Thursday, 13 May 2010

Mashing Up: Practice + Research

A One-Day Public Symposium at the Centre for Contemporary Arts, 350 Sauchiehall Street, Glasgow
Wednesday 19th May, 1.30-5.30 pm
Please book with CCA for Symposium 
Kathryn Elkin, CCA
+44 (0) 141352 4900
www.cca-glasgow.com

“MASHING-UP...”
A Public Lecture Series
presented by UWS and CCA

This ongoing lecture series stimulates critical, transdisciplinary research communities to discuss advanced knowledge and to build networks of excellence among producer communities.

‘Mashing up’ [definition] a mashup is a web page or application that combines data or functionality from two or more external sources to create a new service. The term mashup implies easy, fast integration...to produce results that were not the original reason for producing the raw source data (Wikipedia, 2009).

The lecture series exhibits the values of new media culture to explore synergies between institutions, ideas and disciplines. This aspiration originates with the UWS and CCA partnership, which extends to the specific areas of inquiry that we pursue. It advances the core mission of each organization to initiate applied, international research opportunities through experimental, local dialogue to foster collaborative, bottom-up, sustainable practices of development.


#mashingup We want attendees to blog, photograph, film, tweet and do all they can to share the content of these talks to democratize access to knowledge.


At UWS, we pride ourselves on the vocational and practitioner-led focus of our curriculum. Many of our academic staff have spent years working as cultural producers, artists and entrepreneurs outside of the university sector, and bring their knowledge of practice in the arts and cultural industries to bear on their teaching and research. At the same time, universities strive to build meaningful relationships between their research and teaching activites and wider communities, in order to justify their position as ‘places of learning’ and to maximise the social, cultural and economic ‘impact’ of academic work.

As the learning landscape becomes more convergent, with collaborations of all kinds characterising modern higher education research and teaching, it is important to consider the implications of these forms of academic practice. In this symposium we bring together practitioner-academics, artists, and researchers to consider such questions.

Knowledge-based communities often seem to divide themselves into distinct tribes of either theory or practice. But whether explicitly articulated or tacit, theory is always informed by forms of practice, and practice is always informed by theory. Within the disciplines that make up the creative and cultural industries, practice-based research has become increasingly prominent, but the place of such work within higher education can be contested, because it communicates knowledge in ways that are not necessarily written traditionally or ‘theoretically’ but expressed otherwise, for example through the production of artefacts in visual art, design, performance, music or moving image. At the same time, higher education must develop critical awareness and theoretical and analytical capabilities, to produce more competent and skilled practitioners and researchers.
Creativity, invention and discovery depend upon challenging disciplinary boundaries, playing with orthodoxies, and making new connections. Creativity may also involve leaps into the unknown or experimental and unorthodox approaches. However, funding and policy imperatives often mean that researchers are under pressure to justify the’ impact’ of their work in economic and practical terms; and artists involved in research, particularly in higher education, are expected to account for their methods and approaches in externally verifiable ‘research’ terms. So terminological confusion abounds.
What can researchers learn from artistic methods?  Practitioners and theorists may have more common methodologies than they think; the media theorist and the journalist often utilize similar methods of inquiry.  Artists and scientists conduct controlled experiments which depend on deep expertise, specialised knowledge, highly skilled technical facility, and intuition. Can cultural and artistic research reveal common ground between theory and practice? And in this context, how does theory help to illuminate practice?

SCHEDULE


1.30 pm

Welcome and Introduction:
Anne Gifford, Head of School, School of Creative and Cultural Industries


1.40 pm
Mashing Up: Practice + Research: an introduction
Graham Jeffery, Reader, Creative & Cultural Industries, UWS


2.10 pm
Polymash artistic practice
Chris Dooks, Artist


2.40 pm
Questions/Discussion


2.55 pm
Coffee


3.15 pm
Parallel Sessions:

1.      Social Creativities? Artistic Practice with Communities
Kirsten McLeod, PhD student, UWS
Jackie Sands, arts and health coordinator, NHS Greater Glasgow & Clyde
(Chair: Katarzyna Kosmala)


