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Cardiff Start

We’re CardiffStart. You might have heard of us already and, if not, you’ll have certainly heard of our members (we make up a large portion of digital economy in Cardiff and beyond). We’re a group of entrepreneurs, startup founders, creatives, students, and investors who believe that our city is a brilliant place to work and live; We’re passionate about sharing knowledge, advice and help.

We’re also a CIC, which means that we don’t make any money and the only reason for our existence is to help make Cardiff one of the best places to start and grow a tech business in the UK.

On Thursday the 11th of April, we’ll be holding our official launch in Cardiff’s City Hall and there’s a bucket load of media opportunities available surrounding the day.

During the day, we’ll be holding several essential workshops with advice a tech business can implement today. Rob Fitzpatrick is an expert in international startup ecosystems and in launching a successful (and profitable) digital business. He’ll be joining two blue-chip investors and a range of IP and financial experts to speak with delegates from both home and abroad. As part of our international scope and ambition, we’ll be welcoming some of Europe’s most exiting entrepreneurs from Ireland and Spain who are flying in specifically to see what we’re up to here in Cardiff. It’s testament to the unique things we’re doing here in Cardiff.

At 6pm, we’ll be welcoming the world to City Hall as we say hello, show off the work of our members and raise a glass to our current success and future vision. We’ll also be presenting “People” – a world first, home-grown platform to connect the city’s entrepreneurs, investors and students in a way that’s never been done before.

Obviously, we’d love you to come along to our evening event. More than this, we need you to come along! Given your influence, both locally and nationally, it’s vital that we get support from people just like you.

If you’d like to find out more about our group (and give us some exposure) please get in touch. We’ve got several member success stories with some really nice human interest angles which would make great copy. Obviously, we also have some great business angles covering some really sexy startups!

I hope that we can put together a strong working relationship – what’s good for CardiffStart is good for Cardiff and UK PLC.

Find out more:
CardiffStart.com
twitter.com/cardiffstart

CardiffStart’s official launch will take place throughout the day on April 11th 2013. All events will take place in Cardiff’s prestigious City Hall (Cathays Park, Cardiff CF10 3ND).
Our daytime event start at 09:30 and finishes at 16:30. Our evening event starts at 18:00 and ends at 19:30.
There will be photo and interview opportunities throughout the day and evening.
Press accreditation for both the day and evening events can be requested via Stephen Milburn (stephen@cardiffstart.com or +447834453612).
Several members of our group have agreed to share their startup stories with members of the media, please contact Stephen Milburn for further details.If you’d like to register as an attendee for our launch event (it’s free) please visit: http://cardiffstartlaunch.eventbrite.co.uk

 

 

 

 

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Chris and his Art (1994)scale

How would you like to be remembered?

Christopher Andrews : Retrospective exhibition will be held at the Norwegian Church Arts Centre, Cardiff Bay from Monday 15th – Friday 19th April and Sunday 21st April 2013. Entrance is free. Opening hours are 10am – 6pm.

Christopher Andrews passed away in 2008 at the age of 38. He studied, lived and worked in Cardiff showing promise as an exceptional artist in fine art with his work exhibited locally and abroad. In 1996 Chris co-founded the Kings Road studio in Canton which is still in use sixteen years later. He was an art critic contributing to several local publications including SKIP.

Christopher Andrews : Retrospective has been organised by curator Gideon Hall with the aim to display Chris’s legacy to as wide an audience as possible. Norwegian Church Arts Centre, with its location, history and presence, is an ideal venue to present Chris’s art to the public.

Curator Gideon Hall, himself an artist says “I was fortunate to know Chris and witness the emergence of a talented and unique artist.” Professor Anthony Howell recently remarked that Christopher Andrews was “A very interesting young artist, always enthusiastic …who made perceptive comments.”

Christopher Andrews : Retrospective is free to attend and the costs are being crowdfunded through Sponsume. If you can donate to this exhibition please go to www.sponsume.com/project/chrisopher-andrews-retrospective or email Gideon Hall at christopherandrewsart@gmail.com

Find out more:
www.facebook.com/christopherandrewsart
www.facebook.com/events/205734059572140/ 

Christopher Andrews Art

Norwegian Church

@gideonhall0

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Diffusion: Cardiff International Festival of Photography

Diffusion, a month-long festival of photography will come to Cardiff in May, with exhibitions, screenings, performances and events.

