CFi Newsletter Jan-Dec 2014

44
1 the Creative Futures Institute Our News Jan-Dec 2014

description

 

Transcript of CFi Newsletter Jan-Dec 2014

Page 1: CFi Newsletter Jan-Dec 2014

1  

the Creative Futures

Institute

Our News Jan-Dec 2014

Page 2: CFi Newsletter Jan-Dec 2014

2    

Page 3: CFi Newsletter Jan-Dec 2014

3  

Our News Jan-Dec 2014

Page 4: CFi Newsletter Jan-Dec 2014

4  

Welcomefrom the Director

Welcome  to  the  2014  update  from  the  Creative  Futures  Institute.  This  is  an  exciting  time  for  UWS,  as  we  form  a  new  School  of  Media,  Culture  and  Society,  and  embark  on  an  ambitious  University-­‐‑wide  strategic  plan  that  seeks  to  significantly  increase  research  activity  and  our  international  reach.    

In  this  edition  you  will  find  information  about  the  range  of  our  work  throughout  2014.  We  have  contributed  to  the  debate  about  the  future  of  Scotland  and  the  momentous  events  around  the  Referendum  through  Prof.  John  Robertson’s  widely  disseminated  analysis  of  broadcast  media  outputs,  through  Dr  Gerry  Hassan’s  series  of  public  events  on  Cultures  of  Independence,  and  through  practice-­‐‑based  work  in  theatre,  film,  literature  and  the  visual  arts,  including  Dr  David  Overend’s  production  of  Wallace  at  the  Arches,  and  our  collaboration  with  Trigger,  How  to  Choose?.    

Our  partnerships  with  CCA  Glasgow,  and  with  the  UWS  Creative  Media  Academy,  Film  City  Glasgow,  continue  to  yield  really  exciting  opportunities  for  collaborative  working,  including  a  symposium  series  on  

Page 5: CFi Newsletter Jan-Dec 2014

5  

Curating  Europe’s  Futures  involving  Prof.  Katarzyna  Kosmala,  and  a  major  exhibition  and  seminar  series  planned  for  2015  and  2016.    

Scottish  culture  and  the  multiple  representations  of  identity  in  contemporary  Scotland  also  continues  to  be  a  focus,  with  Eleanor  Yule  and  Dr  David  Manderson’s  book  on  Scottish  Miserablism  receiving  widespread  attention,  as  well  the  ongoing  work  of  the  Scottish  Centre  for  Island  Studies,  led  by  Dr  Kathryn  Burnett.  A  team  of  researchers  led  by  Prof.  Gayle  McPherson  and  Prof.  David  McGillivray  have  also  been  working  with  the  Commonwealth  Games  teams  on  culture,  parasport  and  the  wider  impact  of  this  summer’s  events  in  Glasgow  and  beyond.    And  extending  outwards  beyond  Scotland,  our  researchers’  work  in  participatory  and  contemporary  arts,  media/arts  practice  and  cultural  studies  continue  to  make  connections  across  the  world  -­‐‑  including  projects  funded  by  the  AHRC’s  Connected  Communities  programme,  exchanges  with  the  IDEEA  Lab,  Tokyo  Metropolitan  University,  and  collaboration  with  the  University  of  the  Arctic’s  Arctic  Sustainable  Art  and  Design  Network.  

We  hope  you  enjoy  reading  this  newsletter,  and  as  ever,  do  please  keep  in  touch.  

Graham  Jeffery  

Page 6: CFi Newsletter Jan-Dec 2014

6  

Contents Books  &  Journals  In  Focus:  Peter  Snowdon  Journal  Articles  Book  Chapters    In  Focus:  John  Robertson    Practice  Reports  In  Focus:  LSA  Conference    In  Focus:  David  Manderson  &  Eleanor  Yule  Media  Highlights    Impact:  Game  Changer  Awards    In  Focus:  European  Connections    In  Focus:  IDEEA  Lab    Conference  Presentations    In  Focus:  Holly  Tessler    In  Focus:  How  to  Choose  Arrivals  and  Departures    Grants  Awarded    PhD  Students    Our  Creative  Future    

Page 7: CFi Newsletter Jan-Dec 2014

7  

cf.

Page 8: CFi Newsletter Jan-Dec 2014

8  

Research Outputs

Page 9: CFi Newsletter Jan-Dec 2014

9  

Books & Journals Collins,  K,  Kapralos,  B  &  Tessler,  H.  (eds.)  (2014)  The  Oxford  Handbook  of  Interactive  Audio.  Oxford  University  Press.    

Hassan,  G.  (2014)  Caledonian  Dreaming:  the  quest  for  a  different  Scotland.  Luath  Press.

Kosmala,  K.  (ed.)  (2014)  Sexing  the  Border:  Gender,  Art  and  New  Media  in  Central  and  Eastern  Europe.  Cambridge  Scholars  Publishing.  

Kosmala,  K.  &  Kluszczynski,  R.  (eds.)  (2014)  Art  Inquiry:  ‘Crossing  Borders,  Imagining  Europe,  Representing  Periphery’,  Issue  15,  Lodzkie  Towarzystwo  Naukowe  (Journal).  

