Tuesday 28 September 2010

Goldsmiths Department of Computing

The Department of Computing at Goldsmiths is a vibrant, innovative
environment combining contemporary arts and computing research with
cutting-edge, applied, creative approaches. We produce groundbreaking
interdisciplinary work in creative technologies that spans arts, music,
media, design, games, psychology and performance.

At Goldsmiths, we believe that computing, like art, is inventive,
artistic, dynamic and importantly, fun. Our teaching aims to develop the
creative as well as the technical skills of those who come to study with
us and to think why they are making work, to whom and in what critical
context. This is what makes our approach so distinctive.

Our 10 days a week website is the result of creative collaboration amongst
a group of MFA students who are from different parts of the world,
Portugal, Kuwait, Korea, Taiwan and Greece as well as students from the
other institutions from Paris, Valencia, Lille and Athens who that found
themselves in Delphi as part of an Erasmus programme. During the Delphus
project contributions were also made from PhD students from Design and
Cultural Studies. 10 days a week represents the experience of the
journey, arrival and duration at the centre of the world, in heat and sun,
from the physical to the virtual world that was embedded in the process of
being there.

Prof. Janis Jefferies

Delphus Project Workshops

WORKSHOP 1: 2 days

EXPERIMENTAL 3D TYPOGRAPHIC EXPERIENCE WITHIN VISUAL ARTS

INSTRUCTORS:
Anastasios Maragiannis
is a PhD researcher on the Arts and Computational Technology programme at
Goldsmiths, University of London and a senior lecturer at Greenwich
University in graphic design:

WORKSHOP OUTLINE:

Participants in this workshop will be led through optional series of
experimental intellectual 2D/3D typography in motion, static, sculpturing
and /or drawing exercises that seek to strengthen visual experimentation
with typographic connections through the sonic arts and technical
processes, as well as the creative processes, underlying the third
dimension in typographic design and visual space. Participants will create
visual screen based imagery, which include sculptural incarnations.

Participants will deal with typographic representations of the “uncanny”,
graphic representations of degenerative processes and illustrations of
conceptually related events or myths (Greek or other). The work will be
made during the workshop-residency at Delphus would inform the development
and realisation of typography in Fine, Visual and Applied Arts.


WHY THIS WORKSHOP IS FOR DELPHUS:

In the workshops can be integrated 3D physical or virtual objects, videos
and any other application for web as an external link. Technical
specifications for the integration of the different projects in this
workshop will be given at the start of each phase.

This workshop very much fits with the Delphus Project according to the
proposed 5 laboratories advertised on the blog.
Furthermore, being in a mythological environment as Delphus, this proposed
workshop will encourage a mythical / virtual approach to each projects.

First, it focuses on a multitude of skills, and how they are interrelated
– especially in terms of synthetic images 2D, 3D typographic connections
and Visual Arts.

Second, it presents these skills within a broad, but structured framework.
This workshop takes participants outside the standard classroom/ studio
setting, and through both simple and more sophisticated exercises
unfolding the real/visual arts, leads them through tasks which link their
technical sides to their creative sides.

WORKSHOP 2: 2 days

How do we make stories?

ALEXANDRA ANTONOPOULOU is a PhD candidate in Design at Goldsmiths and
teaching at Chelsea School of Art and design at University of the Arts in
London

Alexandra will explore interaction and learning through story telling and
narrative through collaboration in drawing and multi media.

ALEXANDRA ANTONOPOULOU is a PhD candidate in Design at Goldsmiths and
teaching at Chelsea School of Art and design at University of the Arts in
London

http://thursclubalex.blogspot.com/
http://onceuponalex.blogspot.com/
http://everafteralex.blogspot.com/

WORKSHOP 3: One seminar session
An interim response to work and site

Elena Papadaki is a PhD candidate in Cultural Studies, Goldsmiths,
University of London researching the curation of screen media in
galleries, museums and public sites.


WORKSHOP 4: 2 seminar sessions
RE THINKING CURATORIAL PRACTICES

Janis Jefferies, Professor of Visual Arts, Artistic Director of Goldsmiths
Digital Studios, Convener of MFA in Computational Studio Arts and PhD in
Arts and Computational Technology, Goldsmiths, University of London,UK
and Dr. Maria Chatzichristodoulou [aka Maria X], Director of Postgraduate
Studies, Lecturer in Theatre and Performance, School of Arts and New
Media, University of Hull,UK


As curator Steve Dietz has observed in his preface to Rethinking Curating:
Art after New Media (Beryl Graham and Sarah Cook eds, MIT Press, 2010),
new media art is like contemporary art—but different. New media art
involves interactivity, networks, and computation and is often about
process rather than objects. New media artworks, difficult to classify
according to the traditional art museum categories determined by medium,
geography, and chronology. These works present the curator with novel
challenges involving interpretation, exhibition, and dissemination.

Some of the questions we might ask are:

How are the roles of curators and audiences defined in light of new media
art's characteristics? What might these be?

What are the expectations of the audience?

What are the challenges as opportunities to rethink curatorial practice?

How can flexible tools for working in this fast-moving field and what
useful lessons are offered from curators and artists for those working in
such other areas of art as distributive and participatory systems?

How do sound works get curated in exhibitions that include interactive
objects an screens?

Are recent hybrid ways of working online and off, including collaboration
and social networking, effecting physical forms of exhibition display and
publishing?

Keywords then in the 1990s and now in the 21st through a cloud formation.

WORKSHOP: daily
10 Days a Week
response to site and experience, produced as a website

Visit http://delphusproject.com/timeline.html


The Goldsmiths team.