David Drake, director of Ffotogallery and of the Diffusion Festival, said the aim was to showcase outstanding photographic work from around the world and provide a major new platform for Welsh artists.

He said: “Diffusion is a celebration of photography and the photographic image, in all its forms. Whether created, published, exhibited, collected or distributed in a physical or virtual way, the photograph has the power to inspire and provoke reaction, to reflect our own experience and that of society evolving around us.”

Diffusion is being staged in Cardiff, which in recent years has undergone major economic and social transformation. The festival will use both traditional and new media to create a strong visual presence across existing venues and found spaces. The aim is to encourage visitors and residents alike to navigate Cardiff and its environs in new ways, and to discover facets of the city they would not normally expect to find.

The festival Opening Weekend, 3 – 5 May, sees exhibitions and events across the city, and a symposium at the National Museum Cardiff looking at the status and meaning of the photograph in contemporary visual culture, with a keynote address by internationally renowned artist Richard Wentworth.

Throughout the month there will be free exhibitions, artist talks and workshops, schools’ programmes and photographic rambles around the city. The Diffusion Publishing Weekend takes place over 25 – 26 May, with a Photo Book Fair, symposium and other activities – including the popular mass participatory event Cardiff Photomarathon.

Other festival highlights include the world premiere of award-winning filmmaker Gideon Koppel’s B O R T H and Lure, a major exhibition of new work by Helen Sear, another of Wales’ most important and insightful artists.

It’s Not Too Late It’s Only Dark will be Italian artist Maurizio Anzeri’s first solo exhibition in Wales, featuring previously unseen works alongside his famous ‘photo-sculptural’ pieces.

The Valleys Re-Presented explores the relationship between image, myth and location, and includes classic work by renowned photographers such as David Bailey, Peter Fraser and John Davies alongside newly commissioned projects by Zhao Renhui and Alicia Bruce.

European Chronicles features a number of solo projects by artists from across Europe highlighting how photography, arguably the world’s most democratic and visible medium, enables us to record contemporary life as lived, and to imagine a new, future-oriented European identity.

With its starting point an enquiry into the relationship between Swansea and Cardiff, the exhibition From common differences questions the role of the ‘locally distinct’ in an increasingly globalised world.

Acclaimed Portuguese artist Edgar Martins presents his recent project The Time Machine, and camera-less photography is represented by Swiss artists f&d cartier’s intriguing installation Wait and See. Peter Bobby’s High-rise uses photography and video to critique the global phenomenon of high-rise architecture, questioning its relationship to the city below.

The exhibition Drift at the National Museum Cardiff includes three films by artist Tim Davies made in response to his invitation to represent Wales at the Venice Biennale in 2011. They create a dramatic and poignant portrait of Venice, offering a counterpoint to how the city is represented in the Museum’s historic collection by artists such as Canaletto, Monet and Whistler.

—Diffusion is a Ffotogallery initiative funded by Arts Council of Wales and made possible through the generous support and partnership of a number of organisations. Click here for more info.

Diffusion is brought to you by Ffotogallery (www.ffotogallery.org), the national development agency for photography and lens-based media in Wales, in association with our festival partners across Wales and internationally.

Find out more www.diffusionfestival.org
@_diffusion

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David Drake

Since I came to work here four years ago, as Director of Ffotogallery, I have been amazed by the deep well of talent that exists in Cardiff and Wales, and the receptiveness of Welsh audiences to international work. There is a real appetite in Wales for new cultural experiences, ones that transcend local and national boundaries and reflect the diversity and complexity of the world today. Artists I have invited to present work here – from places as far-flung as Korea and Canada, South Africa and Portugal – invariably pick up on those subtle, hard to define qualities that make Cardiff and Wales such special places.

Cardiff is an exciting, diverse and welcoming city, combining a truly international outlook with a passionate local heart. Its cultural offer is rich in many areas – sport, broadcasting, performing arts, heritage, food, entertainment and retail.

