Public 2.0: Culture, Creativity and Audience in an Era of Information Openness
Free but booking required,
http://www.westminster.ac.uk/schools/media/cream/events/conferences/public-2.0
Date: 21 July 2011 10.30am – 21 July 2011 6.00pm
Location: Regent Campus, 309 Regent Street, London, W1B 2UW
In recent years significant changes in the technological, social and media landscapes have redrawn relationships between cultural producers of all stripes and the people previously called readers, audiences and users. In parallel with this, unprecedented amounts of information have entered the public domain as a result of both top-down policy pressures and bottom-up social activism. This process in turn has given birth to new cultural movements, opportunities for creativity, forms of information visualisation, and modes of content production.
This free one-day conference brings together journalists, academics, developers, artists, activists and business people to reflect upon these phenomena, show work, exchange experiences and signpost future trends.
The conference will be followed by an exhibition opening of work produced as part of Data Art, an AHRC funded research project exploring how broadcast and news data can be reformatted, explored and navigated using information visualisations. The project is the result of collaboration between: the Centre for Research in Education Art and Media (CREAM), the University of Westminster; BBC Learning and BBC Future Media and Technology
www.data-art.net
Speakers include:
Tom Corby, conference convener, artist, academic and writer working at the University of Westminster
Simon Rogers, editor of the Guardian Datablog and Datastore.
Ian Forrester, Senior Producer at BBC R&D and emergent technology expert.
Roland Harwood, co-founder of 100%Open an innovation agency.
David Gauntlett, writes and teaches on how digital media gives people new opportunities to create and connect.
Rob Myers, artist, writer, hacker and Chief Technology Officer for Philter Phactory.
Drew Hemment, associate Director of ImaginationLancaster, Lancaster University, and Director of the FutureEverything Festival. (TBC)
Julian Tate lead developer on the Manchester Open Data Cities project for FutureEverything.
Ruth Catlow, media artist and co-founder and co-director of Furtherfield.org media arts organization.
In addition a show and tell session will feature art and design works by independent companies and developers including the Bestario design company, Andy Littledale, Gavin Baily and Harry Robbins.
General enquiries contact Helen Cohen – – or 020 7911 5000 ext 4298
This conference is funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council and the University of Westminster