Manderson,  D  &  Yule,  E.  (2014)  The  Glass  Half  Full:  Moving  Beyond  Scottish  Miserablism.  Luath  Press.    

Page 10: CFi Newsletter Jan-Dec 2014

10  

FOCUS: Peter Snowdon We  welcome  Peter  Snowdon  as  Lecturer  in  Filmmaking.  Peter  is  an  award-­‐‑winning  documentarian  whose  body  of  work  –  which  has  developed  from  the  purely  political  to  the  experimental  and  avant-­‐‑garde  –  has  screened  widely  on  the  international  festival  circuit.  He  has  travelled  and  worked  around  the  world,  in  particular  in  the  Palestinian  territories,  where  a  number  of  his  films  were  shot,  and  India,  where  he  was  a  consultant  for  the  International  Society  for  Ecology  and  Culture.    

Since  making  his  first  short  doc  in  2006  Peter  has  directed  a  further  ten  films.  His  recent  debut  feature,  The  Uprising  (2013,  Third  Films/Rien  à  voir),  gained  critical  acclaim,  screening  at  over  fifteen  international  film  festivals  and  premiering  as  part  of  Documentary  Fortnight  at  MoMA,  NYC.  The  documentary  is  a  multi-­‐‑camera,  first-­‐‑person  account  of  the  Arab  revolutions.  Composed  entirely  of  over  100  videos  made  by  citizens  and  long-­‐‑term  residents  of  Tunisia,  Egypt,  Bahrain,  Libya,  Syria  and  Yemen,  it  uses  original  footage  not  to  recount  the  actual  chronology  of  events  or  analyse  their  causes,  but  to  create  an  imaginary  pan-­‐‑Arab  uprising  that  exists  (for  the  moment)  only  on  the  screen.  In  this  respect,  it  challenges  conventions  of  factual  and  fictional  filmmaking.  Peter  notes:  “if  this  is  a  documentary,  it  is  not  documenting  an  actual  past,  but  a  possible  future  –  one  of  many  possible  futures”.    

Page 11: CFi Newsletter Jan-Dec 2014

11  

Page 12: CFi Newsletter Jan-Dec 2014

12  

Journal Articles Clark,  S.  (2014)  ‘The  Curator’s  Room’.  Terrain.org:  a  journal  of  the  natural  and  built  environments.  

Clark, S. (2014) 'Things Unseen: Samantha Clark interviews Anne Bevan'. Antennae: the journal of nature in visual culture. 28.

Cox,  T.  McGillivray,  D.  &  McPherson,  G.  (2014)  ‘Making  sense  of  multiplicity:  evaluating  Scotland’s  Cultural  Olympiad’.  Journal  of  Policy  Research  in  Tourism,  Leisure  and  Events.  6  (3).  p.201-­‐‑214.  

Kosmala,  K.  (2014)  ‘Withering  into  the  Past:  Deconstructing  

a  Myth  of  the  Male  Artist’.  The  International  Journal  of  New  Media,  Technology  and  the  Arts.  7  (4).  p.15-­‐‑24.  

Kosmala,  K.  (2014)  ‘Constructed  Stories  of  (Non)Belonging  to  Europe:  Performative  Videos  of  Marina  Grzinic  and  Aina  Smid’.  Art  Inquiry  15.  p.65-­‐‑88.  

McGillivray,  D.  (2014)  ‘Digital  cultures,  acceleration  and  mega  sporting  event  narratives’.  Leisure  Studies.  33  (1).  p.  96-­‐‑109.  

Rich,  E  &  Miah,  A.  (2014)  ‘Understanding  Digital  Health  as  Public  Pedagogy:  A  Critical  Framework’.  Societies.  49  (2).  p.  296-­‐‑315.  

Page 13: CFi Newsletter Jan-Dec 2014

13  

Overend,  D.  (2014)  ‘Dramaturgies  of  mobility:  on  the  road  with  Rob  Drummond’s  Bullet  Catch.  Studies  in  Theatre  and  Performance.  35  (1).    

Shand,  R.  (2014)  ‘The  Wick  Society’s  Intervention  into  Industrial  Heritage:  Remaking  Local  Films  for  Future  Historians’.    International  Journal  of  Scottish  Theatre  and  Screen.  7  (1).  p.  70-­‐‑97.  

Page 14: CFi Newsletter Jan-Dec 2014

14  

cf.

Page 15: CFi Newsletter Jan-Dec 2014

15  

Book ChaptersBurnett,  K.A.  &  Danson,  M.  (2014).    ‘Enterprise  and  Entrepreneurship  on  Islands’.  In  Henry,  C.  &  Mcelwee,  G.  (eds.)    Contemporary  Issues  in  Entrepreneurship  Research  Volume  4  -­‐‑  Exploring  Rural  Enterprise:  New  Perspectives  on  Research.  Bingley:  Emerald  Group  Publishing.  

Higgins,  N.  (2014)  ‘Other  Screens,  Other  Selves’.    In  National  Collective  (eds.)  Inspired  by  Independence.  Edinburgh:  Word  Power  Books.  

