Building the Wireframe: E-Science for the Arts Infrastructure
Lead Research Organisation:
Birmingham City University
Department Name: BIAD Art
Abstract
This bid was the drawing together of the creative and scientific communities in the West Midlands area though the Visualisation Research Unit (VRU) in partnership with the Midlands E-Science Centre (MeSC). The VRU led the bid, drawing support from the network of resources and expertise of the MeSC. In order to effectively draw in the creative community the VRU worked with Arts Council West Midlands, the IKON
Gallery, the public and an extensive regional network of artists and arts organisations.
The workshop series took place over four weeks during November 2006. There were four events. Three workshops, each lasting a day, consisted of presentations, discussions, group work, hands-on application of technologies, and took place at the Ikon Gallery in central Birmingham. A further public lecture given on the role of technology in the creative arts was delivered at the British Midland Institute, also in Birmingham. The workshops were aimed at organisations and individuals working in the arts in digital media, including practising artists in e-media contexts.
The main aims of the workshops were as follows:
To optimise the opportunities, use and understanding of e-science processes and their applications in creative industries.
To identify and understand the major narratives and cultural implications of e-science for arts practice.
The main objectives of the programme were:
To develop, support and sustain a community of interest around e-science issues in the context of the arts infrastructure of the West Midlands region.
To demonstrate how processes and approaches in the arts can enter a constructive partnership with e-science.
To disseminate e-science culture to a wider public through a programme that includes websites, podcasts, public lectures and exhibitions related to the workshop programme
Gallery, the public and an extensive regional network of artists and arts organisations.
The workshop series took place over four weeks during November 2006. There were four events. Three workshops, each lasting a day, consisted of presentations, discussions, group work, hands-on application of technologies, and took place at the Ikon Gallery in central Birmingham. A further public lecture given on the role of technology in the creative arts was delivered at the British Midland Institute, also in Birmingham. The workshops were aimed at organisations and individuals working in the arts in digital media, including practising artists in e-media contexts.
The main aims of the workshops were as follows:
To optimise the opportunities, use and understanding of e-science processes and their applications in creative industries.
To identify and understand the major narratives and cultural implications of e-science for arts practice.
The main objectives of the programme were:
To develop, support and sustain a community of interest around e-science issues in the context of the arts infrastructure of the West Midlands region.
To demonstrate how processes and approaches in the arts can enter a constructive partnership with e-science.
To disseminate e-science culture to a wider public through a programme that includes websites, podcasts, public lectures and exhibitions related to the workshop programme
Organisations
People |
ORCID iD |
Gregory Sporton (Principal Investigator) |