If I was to highlight one area in which the city visibly lags behind other major UK cities such as Liverpool and Bristol, that would be Cardiff’s contemporary art offer. The city lacks a range of small to middle-scale public and independently run contemporary art spaces, as one finds in comparable European cities such as Stuttgart and Nantes, both twinned with Cardiff. However, I feel this shortcoming in the city’s cultural provision can be addressed through collaborative working and the progressive implementation of new initiatives, ones that are greater than the sum of their parts.

That belief prompted me to bring together artists, designers, creative producers from the museums and galleries, digital media and creative industries sector, all of whom are partnering with Ffotogallery to launch in May 2013 Diffusion, a new biennial Cardiff international photography festival.

Combining homegrown talent with a truly global reach, Cardiff is the perfect host city for Diffusion – an international celebration of photography and the photographic image, in all its forms, whether created, published, exhibited or distributed in a physical or virtual way.

David Drake is the Director of Ffotogallery and you can follow him on Twitter

@ffotodavid

To find out more about Diffusion – Cardiff International Festival of Photography (1 – 31 May 2013) go to www.diffusionfestival.org or follow us on Twitter @_diffusion or Facebook DiffusionFestival

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Lumen Prize

Last month saw the announcement in Cardiff of the winner of the international Lumen Prize Exhibition for digitally-created fine art. Tommy Ingberg of Sweden collected first prize for his piece Torn which depicts a man ‘torn’ between the sky and the ground by balloons and a boulder.
The prize, now in its second year, was started by business and financial journalist Carla Rapoport in an effort to draw the world’s attention to the amazing art being created by all the new technology that has rained down on artists worldwide, from the ubiquitous smartphone to tablets to the latest computer software.

“I was really taken with all the changes happening to so many industries because of the IT revolution and the impact techhology was having on art being a huge fan of David Hockney’s work. I’ve always had an interest in art as a member of various museums, attending private views and always wanting to spend as much time as possible in front of great art. It’s such a pleasure to be in the presence of genius,” says Rapoport. “I thought it might make sense to set up a competition to provide a bar to which artists who use this genre can reach. I see the Lumen Prize Exhibition as a means of breaking the log jam of acceptability of this genre by the established art world.”

Rapoport, the US-born CEO and Founder of the Lumen Prize Exhibition, has long been a fan of art. For her, fine art is unlike any other cultural discipline because of the proximity that it allows the viewer.

“It’s such a pleasure to be in the presence of genius. While music is fabulous and the theatre is fantastic, you can’t actually stand as close to genius as you can to visual art. You can’t get that close to an actor or an orchestra,” she explains. “Attending a visual art exhibition is perhaps the most exciting cultural thing that you can do. I realised that technology was a great enabler for artists but I also recognised that digitally-created fine art had been shoved off into a corner of the art world. I think this was the simple reason that no-one knew how to sell it.”

Rapoport admits that the response to the Prize has been overwhelming. Between its launch in May 2012 and now, 1000 people have registered on the Prize’s website. When the contest closed its call for entries last summer, Lumen had received over 500 submissions of work from over 30 countries for its 2012 competition.

“The Prize was set up to recognise the very best in art created digitally and then take that art around the world on a global tour. Digital art has the unique ability to be shared and enjoyed via the web or on web-enabled devices, so it can be seen in places where traditional art is already, but also where it can’t be seen,” she says of the art prize which is unlike any other. “From the very start, I wanted the Lumen Prize to engage with a charity, so I took it to Peace Direct which enables and support local peace builders in conflict zones. The charity loved the idea and helped to give us a home so that we could get the project off the ground by providing us with strategy and logistical support. Then, thanks support from the City of Cardiff, we now have a physical home for the Prize.”

In a world that has been rendered increasingly borderless through technology and networking, the story of how the Lumen ended up in the capital of Wales instead of a major world city is a funny one.

It was on a train journey between her home in the Brecon Beacons and London, where Rapoport was working at the time, that she, by chance, sat next to Professor Terry Stevens, an expert in City and Regional Development as well as the Digital Economy.