McGillivray,  D.  &  McPherson,  G.  (2014).  ‘Scotland  in  2025:  A  Thriving  or  Striving  Events  Nation?’.  In  Yeoman,  I  et  al.  (eds.)  The  Future  of  Events  and  Festivals.  Abingdon:  Routledge.    

Miah,  A.  (2014)  ‘The  CyberSport  Nexus’.  In  Billings,  A.  &  Hardin,  M.  (eds.)  The  Routledge  Handbook  of  Sport  and  New  Media.  Oxon  &  New  York:  Routledge.    

Miah,  A.  (2014)  Tweeting  the  Olympic  Games.  In  Girginov,  V.  The  Routledge  Handbook  of  the  London  2012  Olympic  &  Paralympic  Games,  Volume  2.  Oxon:  Routledge.  

Page 16: CFi Newsletter Jan-Dec 2014

16    

FOCUS: John Robertson                John  Robertson,  Professor  in  Media  Politics,  has  seen  his  public  profile  rise  substantially  during  the  recent  Scottish  referendum  on  independence.  He  was  the  lead  researcher  on  a  project  that  transcribed  and  coded  the  news  coverage  of  the  campaign  from  September  2012  to  September  2013.  His  interim  findings,  Fairness  in  the  First  Year?,  a  report  made  available  on  the  Creative  Futures  Institute  website  in  February,  analysed  approximately  730  hours  of  evening  news  coverage  of  the  referendum  campaign  broadcast  on  BBC  One,  Reporting  Scotland,  ITV  and  STV.      

Page 17: CFi Newsletter Jan-Dec 2014

17  

The  report  detailed  that  stories  presenting  the  Yes  campaign  in  a  negative  light  outnumbered  those  that  were  more  favourable  by  a  factor  of  two  to  one.  As  a  result,  Professor  Robertson  gave  evidence  to  the  Education  &  Culture  Committee  in  the  Scottish  Parliament  the  following  month.    

These  findings  provoked  a  flurry  of  reaction  from  on-­‐‑line  bloggers  on  sites  such  as  Independence  Live.  The  journalist  Ian  Fraser  posted  links  to  the  research  on  his  website  and  Professor  Robertson  has  also  discussed  the  findings  in-­‐‑depth,  being  interviewed  by  Michael  Greenwell  for  his  podcast.  A  second  report  entitled  Good  Morning  Scotland?  Fairness  in  Reporting  the  Scottish  Referendum  Debate  followed  in  April  2014,  which  charted  the  coverage  of  both  campaigns  on  Scotland’s  flagship  new  radio  programme.    

John  has  now  become  a  regular  contributor  to  international  television  news  channels,  including  Al-­‐‑Arabiya,  Al-­‐‑Jazeera,  Canada  TV  News,  China  Central  TV,  Euskal  Telebista,  5-­‐‑TV  Russia,  Russia  Today.  A  short  film  on  John’s  research,  The  Bigger  the  Lie  went  viral  in  September  when  Frankie  Boyle  and  Irvine  Welsh  retweeted  a  link  to  the  video  in  the  days  running  up  September  the  18th.  More  recently,  an  extended  interview  reflecting  on  media  bias  and  philosophy  was  broadcast  to  the  YouTube  channel  ReferendumTV.  

Image:  Cameron  King,  adapted.  Flickr  

Page 18: CFi Newsletter Jan-Dec 2014

18  

Practice  Clifford,  A.  (2014)  Turbulence,  FILE  2014  SP:  Video  Art,  Centro  Cultural  FIESP,  Sao  Paulo,  Brazil.  (Digital  Art)  

Higgins,  N.  (2014)  Portrait  of  an  Artist,  UWS/Honeycomb.  (Film:  Executive  Producer)    

Jeffery,  G.  and  Kelly,  H.  (2014)  Remaking  Society:  Communities  on  the  Edge.  MECCSA  Conference,  Bournemouth  University.  (Video).    

McGillivray,  D.,  McPherson,  G.,  Jones,  J.  &  McCandlish,  A.  (2014)  Digital  Commonwealth  (Website).  

Overend,  D.  (2014)  CauseWay  by  Victoria  Bianchi  (National  Trust  for  Scotland,),  Robert  Burns  Museum.  (Drama:  director)  

Overend,  D.  (2014).  Wallace  by  Rob  Drummond,  The  Arches  and  National  Theatre.  (Drama:  co-­‐‑director)  

Ronan,  J.  (2014)  Leave  Your  Shoes  at  the  Door,  BloodWater  Theatre,  CCA.  (Drama)  

Tucker,  P.  (2014)  Celebrity  Antiques  Road  Show,  BBC  Two.  (Television:  producer)  

Page 19: CFi Newsletter Jan-Dec 2014

19  

Scott,  J.  (2014)  Jo  Mango:  Transformuration.  Olive  Grove  Records.    (Music  Album)  

Scott,  D.  (2014)  The  Pearlfishers:  Open  Up  Your  Colouring  Book.  Marina  Records  (Music  Album).  

