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    Entries from August 1, 2010 - August 31, 2010

    Tuesday
    Aug172010

    Knight And Day Film Review

    Cameron and Tom in Seville amid the running of the bulls! Yikes!

    The Plot: Roy Miller (Tom Cruise) is  a secret agent involved in a deadly federal investigation and he accidently involves June Haven (Cameron Diaz), a hopeless romantic who is en route to her sisters wedding. Once June is brought into the chaos, both Roy and June find themselves being chased and must work together to not be killed. But in such a deadly game the most important thing between these two strangers is that June trusts Roy, but can she trust him?

    My opinion: I saw this film last night and wasn't expecting too much, especially from Cameron Diaz. I mean don't get me wrong, I used to love her before The Holiday and The Box but lost faith during The Holiday due to her scenes alone when she would talk to herself in a cheesy way, whilst Kate Winslet, Jude Law and Jack Black made the film very watchable and romantic. Just as I predicted, in Knight and Day, she was as cheesy as ever with yet even more scenes of her having a one person conversation in a mirror or in a car for example. This issue actually wasn't too bad as the film was quite lighthearted and fun so I will let this minor irritation slide. Cameron is very funny and looks fabulous as always. The guys will love the bikini scenes as much as the girls will love Tom Cruise's topless scenes! Both of them really do work out! Tom cruise in particular did most of his own stunts in this film. Cruise is brilliant: He is funny, a great actor and lovable. His scenes with Cameron worked well and their onscreen chemistry was sweet and fun.

    Best scene/s: Definitely the scenes where Roy drugs June. I was in absolute stitches in the cinema.

    Rating: 3.5/5 It is a great action rom-com and it is definitely better than the likes of the Bounty Hunter and some of the other stuff I have seen released recently (sorry Gerard Butler and Jen Aniston, I love you both but switched it off half way through!)

    Venue: The Showcase cinema towards Batley, Leeds (just off the M621) was actually very quiet on a Monday night at around 7pm. It was nice and there is also a student discount if you have a valid NUS card. A whole pound less! The snacks, in total, cost as much as the tickets and we shared a drink but the food is still slightly cheaper than the Vue cinemas in Kirkstall and The Light Leeds. All in all, a good night and, although we passed it up last night , there is a Nandos just next door :-)

    Tuesday
    Aug172010

    Vision For Leeds 2030 - DIY Style

    Last week I attended a very interesting event: Vision For Leeds - DIY Style, organised by T4P. The event took place in Leeds at the DLA Piper LLP building and to quote the organisers: 

    This event, for people working in the business sector, is one of a series of small events playing around the edges of the official Vision for Leeds 2030* process – stimulated by it, contributing to it… and challenging it!

    • What makes cities great places - to work in, to thrive in, to live life to the full?
    • What’s your dream for how this city might be in the future?
    • What might we then do to help Leeds become all it can be?

    We started by talking about why we were there and what we hoped to achieve by coming to the event. The answers were mixed: some people focused on transport, others spoke of narrowing the social gap, others spoke from a business angle, some just wanted to talk about Leeds and this was perhaps their best chance of being heard. All in all the group seemed enthusiastic, intelligent and wanted to help the city.

    Picture From Tamara @ ithunter.com

    During the session we spoke about when we personally were most happy in the city, and what circumstances facilitated or contributed to that feeling. I spoke about our recent project with the Barcelona online community (blog post to come on this next week) and how it made me very happy to open the doors of our city and it's fashion/culture to an international audience. Some of the other stories evoked great memories such as talk of the Lord Mayor's Parade and other events where the city was alive and the community engaged.

    The talk inevitably turned towards the council and city planners. We spoke about some of the barriers that are in place and what we can do to remove them. We also spoke of the 'brand' and 'story' of the city: What is Leeds? What are we good at? What is great about the city?

    All in all the evening was very interesting, but for me the next question is: What do we do about it? Do we keep talking, or do we act? Do we wait for the council to tell us it is ok to do things, or do we do things anyway? How can the private sector of the city work together more effectively and collaborate on mutually beneficial projects?

