Archive for the 'FADE' Category

Paul Coldwell – Lectures

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Paul Coldwell will be/has given the followings lectures:

Title: The personalised surface within fine art digital printmaking
Northern Print – Newcastle
Thursday 29th may 5.00
Paul Coldwell will be discussing the progress of the AHRC funded research project with regards to the principle case studies.

Title: Paul Coldwell-Recent work
Venue: Arts Academy Beijing, China
8th June
Coldwell will be talking about the relationship between his print and sculpture and the role of digital technology within his practice.

Title: “The Surface within Digital Prints”
Time: 18:00~19:30 16th June.
Venue: Event Space at British Council Korea
In connection with the exhibition of his prints at Andante Gallery, Seoul, the British Council are hosting a talk by Coldwell on his engagement with ideas of surface within his printmaking practice.

Visit and Talk at Chelsea College of Art by the Centre for Fine Print Research, UWE

Paul Thirkell
FADE are pleased to announce that 5 researchers from UWE’s Centre for Fine Print Research will be visiting Chelsea college of art and design on Friday the 16th May.
CFPR is renowned as one of the leading research centers of it’s kind in the world. The centre has a staff of eleven researchers plus doctoral research students researching offering a wide range of practical and theoretical expertise. As their website states, ‘The main focus of research at the CFPR concerns the development of quality fine print, this is primarily undertaken from a fine art perspective. We recognise however, that print is inexorably linked to industrial development so therefore we are also equally comfortable with conducting research from an industrial perspective.’
There will be 5 speakers at the event which will include:

Their research includes:
‘Alternatives to four-colour and the development of photomechanical print processes’
‘The re-examination and revival of the collotype medium (19th century photomechanical printing process) as an ideal means of reproducing digitally generated hardcopy.’
‘Continuous tone photomechanical processes and their application with current technology, particularly in relation to printed ceramics.’
The details for the event are as follows:

16th May 2008
12.30 Card room, Chelsea college of art and design. Buffet Lunch and drinks.
1.30-5.30 Presentations by CFPR members.

Charlotte Hodes exhibition

Drawing Skirts: New Papercuts

18 April – 30 May 2008

University Gallery and Baring Wing, Northumbria University, Sandyford Road, Newcastle upon Tyne

More details

Simon Schofield – Experiments in Digital Surface Generation

On the 15th of February FADE invited artist Simon Schofield to give a talk exploring the ideas behind his new series of work. He explained the special software developed, and implications for future images, designs and artworks. The talk was held at in the Red room at the Chelsea college of art and design. There was a range of people from the university at the talk including many students from the MA Digital Arts course at Camberwell. Simon talked about his work for an hour then participated in a panel discussion with Dr. Barbara Rauch and Prof. Paul Coldwell. This discussion also included questions from the audience about his his work and relation to the Personalised surface project. A podcast and video of the evening will be shortly made available on this site.

Here is a brief description of Simon Schofield’s work:

“In Simon Schofield’s images constellations of detailed visual elements are aggregated to form expanses of texture, pattern and substance. This method is used to create vibrant and highly naturalistic re-fabrications of the landscape and nature or to construct images that seem to be simulations or observations of microscopic scientific phenomena. He also uses this approach to explore the limits of drawing and pattern using highly detailed fields of drawn elements, or continual reconfigurations of decorative symbols and motifs. Despite their complexity, his images have a quiet, meditative and oceanic quality. In order to produce these images it was necessary for Simon to develop new software and image-making methodologies. The images produced are extremely high in detail, sometimes using literally millions of compositing operations, and are of very high resolution needing to be printed in order to expose their full richness.Simon is fascinated by the intersection of human expression and technology and, over recent years, has developed several software systems exploring the theme. These including the Piranesi 3-D paint system at Cambridge University, now used by architects and 3-D designer worldwide, and an Interactive Music system AudioROM for which he won a BAFTA in 1998. He was awarded a NESTA Fellowship in 2005 to expand his interests in Generative Image Making. He is a Lecturer in Digital Media at London Metropolitan University and Honorary Senior Research Fellow at the Slade School of Fine Art, UCL.”

www.simonschofield.net

Surface

Within the field of digital print, the surface is often the last issue to be considered in contrast to traditional print technology where the surface is negotiated throughout production. This projects aims to question this position and to assess, if, a personalised surface can be negotiated. The surface will be considered in the context of ‘printed’ outputs and the expanded role of the screen/monitor as the site for the artwork itself.

The project, which will start in May 2007 and run for two years, is led by Professor Paul Coldwell and Dr Barbara Rauch and is contribution to the research project FADE (Fine Art Digital Environment: Surface-Layering-Memory). FADE is one of the projects within ICFAR (International Centre for Fine Art Research www.icfar.co.uk) University of the Arts London.

The project will create a forum for the interrogation of the issue of surface within fine art digital printmaking, bringing together agencies from art & design education, studio practice, museums, print publishing and industry. Through this sharing of knowledge, we hope to expand understanding of the position of digital print within contemporary fine art practice and whether this constitutes a continuing tradition or a fracture.

A selection of artists representing very different approaches, both practical and philosophical, will be invited to provide a range of case studies, which test the research question in the studio environment. The surface will also be considered at the point where digital data is first acquired. Through the experimental use of both flat bed and 3D scanners, ways will be experimented with to bring surface information into the artwork. The project will benefit from a dialogue with research and expertise in the field of 3D scanning and haptics at Camberwell College of Arts, University of the Arts London.

The concept of layering is fundamental to the research question. While layering in traditional practice is directly connected to the construction of a surface that holds physical layers of ink, within digital print, layering is a virtual conceit and while most graphic software packages (such as Illustrator, Photoshop) are predicated on this notion, the final print presents a uniform even surface.

Digital technology allows for a history to be recorded of the stage-by-stage changes in the development of an image. The project will exploit this aspect to provide rare evidence of the creative decision making process. While there have been opportunities within traditional print practice to view selected stages and the gradual refinement of a print, digital software offers an unobtrusive continuous record of decisions and changes. This can provide insights not only to the artist’s creative practice, but also to the way artists interact with technology.

The project will be conducted within the research group FADE (Fine Art Digital Environment: Surface Layering Memory) a collaboration between Camberwell and Chelsea Colleges of Art, University of the Arts London. FADE, (previously known as The Integration of Computers within Fine Art Practice) has been a key player in the debate on the role of the digital within fine art practice. Exhibitions have included Computers & Printmaking, Birmingham Museum & Art Gallery and Digital Responses, a year of installations at the V&A, and have been important in bringing these issues to a wider audience. FADE has sought to place studio practice at the centre of its research and has consequently disseminated knowledge through both accepted research channels (conferences, papers, journals), as well through the artist’s professional activity, (solo and group exhibitions) and the location of artworks as expressions of research within leading national and international public collections. In keeping with this approach, the research will be disseminated through symposia, college research forums, exhibitions, research papers, and through a final conference.

The AHRC funds postgraduate training and research in the arts and humanities, from archaeology and English literature to design and dance. The quality and range of research supported not only provides social and cultural benefits but also contributes to the economic success of the UK. For further information on the AHRC, please see www.ahrc.ac.uk.

Supported by AHRC.




Research under creative commons licence detailed blow, individual artists' work remains their own copyright unless specifically stated

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