Snowdon,  P.  (2014)  The  Uprising.  Third  Films/Rien  à  voir.  (Film).  

Digital  Commonwealth  Website.  www.digitalcommonwealth.co.uk    

Page 20: CFi Newsletter Jan-Dec 2014

20  

Reports  Jeffery,  G.,  Schaefer,  K.  and  Wakeford,  T.  (2014)  Connected  Communities:  Remaking  Society  Summary  Report.  Swindon:  Arts  and  Humanities  Research  Council.  

Kelly,  C.  and  Jeffery,  G.  (2014)  JUMP  CUT  Summer  Production  Company:  Final  Evaluation  Report.  Paisley:  CFI.  

Robertson,  J.  (2014)  ‘Fairness  in  the  First  Year?’:  Interim  Report.  Ayr:  CFI.    

Robertson,  J.  (2014)  Good  Morning  Scotland?  Fairness  in  Reporting  the  Scottish  Referendum  Debate,  Ayr:  CFI.  

Page 21: CFi Newsletter Jan-Dec 2014

21  

FOCUS: LSA Conference

In  July  2014,  UWS  hosted  the  39th  Annual  Leisure  Studies  Association  Conference  on  our  Paisley  Campus.  Headed  up  by  Prof.  Gayle  McPherson,  the  conference  attracted  over  one  hundred  delegates  with  half  of  the  delegation  coming  from  overseas.  Themed  under  the  heading  ‘Sports,  Festivity  and  Digital  Cultures’  the  programme  offered  a  range  of  international  case  studies  including;  social-­‐‑recreational  clubs  in  Brazil,  sport  and  national  identity  in  Slovakia,  folk  festivals  in  Australia,  and  sports  and  events  curricula  in  Germany.    

Prof.  David  McGillivray  delivered  a  keynote  as  his  Inaugural  Lecture,  ‘Accelerated  Leisure  in  a  Digital  Age:  Transformations  &  Tribulations’,  which  explored  the  changing  nature  of  those  leisure  cultures  intensified  by  the  presence  of  a  digitally-­‐‑mediated  world.    

Following  the  conference,  there  will  be  a  Special  Issue  of  the  Annals  of  Leisure  Research  on  Sport  and  Cultural  Events:  ‘Contested  Legacies’  (2015)  and  an  edited  collection  entitled  Digital  Leisure  Cultures:  Critical  Perspectives.

Page 22: CFi Newsletter Jan-Dec 2014

22  

FOCUS: David Manderson & Eleanor Yule

Page 23: CFi Newsletter Jan-Dec 2014

23  

David  Manderson  and  Eleanor  Yule  have  made  a  quite  an  impact  with  their  new  co-­‐‑authored  book  The  Glass  Half  Full:  Moving  Beyond  

Scottish  Miserablism.  Focusing  on  the  tendency  of  Scottish  authors  and  filmmakers  to  dwell  on  the  dark  side  of  life,  their  study  has  been  

hotly  debated  on  television,  at  book  festivals  and  conferences.  

Published  this  year  by  Luath  Press,  it  has  caught  the  cultural  zeitgeist  by  being  both  a  history  of  film  and  television,  while  at  the  same  time  

offering  itself  as  a  self-­‐‑help  book  for  writers  dealing  with  subject  matter  set  in  Scotland.  In  June,  Eleanor  appeared  on  STV’s  Scotland  Tonight,  where  she  was  interviewed  by  presenter  John  MacKay,  along  

with  the  Scotland  on  Sunday  film  critic  Siobhan  Synnot.  She  discussed  her  chapters  on  the  tendency  of  films  made  in  Scotland  by  filmmakers  such  as  Lynne  Ramsay,  Bill  Douglas  and  Peter  Mullan  to  

exhibit  a  peculiarly  pessimistic  view  of  life.  

The  book  was  also  discussed  by  the  literary  critic  Stuart  Kelly  in  review  published  in  The  Scotsman,  which  highlighted  the  connections  that  Scottish  miserablism  might  have  with  novels  from  other  nations.  David  Manderson’s  chapters  focus  on  the  literary  history  of  Scotland,  in  particular  the  influence  of  William  McLlvanney,  James  Kelman  and  

Irvine  Welsh.  The  authors  have  taken  their  argument  on  tour  in  a  series  of  illustrated  lectures  in  Paisley,  Glasgow,  Edinburgh  and  in  

Orkney,  where  extracts  from  films  are  shown,  as  well  as  passages  from  novel  read  out,  in  order  to  demonstrate  how  such  works  confirm  regressive  tropes  about  Scottish  identity.  They  have  also  made  appearances  at  the  Wigtown  Book  Festival  and  at  academic  

conferences  in  Edinburgh  and  Berlin.  

Book  launch  at  CCA  Glasgow  

Page 24: CFi Newsletter Jan-Dec 2014

24  

Media Highlights ‘BBC  bias  and  the  Scots  referendum’  Open  Democracy,  21st  February  2014.    

‘Media  Analyst  Condemns  BBC  Scotland’,  BBC  Open  Democracy,  11th  March  2014.  

