Clore begins

Clore 5

This last fortnight I was away on the first two week residential/retreat as part of my Clore fellowship. I thought that the start of my being a Clore fellow would be a blog-powered experience. It turns out that I’ve been so overloaded by what was an amazing and thought-provoking experience that I haven’t published a word. And I’ve been back for a week!

We were staying on a lovely organic farm in Kent called Bore Place, and the combination of the environment there and the inspirational people I met while I was there inspired a photographic response instead. 

Several hundred photographs later, I’ve put the best of them up on Flickr and as slideshows on a new site (ours being the fifth year of the programme) at clore5.com

Who knows what the site will become - I’m thinking of pulling together anything we tag ‘clore5′ on various services. For now, it’s just my photos.

Once I’ve managed to filter through all of the amazing stuff we talked about and experienced I’ll publish some of the best ideas here. There’s just too much to post! I’m hoping that some of the other people who are also following this path with me will be writing about their experiences online. If they do I’ll link them up (hint hint).

Here are a few of my favourite photos from the two weeks:

Paul

Asma

Ahmed

Kate

View all of them.

By stef October 3, 2008 Comment?

A Creative Director for Birmingham?

Last night we ran the second in Creative Republic’s events around a creative response to the Big City Plan based around defining a “Fantasy brief for a Creative Director for Birmingham”.

Unfortunately, our planned speaker (the designer Michael Wolff) was ill and unable to attend. We were warned that might be the case the day before, so I came up with a ‘Plan B’ just in case.

Plan B turned out to be quite interesting in itself and ended up causing some discussion and debate that I hope will inform a future event when Michael returns to Birmingham.

(more…)

By stef September 10, 2008 22 Comments

The “One week until Clore starts” brain-dump

My Clore Fellowship starts in just over a week, and I’ve got lots of thoughts rolling around about what this means, and what I’ll be doing. So I’m thinking them through here… any ideas, let me know.

The Fellowship starts with a two week residential ‘course’ which consists of a very exciting programme of high profile speakers, training, and personal development thinking. I’ve been told that the content is non-blog-safe for the most part but I’ll be posting some personal reactions and thoughts I expect.

However that’s not what’s worrying me. Even with trying to cut down on commitments I’m still incredibily busy and I’m not sure how I’m going to manage to take two weeks out with little or no internet/phone access.

So my approach these last few months is just to get used to not having those things around and not relying on them. It’s quite difficult, but it’s certainly made me put failsafes in place for anything serious that might need attention. And I’m feeling quite confident that it might just be possible for me to not be around for that time and for nobody to actually notice.

However - the thing I am busy on is my new web startup. The work on Odadeo is absolutely on a roll at the moment. I suddenly realised this week that we were ‘polishing’ rather than doing solid development. Tasks have now come down to the ‘can be completed in under a day’ level, which is fantastic. In fact I’d probably be confident in opening the site up as a public beta today. But I’ve decided that that would be unwise without me being around, so it will have to wait a short while.

Meanwhile, Tom, our new community manager, who takes over from Jason now that he’s finished as Graduate Apprentice, will be taking care of the site. He’s been a member of the site since early on, and is the most active user on the site so far. He’s also something of an expert on fatherhood (if all dads aren’t of course) so it’s fantastic to have him to bounce ideas off. We had a great ‘mashup’ meeting this week where we pretty much thought about any API we knew of and whether we could apply it to dads. “Oh hang on. Is that featureland?” was our catchphrase for turning down non-immediate ideas.

So with suddenly being away for two weeks as of next week I’m making sure that anything that I am involved in is going to be handled. As always I have a backlog of correspondence to go through (nothing changes, even with Dubber’s help), but in the main I’m confident that the sky won’t fall in on anything I’m responsible for.

However, what about my little girl? I’m going to miss her, especially seeing her pick up new words and behaviours. And I’m guessing it’ll be strange for her too.

So, I’m going to spend a few evenings before I go, with a video camera, recording me reading some of my favourite kids’ stories so she can watch them for bedtime. I’m actually considering just putting them on Youtube and seeing what reaction I get. I think it’s a nice idea for any dad to do for their kids when they are away for long periods, and with iMovie you can burn simple videos to DVD very easily.

I’ve also suddenly rediscovered an interest in PlayDoh, which is great fun to mess around with before the day starts. I can now make a pretty realistic looking cow in about thirty seconds, and Imogen seems to love planes, cats, pigs and today’s chicken that I created. Good fun - another potential YouTube hit?!

Pete Ashton always says ‘a blog is not a diary’ but it seems to me that that’s what my blog is becoming, and is potentially going to become even more with starting Clore. I guess a blog needs to move and change over time, and now that I have Twitter my posting rate has reduced it’s nice for me to put together more prosaic ramblings once in a while. So continued apologies if you were expecting useful insights into Clore in this post.

In short - I’m worried about the time commitment, worried about how to support my family and lifestyle whilst taking a chunk of time out for personal development, I’m even worried about huge opportunities passing me by, but I’m also very excited about what Clore is going to be.

Tonight I met up with the West Midlands group of Clore alumni, and they set my mind at rest of a few issues, but also pointed out that Clore is going to be a total shock to the system. In one year 20 of 23 people taking part just quit their jobs to concentrate solely on Clore.

I’m not in the position where I want to or could do that, especially with a little baby coming in January. But what does that mean? Is this going to be as big a time commitment as they make out?

I’ve already decided to stretch my time on the programme over a slightly longer period. Maybe it needs to be longer…

Basically it all comes down to what happens in a week’s time. What will I learn? What will I decide? What will I decide I want to do? And with who? And for what?

Some big questions.

But my focus right now is on Odadeo and making it a success - growing the team to build on the beta we’ve been working so hard on, completing this phase of the project to timescale (we’re about a month ahead), and most importantly securing further investment to make the thing fly. I feel a pitch coming on…

Exciting times.