    I have a lot of ideas in this area and am currently meeting with lots of people who have an important role to play in the future of the city. If we can all work together, collaborate and take a few risks... this difficult economic climate could have just helped to stimulate the best thing to happen in the city for a long time, and I for one am excited!

    Monday
    Aug162010

    A Perverse Library: a major exhibition of 'conceptual writing' comes to Yorkshire next month

    “Writing is fifty years behind painting.” (Brion Gysin, 1959)

    A major exhibition of ‘conceptual writing’ is coming to Yorkshire next month. A Perverse Library is the first exhibition of its kind in the UK and will - according to curator Simon Morris - “show work by a generation of artists who have sought a radical reconsideration of the relationship between literature and the visual arts”.

    Image, Scott Myles: Full Stop 2006 © the artist. The last full stop in Tristram Shandy from the first edition, blown up using photomicography at the University of Glasgow

    Appropriately, the exhibition will take place at Shandy Hall, Coxwold: the former home of the celebrated 18th-century English writer Laurence Sterne (author of The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman), whose experimental spirit has had an astounding and continuing influence on the arts.

    A Perverse Library draws from collections of work by internationally renowned artists and writers including: Kathy Acker, Ed Ruscha, Jen Bervin, Christian Bök, Kenneth Goldsmith, James Joyce, On Kawara, Sherrie Levine and the recent Northern Art Prize winner, Pavel Büchler.

    The exhibition starts on 04 September 2010, and will run right through to 31 October 2010. There are a number of free bus services running between York train station and Shandy Hall. Click here to find out more, and to book your place before they all go!

    Étienne-Louis Boullée, Deuxieme projet pour la Bibliothèque du Roi (1785), used on the cover of Craig Dworkin's new book 'The Perverse Library'. Dworkin's collection of more than 2,000 volumes forms the centre piece of the exhibition in Coxwold.

    Questions about what and where writing is have always cut through and across the fields of philosophy, literary criticism and the arts. Whilst these questions are not new, nor specific to any one place, they have emerged as an essential concern for the Western European and American avant-garde.

    Driven by 200 years of radical social change, ‘writing’ in the arts has continued to nourish an extremely rich field of praxis. Its discourses are irreducibly complex and beyond simple definition or catagorisation.

    In part this is due to the breadth of work being progressed by individuals with wide ranging imperatives, working in equally diverse ways: Gertrude Stein to William James to Ezra Pound to James Joyce to Berthold Brecht to Samuel Beckett to Allen Ginsberg to John Cage to Roland Barthes to Jacques Derrida to Christian Bok to Steve McCaffery to Joanna Drucker to David Mamet to Caroline Bergvall to Jerome Bell to Craig Dworkin to Tim Etchells to Gillian Wearing to Mark Manders to Kenneth Goldsmith and on and on, and to name but a fraction of those who’s ideas continue to feed this nebulous and intangible ecology of ideas.

    The complexity is owed also to the depth of critical thinking that questions about writing have fostered, couched in vocabularies that are often challenging, and often deliberately so: demanding the reader to renegotiate their relationship to the ‘text’.

    Terms like conceptual writing, performance writing, writing with art, text based art, language art, l-a-n-g-u-a-g-e poetry, artists’ publishing etc… are only some of the terms used to describe only some of the outlets for these practices. Historically these terms have sat in opposition to traditional literary modes, as well to notions of new or creative writing, which have been favored by the mainstream.

    In recent years the output of artists working in what the writer, Claire MacDonald has called “an expanded field of writing practice” have occupied public spaces, galleries, theatres, studios, libraries etc., and become manifest as books, pages, journals, multiples, paintings, scores, computer applications, sculptures, audio recordings, films, videos, performances, actions, events and ephemera etc. 

    Image, architectural drawings of the 'invisible shelves' designed by Canadian architect Michael Farion,

    In A Perverse Library the output occupies writing, or the idea of writing itself. By adopting strategies of appropriation and/or rip-off “we are seeing whole texts moved around from one location to another. It is not just sampling language but moving entire texts from space to another”, as Simon Morris puts it. “I think there's something quite exciting about making new meaning whilst using exactly the same words as an other.”

