Mainstream Invasion | The Cultural Sector at a Crossroad
08/05/2026 - From 18h to 22h - Public
If culture is increasingly shaped by market logic, who decides what gets seen, funded, and remembered, and who quietly disappears?
This conversation is hosted in partnership with Piknik Elektronik & The Nine.
Piknik Elektronik, a women-led initiative active for 19 years primarily in Brussels and involved in electronic music, new technologies, and as a consumer of all forms of art worldwide, has always stayed ahead of the curve, you may have seen one of their talks on AI and blockchain three years ago at The Nine.
The organization now observes a troubling trend across the cultural sector: the mainstream, focused solely on immediately “sellable” works, is gradually erasing the experimental, lab-like spaces where real art is created, especially projects led by women and minorities.
Through conversations with multiple stakeholders, Piknik Elektronik highlights the urgent need to come together to identify the first areas where meaningful impact can be made.
That’s why they are launching this initial session in a series of roundtables, bringing together a carefully selected group of speakers and participants from across the cultural, artistic, political, and associative sectors. There is much to discuss, and many more conversations to come.
Spaces that once felt raw, experimental, and community-driven are slowly being polished, packaged… and sold back to us. The same formats repeat. And somewhere along the way, the creativity, the spark, gets filtered out.
Behind the scenes, a different story is unfolding: increasing economic concentration, gatekeeping disguised as “curation,” and a quiet but very real squeezing out of independent, often minority-led initiatives, not because they lack relevance, but because they don’t fit the commercial mold.
Yet these independent initiatives are not only where experimentation thrives, they are essential to the very ecosystems that larger structures rely on. Without them, the whole system weakens. What’s needed is not replacement, but balance.
Across music, art, theatre, media, and cultural institutions, the same pattern is unfolding. Larger institutions gain more visibility, funding, and space, while emerging artists and alternative scenes are increasingly marginalized. Diversity is often celebrated as a concept, but the actual range of voices continues to shrink.
This is why we are opening the conversation, not to romanticize the past, but to confront what is really happening and explore actionable solutions. Together, we aim to establish a shared diagnosis and identify the critical points where balance needs to be restored.Together with artists, cultural actors, institutional voices, and researchers, we will examine:
- how these monopolistic dynamics operate in practice
- the long-term consequences for cultural ecosystems
- the strategies we can adopt to challenge, rethink, and reconstruct these structures
The evening will conclude with an open discussion over drinks, because some of the most meaningful exchanges happen off stage.
For logistical purposes, your contact details will be shared between The Nine and Piknik Elektronik. By registering, you agree to receive occasional updates from Piknik Elektronik, with the option to unsubscribe at any time.
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