By stef September 5, 2008 2 Comments

The Big Picture breaks a World Record (and generates a mini debate)

Lucy Moore

It’s official - the West Midlands, UK has made the world’s biggest photo-montage according to the Guinness World Records officials.

I’ve been working on the web site for a large scale public art project called The Big Picture this year, and after about ten months it has come to an end with a big success!

112,896 photos were brought together by thousands of people from across the region, via the site we built, through workshops and events, and by people literally sending in their old photographs to be scanned in.

The result was a huge 30 by 30 metre mosaic made up of all of the images arranged so that at a distance they formed one single image, which itself was one of the images submitted to the project.

That image was one of a handful of images that were shortlisted to be turned into the mosaic and it was only when the final thing was unveiled at Millennium Point this weekend that the winner found out that it was hers that was chosen.

And the image has a story itself - it’s an image of a turn of the century boxer called Arthur James Bunce and not a contemporary image (which I was expecting).

Here’s the moment the winner, Lucy Moore, found out that an image of her granddad Arthur was now the subject of a world record breaking photography montage , captured by Nick Booth:

Watch until the end for the reason she’s so emotional about winning. Amazing stuff.

And here’s what Arthur James Bunce’s great-grandson had to say about it all:

WHEYYYY!!! When my mom told me that Luce had won I think my exact words were “Sure mom yea…” THEN I saw the news!! I was amazed! I wish I was there an not workin hehe I’d have been blubbering along with her! But WOW! It’s incredible to think that so many people have contributed to a photo of my great grandad!!! I am just so glad she entered it and hope people can appreciate the photo as much as our family do now

View a fully zoom-in-able version of the mosaic.

The whole project has generated something of a debate on Nick’s site around the question “Was the big picture about the artist or the community?

I’m quite interested in this because I think that we’re entering an era where the distinction between artist and audience are blurring. Much in the same way that consumer electronics has adapted to a new market phenomenon of the ‘prosumer’ (an ugly but apt word) I think that the success of the big picture points towards the possibility that with social media comes greater connectivity with art, and a greater sense of ownership over a collaborative artwork like this vast montage.

I think this could just be the tip of the iceberg. What happens when the Arts Council start twigging to the fact that there are huge audiences to be had on MySpace, Bebo, Facebook, FriendFeed, Twitter?
Channel 4 already seem to be moving in this direction with 4IP, but what about our arts organisations?

Niches are coming together in interesting ways online and people are increasingly not just using the web but producing with it. That’s a given - I won’t labour the point.

I think this project points towards an interesting opportunity for cultural organisations to reach new audiences that might be interested in what they do but might not be geographically close, or where there are traditional barriers for self-expression, or where there are technological innovations happening around us that change the way we perceive the word ‘culture’.

So I think this points towards a very positive new area that needs huge development if the ‘cultural industries’ want to continue to be relevant to an audience that is increasingly hyperconnected, mobile and technologically aware.

My advice, based on the success of this project - go to where your audience is (with their family), doing something that is already familiar to them (taking photos), using technology that is already widely available (a camera phone and the internet) and do something interesting on the back of free stuff other people have done before (use Flickr and Wordpress) to make something inspirational with a sense of competition (who’s image will be chosen?) for a specific geographic area (in this case the West Midlands) or a niche (people who like taking photos.

The website part of this project wasn’t without its glitches, and we had problem after problem with using Flickr and Wordpress in conjunction with eachother. However, the principle is there, and with some refinement I’m confident that toolkits will become available for arts organisations _within the year_ (for example see Squarespace and OpenSocial) that take the technological headache out of doing exciting artistic projects like this to reach large audiences with little effort.

I see a rosy future for cultural activity online that reinforces and generates exciting stuff that happens offline, and that’s where it really matters.

By stef August 25, 2008 1 Comment

Dad’s Okay

Dad

We all had a bit of a scare last week. My dad had a heart problem at work (still not sure what happened) and had to go be rushed to hospital. Suffice to say it was a little scary for all of the family and as soon as I heard I drove back down to my parents’ place. Coinciding with it, my Grandma had just come out of hospital after breaking her thumb in a car door, so it was a double whammy - so I spent the weekend hanging out with her and my mum while we tried to find out what was going on with my dad.

Anyway - today, he’s back at home, as is my grandma, and everything looks like it’s going to be fine. Dad’s off work for a couple of weeks, and it looks like he’s going to be okay, and he’s going back to work pretty soon.

Thanks to everyone on Twitter who offered kind words - it was really appreciated. And anyone who says these online social networking tools are good for nothing is plain wrong.

Mean time I’m aware that people are waiting on things for me and I’ll be getting through them now that I’m back at work.

It’s quite strange building a site for dads when your own dad is lying in hospital…

By stef August 12, 2008 Comment?
  • Bored?

  • Featured blog post

    featured

    We Won a Webby Award!

    Well what d’you know? The First Light Movies website that we built at 3form has only gone and won a Webby Award!
    A great big thank you to everyone who worked on the project!
    So I’ll be jetting out to New York for Internet Week in June to pick up one of these spirally babies:

    And in a [...]

    May 6, 2008 8 Comments

    Comments

    • Becky: Very good points about the signage in the city. Something I feel passionate about. Pleased that you took the...
    • Steve: Retaggr has some really good stuff in this area. Great widgets to show off your online identity, and help...
    • Dave: Interesting read and I will try and come to the next meeting for sure. ‘Lobbying - if we all grouped...
    • Matt Machell: Great work on this. I wonder if the results would be much different if arriving via train, bus or...
    • Rob Macpherson: small-scale flyers and posters promoting live events tend not to be so important for us anymore. With...