“I told him what I was doing and he said he loved the idea and that he would be happy to introduce me to Ken Poole who is in charge of the City Council’s resurgence and regeneration activities,” she recalls. “Within ten weeks we had a deal with the City of Cardiff to partner with us for 3 years. Terry also introduced me to Gaynor Kavanagh, Dean at Cardiff School of Art & Design. I met Gaynor for a coffee and extraordinarily kindly, she accompanied me on my first meeting with Ken Poole about the Prize. That was an amazing leap of faith for her – to come along with someone she had just met.”

The judging process of the Lumen Prize is complex but through its complexity, thoroughness is ensured.

“We judge the works in two ways. First, an International Selection Committee of academics and art experts review 100 works each. We structure this so each work submitted to the Lumen Prize is seen by at least 5 committee members. The top 50 works – which make up the Lumen Prize Exhibition – are chosen through this review are then submitted to our Jury Panel of 8 top artists, gallery owners and art critics. These panel members review all 50 of the works and select the 20 works on our shortlist and our three top prize winners,” Rapoport explains. “Also, all the submitted works appeared in a Lumen Online Gallery where there was an open vote for the People’s Choice Winner. Next year, we will invite works into the Lumen Online Gallery for the People’s Choice competition.”

The judging panel of eight industry experts includes nationally-known artist Gordon Young; Ivor Davies, President of the Royal Cambrian Academy and Anne Farrer, programme director at Sotheby’s Institute. In keeping with the digital aspect of the Prize, none of the judges met in person to discuss the shortlist. It was all done online. This is just one of the ideas that makes it so special.

“Digital art is uniquely enabling. It can be created anywhere in the world without the need for canvas, oils, studio or any of those other things. It can be done with an iPad or a computer or any digital device,” Rapoport explains when asked of its importance. “It has incredible potential for what it can do, for example, in education, or in bringing people together who can’t speak, as well as the rehabilitation for the elderly, brain damaged and infirm. There’s so many ways that digital art can bring joy and uplift to people in any kind of situation. Imagine taking a brain-damaged child and trying to get them to work with oil. That would be very hard. But a brain-damaged child could put their finger on a tablet and create something very beautiful. The luminosity of our tablets creates a great effect.”

Like any advance in a traditional industry, digital art has its critics. Carla Rapoport’s response to those who dispute the value of digital art is to ask whether they believe a print made by a press to be art or why photographers like Andreas Gursky can sell their photographs for millions.

“Where the critics of digital art misunderstand is that they associate it with commercial art because dog food commercials are created digitally,” she rebukes. “The person who creates that imagery is not an artist because they are working commercially. But when that person goes home at night, what they create on their iPad could well be fine art and shown in museums. Because an artist does dog food commercials in the day, does that mean they can’t be an artist?”

Very thankful to both the City of Cardiff and Cardiff School of Art & Design, Carla Rapoport is at the head of a very exciting art prize which has the potential to showcase the work of lesser-known artists from around the world and give them a platform for praise.

The Lumen Prize Exhibition – a global tour to five cities – will be launched at Gallery 27, Cork Street, London on January 22 and run to Janurary 26 before moving to Riga, Latvia, Shanghai, Hong Kong, and returning to Cardiff in last March 2013. The 50 artists chosen for the Lumen Prize Exhibition come from 13 countries and 43 cities around the world, including Pakistan, Israel, Iran, Taiwan, and China.

Marc Thomas

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WNS_Artes_Mundi_90 for enews

The winner of the Artes Mundi 5 prize was announced in an evening ceremony at National Museum Cardiff. From a shortlist of 7, Teresa Margolles has been chosen as the winner of the prize by a panel of international curators and directors. With a first prize of £40,000, Artes Mundi is the largest cash prize awarded for the arts in the UK and one of the most significant in the world. The exhibition, which opened in October has already had 30,000 visitors.

The Panel of judges, chaired by curator and broadcaster Tim Marlow, commended the work of all seven nominated artists, but were particularly struck by “the visceral power and urgency as well as the sophistication of her work in confronting an on-going human tragedy”.

Teresa Margolles’ work focuses on Northern Mexican social experience where drug-related crime has resulted in widespread violence and murder. Since graduating with a diploma in forensic medicine, Margolles has examined the economics of death and her sculptural interventions and performances often bring the physical reality and materiality of death to the fore, exemplified in her artistic intervention during the 2009 Venice Biennale in which the floor of the Mexican pavilion was mopped with water used to wash dead bodies from a morgue in Mexico.