‘Scottish  Miserablism'ʹ,  Scotland  Tonight,  13th  May  2014.  

'ʹThe  Glass  Half  Full:  Moving  Beyond  Scottish  Miserablism'ʹ,  June,  The  Scotsman  [review  by  Stuart  Kelly],  13th  July  2014.    

‘London  Media  and  Referendum’  Financial  Times,  9th  September  2014.  

‘Westminster  Promises  to  Scotland’,  Canada  TV,  20th  September  2014.  

‘After  the  Scottish  Referendum’,  5-­‐‑TV  Russia,  Friday,  25th  September  2014.    

 ‘UK  Government  Plans  for  Social  Media,  Broadcast  Ban  Contradict  Democratic  Values’,  RIA  Novosti/Russia  Today  3rd  October  2014.  

Page 25: CFi Newsletter Jan-Dec 2014

25  

cf.

Page 26: CFi Newsletter Jan-Dec 2014

26  

IMPACT:  Gold  medal  at  the  Game  Changer  Awards  This  spring  the  Creative  Futures  Institute  was  awarded  a  gold  medal  for  research  impact  at  the  Game  Changer  Awards  2014.  Prof.  Gayle  McPherson  and  Prof.  David  McGillivray  took  home  the  first  place  gong  for  their  project,  Leveraging  Parasports  Events  for  Sustainable  Community  Participation.    

The  project  is  an  international  collaboration  between  UWS  and  the  University  of  Western  Ontario.  It  is  the  first  research  study  that  has  taken  a  comparative  approach  to  large  scale  sporting  events.  Focusing  on  two  different  types  of  events:  integrated  events  where  able  bodied  athletes  and  athletes  with  a  disability  compete  alongside  one  another  (2014  Commonwealth  Games,  Glasgow)  and  non-­‐‑integrated  events  that  have  a  distinct  event  for  athletes  with  a  disability  separated  by  time,  but  occurring  in  the  same  or  similar  location  (2015  Pan/ParapanAmerican  Games,  Toronto),  the  project  considers  how  the  hosting  of  integrated  or  non-­‐‑integrated  sports  events  for  people  with  a  disability  are  being  used  to  create  opportunities  for  community  participation  and  to  influence  community  attitudes  towards  disability.    

Image:  Cameron  King,  adapted,  Flickr.  

Page 27: CFi Newsletter Jan-Dec 2014

27  

The  research  team  is  currently  preparing  for  the  second  phase  of  the  project  at  the  Pan/ParapanAmerican  Games  in  Toronto  next  summer.    

The  Game  Changer  Awards  were  organised  by  Colleges  Scotland  and  Universities  Scotland,  and  backed  by  Legacy  2014  and  the  Scottish  Funding  Council.    

“We   are   delighted   to   have   won   a   gold   medal   in   the  Research  Impact  category  of  the  Game  Changer  Awards.  Our   project   focuses   on   how   the   catalyst   effect   of   the  Games   can   be   used   to   leverage   social   change”  -­‐‑   Prof  Gayle  McPherson,  principal  investigator  on  the  project.  

Page 28: CFi Newsletter Jan-Dec 2014

28  

FOCUS: European Connections

Page 29: CFi Newsletter Jan-Dec 2014

29  

The  second  Gdansk  Shipyard  Summer  School,  led  by  doctoral  candidate  Roman  Sebastyanski,  saw  Masters  students  from  UWS  collaborating  with  architecture  students  and  local  experts  from  the  Gdansk  Academy  of  Fine  Art,  exploring  the  actual  and  possible  futures  of  the  politically,  historically  and  culturally  charged  'ʹregeneration  zone'ʹ  of  the  Gdansk  Shipyard.  Prof.  Katarzyna  Kosmala  and  Graham  Jeffery  are  leading  an  international  exchange  between  networks  of  artists,  activists  and  academics  involved  in  the  debate  about  the  future  of  Govan,  Glasgow,  with  their  counterparts  in  Gdansk.  Roman'ʹs  PhD  project  is  creating  an  interactive  platform  for  public  engagement  with  the  potential  futures  of  the  Shipyard.    

Other  researchers  within  the  Institute  are  feeding  into  the  debate  about  European  urban  futures,  particularly  through  links  with  our  Cultural  Planning  CPD  programme,  led  by  Prof.  Gayle  McPherson,  Graham  Jeffery  and  Liz  Gardiner.  Two  CFI  doctoral  candidates  based  at  Stuttgart  Media  University  and  supervised  through  collaboration  are  addressing  cultural  and  economic  dimensions  of  urban  policy.  Mirjam  Muller'ʹs  project  examines  outreach,  marketing  and  community  engagement  strategies  in  three  European  museums  of  contemporary  art.  Andrea  Braeuning'ʹs  PhD  examines  the  'ʹSmart  City  as  a  Customer'ʹ,  drawing  on  her  experience  as  a  senior  futures  analyst  within  Robert  Bosch  GmBH.  

