GetAmbITion

Get AmbITion! Communicate, collaborate, create and celebrate getting digital in the arts.

  1. National Theatre Wales launches programme with Big Bang!

    NTWlaunchMy Envirodigital client, the new National Theatre Wales, are launching their opening programme on 5th November 2009. It’ll be a big bang for a number of reasons: its Bonfire Night or Guy Fawkes’ Night in the UK, so there will be fireworks. There will also be a new destination website to visit where you can find out what’s on and buy tickets (the huge online community that we’ve grown organically over the past year will be just a click away, and is still growing in numbers, depth and activity daily).

    The final big bang will be the style of the launch: rather than hiring an expensive venue to which the press and VIPs have to travel, NTW are instead webcasting the programme launch, hoping that journalists will NOT make the journey to Cardiff, but will watch the news unfold online and so help NTW achieve its environmentally sustainable aspirations. Don’t expect a fancy brochure either: the only paper NTW will print is a (very beautiful!) newspaper. And that will be available digitally too, so if you can’t pick it up in person, don’t expect to receive one in the post [eco choices, not post strike reasons :-) )].

    Read John McGrath’s blog about the launch for all the details, and HUGE congratulations to John and all the NTW team from us at Envirodigital – we’re so proud that you stuck to all your original aspirations, and thrilled that we could help you make them realities! For more details on the digital choices that I helped NTW make to ensure their digital set-up was environmentally sustainable, read the Envirodigital blog posts about the community development and the organisational development.

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  2. Re-Rite: get yourself into the Rite of Spring!


    If you’re not sure about orchestral music, or about going to a classical concert, the the Philharmonia Orchestra’s Digital Residency is FOR YOU :-) Opening at the Bargehouse on London’s Southbank on 03.11.2009, the Re-rite project will:
    “reveal every section of the orchestra performing The Rite of Spring simultaneously “as Live” thoughout a four-storey warehouse building. The public will be able to sit amongst the horn players, perform in the percussion section and take up the baton and control sections of the Orchestra as they play”.

    Says the Philharmonia’s Principal Consuctor Esa-Pekka Salonen, who developed the concept with AmbITion champion Richard Slaney – also the Philharmonia Orchestra’s Digital Department boss:
    “Being inside an orchestra, experiencing the sensation of 101 players taking on this iconic music is one of the biggest adrenalin rushes and one that I want to share with the world. Now we’re doing just that.”
    Re-Rite will be open 3-15 November from 10am – 6pm (8pm Thurs & Fri).
    You’ll also be able to experience it online from 3rd November onwards!!

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  3. May You Live in Interesting Times: Festival of Creative Technology Cardiff

    THURSDAY 22 – SATURDAY 24 OCTOBER 2009

    May You Live in Interesting Times is a three-day, biennial Festival that is all about ‘do-it-yourself’ and features a programme that celebrates the latest intriguing uses of everyday technology and social innovation, enabled through shared ideas.

    There’s a fantastic range of commissions, exhibitions, a Maker Faire, discussions, workshops, screenings and participant-driven events. Highlights include:

    Alfred Sirleaf: Analogue Blogger, from Liberia; Eddo Stern’s first solo exhibition in the UK; Ghana Think Tank solving Wales’ problems; a dynamic, participant driven game show featuring The People Speak; an unConference that explores Technological Tinkering, Wales’ first Maker Faire and a range of new commissions from artists based in Wales.

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  4. Shift Happens because of digital development (does Seattle Opera miss the opportunity though?)

    Remember the “old” Shift Happens video? Its been updated, and makes the old 2007 version seem ludicrously out of date – watch here:

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  5. Stephen Fry on using the web to share art

    From http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/7926509.stm

    Stephen Fry tells BBC Radio 4’s Analysis programme about why he believes the web is such a wondrous thing.

    There are some lovely gems in here. My favourite bit:

    Where The Web Can Take You

    “What is wonderful is the idea that you can do a really interesting introduction. You can have trusted friends.

    Imagine if someone like Alan Bennett, for example, who is a prodigious gallery-goer and a great writer occasionally, only tantalisingly occasionally on art – imagine if on your website you just said to these people could you just come in and talk about your favourite painting.

    It would take them five minutes and you’d just have a little camera on them – and then similarly talk about a book.

    I think you could just have ways of introducing people and taking the fear and discomfort and embarrassment out of art, if that was what you wanted to do, whether it’s literary art or any other kind of art – dance, opera, whatever you wanted to do.

    There are opportunities and ways of doing it on the internet that are so much more closed to you even in broadcasting, to be perfectly honest.

    The beauty of it is if you had it on the fryuniversity.com, it would be there forever and people would be able to say, “There’s Alan Bennett talking about Whistler’s Mother” or whatever.”

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Creative Scotland Lottery Fund Culture Sparks Rudman Consulting Arts Council England