Slides for a Level 3 Digital Practice and Theory lecture on using CC, promoting your work and ways to get it out there, some demonstration on the economic value of sharing.
David Gauntlett's inaugural lecture from November 2008, in which he points to a shift from a 'sit down and be told' culture to a more creative 'making and doing' culture, which may offer one of the necessary keys to tackling climate change and environmental problems.
In Lecture 5 of this series, Helen Marriage, co-founder of Artichoke, discusses her experiences of getting art forms into the larger community rather than limiting art to a small percentage of the population. Artichoke is a creative company that works with artists to invade public spaces and put on extraordinary events that live on in people's memories. She discusses how through art, whole communities can be engaged and bridges built in disenfranchised local communities. She talks about her experiences at Canary Wharf and Salisbury, about putting the work of local artists in front of the population and using art to disrupt people’s expectations, learning to understand other people’s point of view and getting endorsement for projects from someone the community trust. She talks about various events Artichoke has produced, shows a video of the Elephant Story delivered in London, discusses the problems, challenges and assumptions made about inserting an event into the everyday life of a city, about not getting dissuaded but remembering that these are our streets, our public services, the responsibility that comes with producing these events. She presents other events and talks about the lasting effect these experiences have on people, communities, the happiness, joy and pride people have, the legacy and cultural changes that result due to spectacular, provocative and ephemeral events and argues that cuts to arts and culture funding are not the easy option they may be perceived as.