 Earlier  this  year  the  Institute  hosted  a  delegation  from  Dalarna  province,  Sweden,  to  share  participatory  planning  approaches  from  Glasgow,  drawing  on  the  Cultural  Planning  CPD  course  and  Graham  Jeffery'ʹs  AHRC  funded  project,  Remaking  Society.    CFI  academics  have  also  been  very  active  within  other  European  networks,  including  Prof.  Katarzyna  Kosmala  gaining  membership  of  the  European  Cultural  Parliament,  Prof.  Gayle  McPherson'ʹs  appointment  as  a  visiting  Professor  at  the  Institute  for  Cultural  Diplomacy,  Berlin,  and  a  workshop  series  with  curatorial  network  Mother  Tongue,  Variant,  Glasgow  School  of  Art  and  CCA  Glasgow  on  Curating  Europes’  Futures.    

Collaborative  work  continues  with  the  Arctic  Sustainable  Art  and  Design  Network  at  the  University  of  Lapland,  an  Erasmus+  project  in  creative  industries  led  by  the  University  of  Linkoping,  Sweden,  and  preparations  to  host  a  major  international  conference  in  computation,  communication  and  aesthetics,  xcoax.org,  convened  by  Dr  Alison  Clifford,  at  CCA  Glasgow  in  Summer  2015.  

Page 30: CFi Newsletter Jan-Dec 2014

30  Image:  Andrzej  Karmasz,  Celebrate,  2013.  Video  still.  Courtesy  of  the  artist.  

Page 31: CFi Newsletter Jan-Dec 2014

31  

Prof.  Katarzyna  Kosmala'ʹs  new  edited  book  Sexing  the  Border  (CSP,  2014)  is  a  timely  intervention  in  both  critical  discourses  on  video  and  new  media  art,  as  well  as  an  examination  of  gender  in  post-­‐‑Socialist  contexts.  The  book  explores  how  encounters  between  art  and  technology  have  been  implicated  in  the  representation  and  

analysis  of  gender,  critically  reflecting  current  debates  and  politics  across  the  region  and  Europe.  

Offering  a  diversity  of  analytical  contexts,  it  addresses  interwoven  histories  across  post-­‐‑Socialist  Europe  and  engages  the  paradigms  of  

art  practice  and  the  visual  cultures  such  histories  uphold.  Contributors  have  given  a  broad  interpretation  to  the  questions  of  video,  media  and  performance,  as  well  as  to  mediation  in  relation  to  

art  and  gender,  reflecting  on  a  wide  range  of  subjects,  from  the  curatorial  role  to  artistic  practice,  cross-­‐‑cultural  collaboration,  co-­‐‑

production,  democracy  and  representation,  and  impasses  in  securing  streamlined  identities.  

Sexing  the  Border:Gender,  Art  and  New  Media  in  Central  and  

Eastern  Europe  

Page 32: CFi Newsletter Jan-Dec 2014

32  

   

 

In  November  the  Creative  Futures  Institute  welcomed  Prof.  Kumiko  Kushiyama  and  her  colleagues  from  Tokyo  Metropolitan  University’s  IDEEA  Lab  to  the  University  of  the  West  of  Scotland,  where  they  led  a  series  of  demonstration  workshops  in  making  interactive  “Device  Art”.  The  workshops  were  accompanied  by  the  IDEEA  Lab’s  multisensory  art  exhibition  at  Glasgow  School  of  Art’s  Digital  Design  Studio  at  the  Hub,  Pacific  Quay.  The  exhibition  featured  internationally  awarded  works  such  as  Freqtric,  Gocen,  PocoPoco,  Alphabet  Sequencer,  NAKANISYNTH  and  LuminouStep.  The  project,  which  originated  from  connections  made  during  fieldwork  by  CFI  doctoral  candidate    Emilia  Sosnowska,  was  supported  by  the  DAIWA  Anglo-­‐‑Japanese  Foundation.    

FOCUS:    IDEEA  Lab  Workshops/Ex

Page 33: CFi Newsletter Jan-Dec 2014

33  

cf.