In both works chosen for Artes Mundi, death is a major theme. In Plancha, water which has been used to cleanse dead bodies in a morgue drips from the ceiling onto hotplates. Each drop evaporates on impact with a noticeable hiss. The work seeks to narrate the transition in death from present to absent, the processes of decomposition and ultimately honours anonymous lives that have been lost. 32 años Levantamiento y traslado donde cayo el cuerpo asesinado del artista Luis Miguel Suro for which Margolles has chosen to transport and exhibit the tiles from the floor on which Luis Miguel Suro, a close friend and a promising young artist, was murdered in Guadalajara, Mexico. The displacement of these tiles brings the crime and violence associated with them inside the museum itself.

The international judging panel comprises Ute Meta Bauer. Dean of Fine Art, Royal College of Art, London, Adam Budak, International Curator for Contemporary Art, Hirshhorn Museum, Washington, Kathrin Becker, Head of Video Forum , nbk, Berlin, Karen MacKinnon, Curator, Glyn Vivian Art Gallery, Swansea, Tim Marlow, Exhibitions Director, White Cube, London, Sabine Schaschl. Director, Kunsthaus Baselland, Basel.

Presenting the prize, First Minister of Wales Carwyn Jones said:

“I would like to congratulate Teresa Margolles on winning Artes Mundi 5. The competition continues to go from strength to strength, and is truly international in its reach. It is a great privilege to be able to host the event in Wales and it plays a major role in our nation’s vibrant cultural scene.”

In association with Artes Mundi, the Derek Williams Trust Purchase Award of £30,000, to acquire a work by one of the shortlisted artists for Amgueddfa Cymru-National Museum Wales contemporary art collection, will go to Tania Bruguera for Displacement, 1998-99.

Howard Evans, Executive Trustee from Derek Williams Trust said

“The Trust is delighted to support the Museum and its partnership with Artes Mundi by funding the Derek Williams Purchase Prize Award. Our long-term support of this initiative has been of real importance to the Museum and its development of an ambitious collection of international contemporary art. The Award ensures that the very best international art will be seen here in Wales in the years to come.”

2012 will be founding board member William Wilkin’s last year as chairman. William Wilkins conceived Artes Mundi 12 years ago and retires after helping to facilitate many great achievements for both Artes Mundi and the contemporary visual arts in Wales. It was announced tonight that Mathew Prichard would be the next Chair of the Artes Mundi Board. His wide experience of the arts in Wales and elsewhere will be a great asset in the future development of the Prize. It will also mark Ben Borthwick’s final Artes Mundi as Artistic Director and CEO. Borthwick joined the organization after seven years at Tate Modern and having delivered a successful Artes Mundi 5, will be leaving to pursue international curatorial projects.

Bank of America Merrill Lynch is principal sponsor of the Artes Mundi 5 Exhibition and Prize which runs at National Museum Cardiff and Chapter until 13 January 2013. This year will also welcome the inclusion of an audience choice poll for the prize, allowing the public to vote for their favourite artist. The results of the poll will be revealed just before the close of the exhibition.

www.artesmundi.org
@ArtesMundi

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Bernard Kane and The Kane Players String Ensemble

Celebrating the release of their debut album, ‘Hiraeth: Longing for Home’, Bernard Kane and The Kane Players String Ensemble will perform all tracks in full at St John the Evangelist Church, Canton, Cardiff on November 30th at 7.30pm. In addition, there will be a world premier of Bernard’s setting of Dylan Thomas’ ‘And Death Shall Have No Dominion’ for soprano and strings featuring special guest Helen-Jane Howells.

‘Hiraeth: Longing for Home’ is a collection of original compositions by Bernard Kane. They have all been inspired either by rivers, or the sea and that sense of Hiraeth which can strike when one is away from home for any extensive period of time. These works reflect that: from the shores of Bermuda, in the Sargasso Sea, to Bardsey Sound in North Wales; the river Taff in South Wales and the dramatic coast of New South Wales.