    If you are interested in knowing more about this field of art / writing practice then A Perverse Library is definitely an exhibition, even the exhibition not to be missed. If you do miss it though, we will be sure to get lots and lots of photos and video from the grand opening, which organisers have in the spirit of Sterne put the night before the exhibition closes.

    Thursday
    Aug122010

    Let The Cool Hunting Begin!


    I have been cool hunting in a number of different cities in the past, Taipei, Beijing, Barcelona, and now Leeds. So far I have been surprised... in a good way. All the people I've photographed have been very friendly, they stop and listen, respond well, and as you can see, they all have amazing smiles.

    We have started cool hunting in Leeds because we think it's important to follow the real trends on the street, what people are wearing. And maybe we can find out what makes fashion in Leeds different to other cities. -Stp

    Thursday
    Aug052010

    "All technology is neutral", a reflection on Sir Ken Robinson's speech for #shifthappens 2010

    “All technology is neutral”. This was the essence of a keynote speech given by Sir Ken Robinson (@SirKenRobinson), via Skype from his home in California, to a packed out auditorium at York Theatre Royal.

    Sir Ken Robinson addresses the audience at Shift Happens 2010

    The speech came at the end of the opening day of the third annual Shift_Happens event, the brainchild of Pilot Theatre’s Artistic Director, Marcus Romer (@MarcusRomer). Inspired by Romer’s experiences at TED, Shift_Happens draws people together from across the cultural and creative industries (the arts, media and film, museums and libraries, and so on) to talk about how they can take part in, and drive the digital landscape. The event includes a series of speeches, covering areas of both digital practice and policy, as well as performances, user testing of new digital and interactive media works, and surgeries giving new arrivals to the conversation insight into the digital landscape.

    We were very pleased to attend Shift_Happens on behalf of Hyper Island, who we work with lots, and who are working with Skillset and Screen Yorkshire on a new leadership programme for Yorkshire’s digital and creative workforce. Our mission was to find out what is making people in the arts tick when it comes to digital.

    The keynote will be available to view online in the coming weeks, so I won’t summarise here (we will provide a link once available). To be honest, I’m not sure where I’d begin anyway: it moved back and forth between the earliest developments of technology, and predictions about where we might be heading. What I can summarise, though, is the thesis: that technology, historically, has shaped the condition of society and its cultures. In that process, technology has promoted ways of living (urbanisation, for example) that push us away from nature, and each other. However, the truth of the matter is that technology is not actively working towards these ends: it is not looking to drive the wedge. Indeed, technology is only ever passive – “all technology is neutral”. What matters, then, is how we use technology. If we use it responsibly then it will promote creativity and spiritual wellbeing. If we don’t then we could be in trouble.

    Sir Ken’s keynote followed another presentation (part speech, part crowd-souring performance lecture) by Andy Field, Artistic Director of Forrest Fringe Festival (a free festival phenomenon that landed at the Edinburgh Fringe a few years ago).

    Andy Field, of Forrest Fringe Festival, talks to Director of National Theatre Wales, John E McGrath

    By accident or design, Field’s speech set a clear context for Ken Robinson’s keynote, and made it’s own call for a reconsideration of how technology is used by artists, to affect change: paraphrasing… “digital is a field that we are all, as artists and creative people, right at the forefront of: even if we were, in many ways, the last to arrive at the party. Rather than using technology to re-use existing ideas and content, we should be using our art to rip the heart from technology. We should bring art and technology together to dream stupid, impossibly grand visions of what the future might look like… It is true that no one can break the Internet, but we should all be trying.

    So, to end where I began (or, rather, where Sir Ken began), all technology is neutral. It is passive, non-political, non-destructive. What activates technology is us, and it is up to us to determine its uses and by extension the shape of tomorrow’s society. That all seems simple, doesn’t it? Well, not if you skip back to the middle of Sir Robinson’s presentation when he shared a prediction: that by 2050 the average personal computer will have the same processing power as all of human consciousness. Machines that think, and learn, and re-write their operating systems based on their experiences. Will technology still be neutral then?

    While you ponder that one the team at Hyper Island are heading off to buy copies of the Sarah Connor Chronicles, and here at Hebe we're getting started on the bunker.