Page 34: CFi Newsletter Jan-Dec 2014

34  

Conference Presentations Into  the  New  Symposium,  Glasgow,  Jan  2014  

MECCSA  conference,  Bournemouth  University,  Jan  2014  

Impact  of  Events  and  Tourism  symposium,  Sweden,  March  

2014  

Scottish  Association  of  Writers'ʹ  Annual  Conference,  

Cumbernauld,  March  2014  

Theatre  and  the  Nomadic  Subject:    Mobile  Train  Conference,  

Helsinki/Rovaniemi,  Finland,  April  2014  

Screen  Studies  Conference,  University  of  Glasgow,  June  

2014  

Great  Writing  Annual  Conference,  Imperial  College  

London,  June  2014  

World  Congress  of  Scottish  Literatures,  Glasgow  University,  

June  2014  

Bread  Loaf  Environmental  Writer'ʹs  Conference,  Middlebury  

College,  Vermont  USA,  June  2014  

Image:  Adriaan  Bloem,  Flickr,  altered  

Page 35: CFi Newsletter Jan-Dec 2014

35  

Participation  and  Engagement  in  the  Arts,  University  of  

Utrecht,  June  2014  

iDocQ2014,  University  of  Glasgow,  June  2014  

British  Sociological  Association  Postgraduate  Conference,  

Glasgow  Caledonian  University,  June  2014  

Film-­‐‑Philosophy  Conference,  Glasgow  University,  July  2014  

Leisure  Studies  Association  conference,  UWS,  July  2014  

Theatre  and  Performance  Research  Association  conference,  

Royal  Holloway,  London,  September  2014  

European  Association  of  Sport  Management  conference,  

Coventry  University,  September  2014  

AHRC  Connected  Communities  Creative  Citizens  

conference,  RCA,  London,  September  2014  

Becoming  Scotland,  QMU,  Edinburgh,  Sept  2014  

IJADE/NSEAD  research  conference,  Tate  Liverpool,  Oct  2014  

On  the  Image    Freie  Universitat  Berlin,  Oct  2014  

ELIA  Congress,    Glasgow,  November  2014  

Institute  of  Small  Business  &  Entrepreneurship  conference,  

Manchester,  November  2014  

Page 36: CFi Newsletter Jan-Dec 2014

36  

FOCUS: Holly Tessler Dr  Holly  Tessler,  Senior  Lecturer  in  Commercial  Music,  has  recently  published  a  pioneering  new  textbook  exploring  the  new  field  of  interactive  audio.  As  one  of  the  co-­‐‑editors  of  The  Oxford  Handbook  of  Interactive  Audio,  she  has  been  jointly  responsible  for  bringing  this  ambitious  project  to  fruition.  This  work  represents  a  survey  of  this  emerging  and  increasingly  diverse  topic,  running  over  six-­‐‑hundred  pages  in  length.  The  Oxford  Handbook  of  Interactive  Audio  highlights  the  fast  changing  technological  developments  that  are  reshaping  the  audio  landscape  and  is  the  first  book  of  its  kind  on  this  subject.    

Previously,  the  Oxford  Handbooks  in  Music  series  highlighted  such  topics  as  music  education,  sound  studies  and  music  revivals.  Now  this  investigation  of  interactive  audio  includes  reflections  on  a  wide  array  of  media;  from  popular  music,  films,  gaming,  toys,  human-­‐‑computer  interaction  and  digital  art.  The  collection  focuses  on  the  two-­‐‑way  process  which  is  increasingly  evident  in  many  people’s  relationship  with  media  today.  These  consumers  are  no  longer  only  listeners,  but  often  creators  and/or  producers  as  well.  The  collection  is  a

Image: Rodrigo Carvalho, FlickR

Page 37: CFi Newsletter Jan-Dec 2014

37  

diverse  range  of  scholarly  methodologies  and  industry  specific  debates.  The  Oxford  Handbook  of  Interactive  Audio  includes  thirty-­‐‑three  chapters  by  the  leading  practitioners  and  academics  from  around  the  world,  who  are  based  in  Canada,  Denmark,  Finland,  Ireland,  Japan,  the  Netherlands,  Norway,  Sweden,  the  United  States,  and  the  UK.  

Page 38: CFi Newsletter Jan-Dec 2014

38    

FOCUS: How to Choose?

     

When  the  referendum  was  just  around  the  corner,  you  probably  knew  which  way  you’re  going  to  go.  But  HOW  did  you  choose?  And  what  influenced  you?      Theatre  makers  Gary  McNair  and  Davey  Anderson  dug  a  little  deeper  into  the  question  of  how  we  choose.  Can  we  ever  know  what  the  right  decision  is?  They  spun  us  through  an  audio  journey  set  in  a  radio  station  inside  your  mind  –  tales  and  excerpts,  from  propaganda  to  a  pot  luck  gamble.  Tour  dates  during  September  included  venues  in  Ayr,  Edinburgh,  Glasgow,  Stirling  and  Tobermory.  The  podcast  is  now  available  on  the  SoundCloud  website.  

 Produced  by  Trigger  in  partnership  with  the  Creative  Futures  Institute,  in  association  with  the  University  of  Glasgow.  The  project  was  supported  by  Creative  Scotland.  

Page 39: CFi Newsletter Jan-Dec 2014

39  

Arrivals and Departures

Dr  Lesley-­‐‑Ann  Dickson  joins  the  Creative  Futures  Institute  as  Research  Assistant.  Lesley-­‐‑Ann  recently  completed  a  collaborative  doctorate  in  the  School  of  Culture  and  Creative  Arts  at  the  University  of  Glasgow.  Her  research  explored  exhibition  practice  and  audience  reception  at  film  festivals,  using  Glasgow  Film  Festival  as  case  study.  Her  background  is  in  book  publishing  and  she  continues  to  run  her  own  independent  press.  

