
January 26, 2025
Contact
The project is supported by the National Agency for Education for Europe at the Federal Institute for Vocational Education and implemented within the EU Program Erasmus +.
With the financial support of the Bulgarian Culture Fund.