2.      Solitary Creativities? Reflections on the individual “creative process”
      David Manderson, Lecturer in Creative Writing, UWS
      Rachael Flynn, PhD student, UWS
      David Scott, Lecturer in  Music, UWS
      (Chair: Graham Jeffery)

3.      Producing creativities? Mediating the university/work divide
      Nic Jeune, Director of Artswork Media, Bath Spa University    
      Peter Broughan, Lecturer in Film-making/Producing, UWS
      Paul Tucker,  Lecturer in Broadcast Production, UWS
      (Chair: Anne Gifford)

4.15 pm

Panel/Plenary: Ecologies of learning: Research/Practice/Creativity – feedback from sessions
Chair: Katarzyna Kosmala/Graham Jeffery

4.45 pm
Closing Keynote: creative practice: research and the academy
Prof. Graeme Harper, Bangor University

5.15 pm
Close


Please book with CCA for Symposium 
Kathryn Elkin, CCA
+44 (0) 141352 4900
www.cca-glasgow.com


Tuesday, 30 March 2010

>>El Sur >> Buenos Aires April 2010

Collectivity for/in a Sustainable World:
Movements, Political Organizations and Governance


Simultaneous differences make a dialogue. Our collaborative stream in LAEMOS in Argentina, in Buenos Aires, co-organised with colleagues from Kingston University, London and Universidad Nacional de General Sarmiento, Buenos Aires invites multiplicity of views that reflect the desire for social, political and economic change that dominant market discourse has ignored for some time. We focus on the question of how anti-globalisation and activist movements, various grass-roots organizations and locally formed community groups have contributed to disrupting current governance forms, institutions and its logic of sustainability. We also draw on the art-based methods as a way of ‘social movement’ that somehow encapsulate this challenge to existing forms of governance through lens-based representation and through participation; a challenge of breaking the paradigmatic consensus in knowledge re/production.

While in Buenos Aires, we also engage with the question of representation through heteroglossic story-telling of Fabricas Recuperadas Inc. What we hope to illustrate is how the local community through co-operative initiatives IMPA Ciudad Cultural and collaborations with Centro Cultural de la Cooperacion and the recovered enterprises in Buenos Aires area can potentially re-territorialise the crisis experience, bringing authenticity back into the globalisation-'framed' narrative.

Research project Katarzyna Kosmala

Tuesday, 16 March 2010

Practice/Research-related seminars and events in Spring 2010


TUESDAY 23RD MARCH

Professor Andy Miah: inaugural lecture 

and Mashing Up Lecture Series launch CCA 5 , Glasgow 6.30pm

THURSDAY 25TH MARCH

DIGITAL MEDIA FOR GOOD CCA (Centre for Contemporary Arts), 350 Sauchiehall Street, Glasgow G2 3JD 4.30pm – 6.30pm 

SATURDAY 27TH MARCH
Ayrtime: Event 3 Pippa Goldschmidt Bar Libertine, Ayr 7.00pm

WEDNESDAY 31ST MARCH

BA (Hons) Performance Showcase, CCA Glasgow, 7pm

APRIL

FRIDAY 2ND APRIL

Ayrtime: Event 4 Alasdair Roberts Bar Libertine, Ayr 7.00pm




WEDNESDAY 14TH APRIL
Practice/Research Seminar 2 
Stuart Hepburn/John Quinn:  Adapting fiction for television CCA Glasgow 6.00pm

FRIDAY 16TH APRIL

Ayrtime: Event 5 Wounded Knee Bar Libertine, Ayr 7.00pm

WEDNESDAY 28TH APRIL

Practice/Research Seminar 3 Samantha Clark with Chris Fremantle (University of Dundee) Contemporary art practices and ecological aesthetics CCA Glasgow 5.00pm
MAY

WEDNESDAY 5TH MAY

Practice/Research Seminar 4 Graham Jeffery with Professor David Jenkins (Kings College London) Practitioner conversations between teachers and artists: possibilities and pitfalls CCA Glasgow

WEDNESDAY 12TH MAY

Practice/Research Seminar 5 David Scott Songwriting and Popular Music Pedagogy CCA Glasgow


Ayrtime

UWS is supporting Ayrtime, a series of events/performances curated by Chris Dooks and Eleanor Thom at Bar Libertine in Ayr. Next up is writer/performer Alan Bissett, at 7pm on Friday 19th March. Podcasts from each event will be available on the Ayrplayer around 3 weeks later.

