Filtering by: workshop

"MAKING THE DIGITAL" w/ PETE DAVIES
May
4
4:00 pm16:00

"MAKING THE DIGITAL" w/ PETE DAVIES

This talk is about the digital manipulation of data in relationship to craft and art, how is it achieved, does it change the end result and can it still hold authenticity.

Some anthropologists are contributing to a growing interest in art and design research that is based on fluid forms of understanding that are acquired and changed through the processes of making, especially when specifically related to materials, places and people, rather than static notions of knowledge more familiar to western academic thinking.

This expansion of how making/art creation is carried out and conceived is changing the nature of study in a number of disciplines. This talk poses questions about the antique artefact and its reinterpretation. Can perhaps these artefacts (usually kept in museums) help us understand our past and develop our futures.

In parallel with this increased interest in making within academic communities, there has also been a wider rise in the popularity of making in domestic and non-academic spaces. Since the late 1990s this movement has gained momentum and followers, as can be seen in the huge increase in ‘Hackspaces’ and ‘Makerspaces’ internationally, this has contributed to ‘seeing through’ the digital capture of data and has developed questions about authorship, replication and diversity.

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PRACTICAL WORKSHOP | DOCUMENTING ARTWORK w/ TOM BOWDITCH
May
4
3:00 pm15:00

PRACTICAL WORKSHOP | DOCUMENTING ARTWORK w/ TOM BOWDITCH

Cluster is pleased to hold a practical workshop with Tom Bowditch on the specifics of documenting artwork.

Please, RSVP if you would like attend: HERE

The workshop will be focussed around the technical aspects of documenting Artwork/Exhibitions which makes up most of what Tim do as a photographer. He will deliver a 2 hour workshop where he will give an overview of the kind of work he does and then go into how to technically approach photographing various types of artwork in a "classroom" environment and then put some of it into practice with a demo using his camera, lights and artoworks on site.

Tim Bowditch is a photographer and filmmaker living and working in London. Graduating from University of Portsmouth in 2008 with a BA in Photography Bowditch documents exhibitions, artworks and performances for many galleries, project spaces and artists directly. Institutions include Arcadia Missa, Camden Arts Centre, Copperfield Gallery, David Roberts Arts Foundation, Delfina Foundation, Kingsgate Workshops, Kunstraum, Matts Gallery, Millington Marriott, MOT International, PEER, Pi Artworks, Ryder Project, Space In Between, Space Studios, Somerset House, Sunday Painter, The Photographers Gallery, TURF, Whitechapel Gallery and Zabludowicz Collection.

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"HOW TO DIRECT THE COURSE OF YOUR CAREER IN THE ARTS" w/ BENJAMIN MURPHY
May
4
12:00 pm12:00

"HOW TO DIRECT THE COURSE OF YOUR CAREER IN THE ARTS" w/ BENJAMIN MURPHY

RSVP here

Benjamin Murphy is an artist, writer, gallerist, and lecturer based in London. Since graduating, he has exhibited in over 150 exhibitions globally, at galleries including The Saatchi Gallery and the Houses of Parliament. As well as this, he is the co-founder and co-director of Delphian Gallery, which is a peripatetic gallery that focuses on showing emerging and early-career artists. Benjamin is a lecturer at University Of The Arts London, and also regularly guest lectures outside of UAL, often on the topic that he will be discussing on the 4th of May. During the talk he will cover many topics, but will also allow questions from the floor at any point during his talk so as to ensure that he discusses the things that the audience really wants to know.

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PRACTICAL GUIDE TO COPYRIGHT FOR ARTISTS w/ ACS
May
3
3:00 pm15:00

PRACTICAL GUIDE TO COPYRIGHT FOR ARTISTS w/ ACS

If you are not a Cluster member, please RSVP on: HERE

ACS

The Artists' Collecting Society (ACS) was established in June 2006 by Lady Bridgeman, founder of Bridgeman Images. ACS now represent over 500 artists including Frank Auerbach, Eileen Cooper and Paula Rego, and more than 500 estates, such as Howard Hodgkin, Barbara Hepworth and Lucian Freud. 

