Education

Anyone thinking of doing an MA in History, Film and Television at Birmingham Uni should pop along to the open day on Wednesday December 5th. Details on this poster.

Share on TumblrShare on Twitter

New BIAD site

17th
Oct
2007

BIAD, the Birmingham Institute for Art and Design at UCE BCU, has a new website.

Biad site

There are a couple of nice things about this. The most obvious is the extensive gallery of graduates’ work which serves to show off the grads and their alma mata, though links to their sites would make it really useful. The second is the news page which appears to cover a whole range of activities connected to the institute from colaborations with IKON, public lectures and events and new publications by staff.

While it might not be obvious, this new site is pretty much a blog. Indeed, it’s using Drupal, a powerful free content management system that understands the best things about weblogs. This also means they have RSS feeds – a first for an academic website that’s ostensibly all about the PR. No idea who’s behind it all but, compared to the parent site it’s a breath of fresh air.

via Nikki Pugh

Share on TumblrShare on Twitter

Drumvoice

9th
Oct
2007

dv_logo_red.jpg

Drumvoice is “a Birmingham based company that brings exciting hands-on West African drumming, singing and dance workshops to education and the community”. Lead by Sarah Westwood they do projects in schools and arts organisations as well as running a adult group, Drumvoice Orchestra, who perform at events like Artsfest..

Alongside this is The Rhythm Business which brings drumming into the corporate environment for team building exercises.

drumvoice.jpg

Share on TumblrShare on Twitter

BCU announced

29th
Sep
2007

bculogo.jpgThe rather useful looking Skyscraper City forum prints the email sent out by UCE’s Vice Chancellor David Tidmarsh telling staff and students that he’s soon to be BCU’s Vice Chancellor. I won’t post the whole thing but here’s an exceprt or two that caught my eye.

Through our research and consultation exercise, we have confirmed that by using the shorter, stronger title of Birmingham City University, we will have a more recognisable and powerful name that will give us a much stronger identity in the market place. We believe that we will all benefit if the University is more easily recognised for its achievements by using a shorter, stronger name.

This is a name that clearly identifies both our status and location in Birmingham and also chimes well with our mission to be a centre of excellence in learning, creativity and enterprise, promoting economic, social and cultural well being.

[...]

As one of our many ambitions, our long-term estates plan will create a major new city centre campus at Eastside, near Millennium Point and we are committed to further investment at Perry Barr and Westbourne Road, to improve and enhance facilities at both campuses.

Thanks to Simon Howes for the tipoff

Share on TumblrShare on Twitter

The Solihull College Fine Art Degree show for 2007 runs from June 9th to 21st from 10am – 4pm (noon on Saturdays) with a Private View on the 8th at 6-8pm. The Fine Art degree at Solihull has something of a reputation apparently with many graduates going on to professional arts careers so this should be worth checking out at the Blossomfield Campus (map). Phone 0121 678 7001/2 for more details.

Any other degree shows happening in the area (other than New Generation Arts which I’ve got covered) do let me know.

Share on TumblrShare on Twitter

A Comic School?

9th
May
2007

Hi8tus are looking at the feasibility of setting up and running a Comic School cementing their work in supporting comic book illustration through the Stripsearch program.

It’s worth emphasizing that this is at a very early stage – the tender for the feasibility study has only just gone out – but it’s worth noting as there isn’t anything like this in this country, though it was tried in London in the late 80s and early 90s. In the US there are a number of classes and departments at colleges and schools for comic art so it’s not necessarily a pipe dream.

If anyone does take up the tender and wants some contacts for those who’ve tried it before do get in touch as I can probably help you. (Your first port of call will probably be Paul Gravett.)

Here’s the consultancy brief (PDF).

Share on TumblrShare on Twitter

Out Of Hours is a networking and social event for people working in the culture sector that tales place at the Light House in Wolverhampton. The next one is Monday March 5th, 5.30-7.30pm

This evening we’re overflowing with interesting things to see, watch and listen to. There will be a screening of 7 Inch Cinema‘s SloMo challenge, which ran for the first time last summer and will include clips from the original festival that inspired it. The challenge: to make a one-minute film using slow-motion in some way. The screening will be attended by a number of the filmmakers who will introduce their work.

This evening also marks the opening of the exhibition from Malooma, AKA Glen Tapper. Glen’s work is influenced by street graffiti, clean graphic design and is crammed with pop culture references. He depicts images of iconic film stars, using bold colours, text and strong lines. Finally, we are also welcoming Geraldine McCullagh and Jo Willis from BBC Big Screen who are on the look out for films and will give a short talk about the philosophy behind the Big Screen and the sort of content that they are looking for.

In addition we’ll have our resident VJs, Cinecull, a Wolverhampton based video production company, who provide an exclusive live audio-visual backdrop for Out of Hours.

Entrance is free. Contact plot@light-house.co.uk for further details.

Share on TumblrShare on Twitter

Tomorrow has a Postgrad Open Day at the Birmingham Institute of Art and Design (BIAD) covering the departments of Visual Communication, Architecture, Fashion, Textiles and 3D Design, Theoretical and Historical Studies, Media and Communications and Art.

This has been your absurdly-short-notice post for today. via D’log.

Share on TumblrShare on Twitter