PhD Studentships for 2010

Here are some of the studentship opportunities for next year we're currently offering  - please pass on to anyone appropriate you think might be interested. We're very keen to hear from people who would like to have a strong practice-led element in their proposals. Some of them are mainly based in our offices at CCA and Film City. They have full fees paid for 3 years plus a (modest) stipend of £6k per year... For the right candidates we will also put forward their applications for AHRC studentships which have a more generous living allowance of £13.6k - but if you want to apply for one of these, you'll need to move fast: the deadline by which applications have to be lodged with the AHRC is 1st May. For UWS-funded studentships the deadline for applications is 31st May. 


PhD students at UWS in the Faculty of Business and Creative Industries will be joining a lively community of researchers - to find out what some of them are currently up to, take a look at our research blog at uwscreative.wordpress.com. 


Studentships (full time, three years):

Activist artist practices and urban interventions (at CCA Glasgow)
Channel Four and the Scottish independent production sector (at Film City, Glasgow)
Dark Narratives: Gothic Nightmares (creative writing and critical element) 
Ethics and Emerging Technologies 
Media Narratives on the London 2012 Olympic Games 
Network enterprises in the creative industries (at Film City, Glasgow) 
New paradigms of artistic practice in healthcare environments 
Place, identity and locality: place-making in contemporary arts practice 
Real to Read (non-fiction writing and critical element) 

Welcome

This is the blog for the group of research-active staff and PhD students in the Faculty of Business and Creative Industries at the University of the West of Scotland who have an interest in practice/research relationships, with a particular focus on contemporary, applied and participatory arts practices, digital/screen media, creative writing, and creative pedagogy. In this blog we will gather together resources, links and materials which support our work.

We are based across the four campuses of the University of the West of Scotland, with a 'hub' in Glasgow which we're calling a "Creative Enterprise Cluster." Here, we have offices at CCA (Centre for Contemporary Arts) and Film City Glasgow, both of which we use as a base for teaching, meetings, projects, workshops, events, and collaborations in research and knowledge exchange. We also work with SCET - the Scottish Centre for Enabling Technologies, based at Glasgow Science Centre, which is managed by UWS' School of Computing. UWS is working towards achieving full recognition as a Skillset Media Academy, which will draw together all of our provision in digital media, film, games, audio, music, journalism and broadcast across three Schools (Business, Creative and Cultural Industries, and Computing).

The Creative Enterprise Cluster is a 'portal' to wider cultural and artistic networks in Glasgow and beyond. We use it for undergraduate and postgraduate teaching, it's a resource for partnership and collaboration, and it's strongly interdisciplinary, bringing together researchers, students and practitioners. Staff work across the domains of film, television, journalism, radio, music, performance, visual art and new media art, and we want to encourage collaboration and cross-fertilization wherever it's appropriate.

Across the Faculty as a whole we are concerned with developing and analysing the links between creativity, culture, enterprise, economy and communities. We do this through creative practice, reflection, evaluation, and sociological and theoretical enquiry. Some of the wider themes and issues we are interested in include making and analysing collaborative and creative work(s), exploring ideas about cultural labour, and exploring discourses of creativity, identity and community in the context of a network society in which power and resources are very unevenly distributed. Some colleagues are focused on creative and cultural business, work and commercialization of intellectual property; others have a strong interest in sustainability, participation, cultural identity and transition to a low-carbon economy; so the notions of ethics, entrepreneurship and ecologies of all kinds - mediated, social and 'natural' - are never far from the surface of our work.









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