ACS’ company structure is unique. We are a not for profit Community Interest Company which means that all profit we make is legally locked into the company and has to be used to benefit the artistic community.  ACS currently sponsors bursaries for students at the Royal Academy Schools, Falmouth University, City and Guilds of London Art School, The Slade, Edinburgh University as well as several art prizes for emerging artists.

Talk: 

Artists' Collecting Society, Talk - a practical guide to copyright, Kimberley Ahmet will present on Friday 3 May 2019.

The ACS talk provides a practical guide that covers intellectual property rights such as the Artist's Resale Right, copyright and licencing. It has been written with burgeoning artists in mind and covers the following:

Intellectual Property:

Copyright

What is it?

What artistic works does it apply to? 

What doesn’t apply to? 

Who owns or can own it?

In Practice

Artist’s Resale Right (ARR)

What is ARR?

What does it apply to?

What doesn’t it apply to?

Who owns, or can own it?

How can I benefit?


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May
2
12:00 pm12:00

COLLECT & RECOLLECT w/ MICHELLE COOK

COLLECT / RECOLLECT: THE DIGITAL ARCHIVE AS A CABINET OF CURIOSITIES

Please, RSVP if you would like to attend: HERE

The programme will begin with a mapping activity, which will shine a light on enchanting collections from a wide range of public domain collections. The workshop will cover how to use an archive intuitively. The event is presented as a curated journey through memory, both factual and imaginative, investigative and playful. Participants will also be introduced to subsequent activities, including alternative ways of documenting immediate lived experiences through experimental writing and drawing. If possible, please bring your own laptop.

COLLECT / RECOLLECT PROGRAMME
This programme is about action and memory. It seeks to colour our understanding of what an archive is and how contemporary artists may use it to expand and enrich their arts practice. The archive is more than a collection for browsing, it is also a space in which to forge connections and articulate selfhood. To delve into an archive or look through archival material is to engage in an affective and critical practice.

Two workshops and a participatory installation will explore what it means to imagine, perceive, remember, and record. The series is free for all participating artists, and open to all makers who are inquisitive and reflexive.  

Michelle Cook is a London-based writer and curator. Her practice is research-led, interdisciplinary and reflexive. She is concerned with the visibility of the archive, and models of community engagement that are participatory and dialogical. Her work explores how we perceive and respond to collections, and communication that departs from rigid uses of language.

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May
2
to 5 May

PARTICIPATORY INSTALLATION ABOUT EXPERIMENTAL DOCUMENTATION

F(EE/I)L ME: A PARTICIPATORY INSTALLATION ABOUT EXPERIMENTAL DOCUMENTATION

This participatory installation is about speaking back to the show. We want you to interact with the exhibition space through forms of alternative documentation. In the gallery, you will find information about experimental writing and drawing. How do you translate the intimacy of your experience into a record? Take a moment to breathe, observe, and render the unique ephemeral quality of your own experience of the space. These activities are part of a wider programme which explore perception, communication, and the collective act of constructing memory. What you return to us will contribute to an experimental archive for CLUSTER 2019.

COLLECT / RECOLLECT: HOW WILL WE REMEMBER CLUSTER?
This programme is about action and memory. It seeks to colour our understanding of what an archive is and how contemporary artists may use it to expand and enrich their arts practice. The archive is more than a collection for browsing, it is also a space in which to forge connections and articulate selfhood. To delve into an archive or look through archival material is to engage in an affective and critical practice.

Two workshops and a participatory installation will explore what it means to imagine, perceive, remember, and record. The series is free for all participating artists, and open to all makers who are inquisitive and reflexive.

Michelle Cook is a London-based writer and curator. Her practice is research-led, interdisciplinary and reflexive. She is concerned with the visibility of the archive, and models of community engagement that are participatory and dialogical. Her work explores how we perceive and respond to collections, and communication that departs from rigid uses of language.

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