Dr  Ryan  Shand  takes  on  the  role  as  Research  Assistant  in  the  Creative  Futures  Institute.  Previously,  Ryan  worked  on  the  AHRC  funded  projects  'ʹChildren  and  Amateur  Media  in  Scotland'ʹ  (University  of  Glasgow,  2010-­‐‑14)  and  'ʹMapping  the  City  in  Film:  A  Geohistorical  Analysis'ʹ  (University  of  Liverpool,  2008-­‐‑10).  He  completed  his  PhD,  which  was  titled  Amateur  Cinema:  History,  Theory,  and  Genre  (1930-­‐‑80),  in  the  Department  of  Theatre,  Film  and  Television  Studies  at  the  University  of  Glasgow  in  2007.  

Documentary  filmmaker  Peter  Snowdon  joins  the  School  of  Media,  Culture  and  Society  as  Lecturer  in  Filmmaking.  .  

In  October,  we  bid  farewell  to  Prof.  Andy  Miah  who  has  taken  up  a  new  post  as  Professor  of  Science  Communication  and  Digital  Media  in  the  School  of  Environment  and  Life  Sciences  at  the  University  of  Salford.  

Page 40: CFi Newsletter Jan-Dec 2014

40  

Grants Awarded A Caged Bird Dreams of Clouds. West Lothian Council: £2,389. (Dr Jo Collinson-Scott).

Artist Development Residency. Timespan Visual Arts: £3,000. (Samantha Clark).

Challenging Elites: rethinking disconnection and recovering urban space. Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC): £29,090. (Graham Jeffery, with Goldsmiths & Birkbeck, University of London; University of Sussex; University of Bristol).

Co-production legacy: what is the role of artists within Connected Communities projects? Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC): £2,000. (Graham Jeffery, with University of Sheffield and Manchester Metropolitan University).

Creative Industries Global Network. ERASMUS+ CIGN EACEA Lifelong Learning Programme: £45,250. (Robert Sutter, with University of Linkoping, Ryerson University and HdM Stuttgart).

Future City Demonstration Project. Glasgow City Council: £20,000. (Prof. David McGillivray)

Honeycomb: Creative Works. Interreg IVA EU: £146,747. (Prof. Nick Higgins, with Creative Skillset Scotland, Highlands and Islands Enterprise, and University of Ulster).

Page 41: CFi Newsletter Jan-Dec 2014

41  

Leveraging Parasport Events for Sustainable Community Participation. Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada Insight Grants: £5624. (Prof. Gayle McPherson, with Western University, Ontario, Canada).

Pits, Ponies, People: Traditions of Storytelling through Song. Heritage Lottery Fund: £7,500. (David Scott).

Regeneration and Waterfront Heritage Zones in Northern Europe. Royal Society of Edinburgh Arts and Humanities Research Networks Scheme: £19,965. (Prof. Katarzyna Kosmala)

Research Project for Newsnet Scotland. Newsnet Scotland: £ 6,000. (Prof. John Robertson).

Sense the sound of the future. Daiwa Anglo-Japanese Foundation: £3,000. (Prof. Katarzyna Kosmala, with IDEEA Lab, Tokyo Metropolitan University)

Well Connected. NHS Lanarkshire: £3,150. (Elizabeth McLaughlin)

Page 42: CFi Newsletter Jan-Dec 2014

42  

PhD Students Pamela Barnes / Kyle Barrett / Alison Bell / Andrea Braeuning / Nick Brooks / Nicola Black/ Kenneth Byres / John Carruthers / Christopher Dooks / Clare Duffin/ Ian Falconer / Danielle Farrel / Marco Federici / Rachael Flynn / Jacqueline Greener / Jennifer Jones / Stephen Langston / Mingxia Li / Anne McVitie / Mirjam Muller / Carole Naylor/ Ben Parry / Lou Prendergast / Jane Robertson/ Roman Sebastyanski / Sarah Scott / Emilia Sosnowska /Anna Sznajder / Iain Taylor / Eleanor Thom / Eleanor Yule

Page 43: CFi Newsletter Jan-Dec 2014

43  

Our Creative Future

“In  the  next  issue  we  will  analyse  our  results  from  the  Research  Excellence  Framework  2014,  report  on  two  major  international  conferences  that  we  are  hosting  at  CCA  Glasgow  in  2015,  and  profile  practice-­‐‑based  work  taking  place  at  our  Learning  Theatre,  the  Gaiety  Theatre  in  Ayr.    Projects  that  we  are  developing  on  our  campus  

doorsteps  in  Paisley  and  Ayr  are  supporting  an  emerging  focus  on  culture,  heritage,  community  

participation  and  regeneration,  and  these  will  also  take  academics  and  students  to  Gdansk,  Poland;  Toronto,  

Canada;  Stuttgart  and  Berlin,  Germany,  as  well  as  other  conference  presentations  and  workshops  around  the  

world.  We  will  also  focus  on  some  of  the  successful  PhD  students  to  have  emerged  from  the  Institute  and  profile  some  projects  being  developed  across  our  new  School  of  

Media,  Culture  and  Society.”  

Page 44: CFi Newsletter Jan-Dec 2014

44  

Contact

Creative Futures Institute School of Media, Culture and Society University of the West of Scotland MAKE Space A Block, Barbour Building Paisley, Renfrewshire Scotland, UK PA1 2BE

http://creativefutur.eu

@CreativeFutur