Tickets are available for £8 in advance from www.wegottickets.com (search ‘The Kane Players’) or £10 at the door (cash only). For further details, please contact Bernard on 07968 390518 or Bernard.kanejr@gmail.com or check out the website www.bernard-kane.co.uk

 

Friday, November 30th, 2012

7.30pm
St John the Evangelist Church
St John’s Crescent
Canton
Cardiff
CF5 1NX

 

 

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Roundel blog

Join five of Wales’ most exciting artists for a unique evening of creativity and discovery at National Museum Cardiff on 8th November. Share their inspiration in the museum’s world-famous collections and enjoy privileged access to the Impressionist and Modern Art galleries. Refresh and develop your own drawing skills in the workshop of your choice. Wind down with the artists over refreshments and collect a goody bag of top quality STAEDTLER art materials.

Brendan Stuart Burns distils an intense engagement with landscape into paint. He will invite his group to explore ‘rhythms in space’ by responding expressively and intuitively to the Museum’s grand hall and a sound-track to create a dynamic temporary installation of 3-D drawings.

Laura Ford blends humour, melancholy and darkness in her work. Inspired by surrealism, she is interested in the ambiguities and implications of looking and being looked at. She has represented Wales at the Venice Biennale and is working on a commission to create four giant animal sculptures for Heidelberg.

Marega Palser, half of the performing partnership Mr and Mrs Clark, trained in fine art and dance. Her workshop aims to capture movement by testing her participants’ dexterity and following a dancer’s pattern of movement. She hopes her group will have fun while discovering new and liberating approaches to drawing.

Stephen West uses drawing as a primary art form, and marks – drawn, painted or chiseled – are his basic elements. Alongside sculpture by Epstein, Gill and Gaudier-Brzeska, he will encourage participants to use observation and mark-making in a variety of materials to explore what they see, combining primitive, dynamic and careful drawing.

Sue Williams makes canvas, theatre and film installations and sees drawing as urgent, immediate communication. Since 2003 she has made over 1,000 drawings investigating the ‘spaces in-between’. Joined by David Alston, Arts Director, Arts Council of Wales, her group will investigate the personal dialogue informing drawings by Rodin and Gwen John before creating their own.

Sue Grayson Ford, Campaign for Drawing Director comments, ”Each artist has shown enormous enthusiasm to make this event memorable. I am sure that participants will find their enthusiasm contagious – whether beginners or expert drawers. Thanks to STAEDTLER and Fabriano, this is also an opportunity to experiment with first-rate materials.”

Deborah Wood of National Museum Wales said, “We’ve always supported the Big Draw campaign at National Museum Cardiff and hold drawing activities annually for children, so we’re delighted to host something a little different for adults. This is a wonderful opportunity for people to participate in a creative and imaginative way and engage with well-known artists in the fantastic surroundings of the Impressionist and Modern Art galleries.

Come Draw with Me!
8 November, 6.00- 8.30pm
National Museum Cardiff

£25 ticket includes refreshments, all art materials for the evening, privileged entry to the museum and a goody bag of STAEDTLER products
only available on line from www.bigdrawshop.co.uk

Sponsored by STAEDTLER UK

Entry to the Museum is free, thanks to the support of the Welsh Assembly Government.

Find out more www.campaignfordrawing.org
@The_Big_Draw
www.facebook.com/CampaignforDrawing

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The Shining at the Angel Hotel

Darkened Rooms is a series of screenings of great films in unusual locations across Cardiff. It’s been a joint project between me, the Chapter Cinema team, Paul Allen of 2D Cinema and designer Matt Needle.

We kicked things off in February this year by showing The Shining in The Angel Hotel, which went alarmingly well – people really responded to the match of film to venue, the hotel staff were very supportive, and the universe very kindly made it snow that day to freak out those attending.

Since then, we’ve taken over Techniquest with two showings of Alien (well-timed to soothe cinemagoers after Prometheus’ crash landing) and returned to the Angel for New York Night, starring Woody Allen’s Manhattan, a Brooklyn pizzeria and a live band. After taking the summer off, we’re very happy to be back with a bunch of exciting events before the end of the year:

* Cinema Paradiso at The Globe, a former cinema itself, on Sunday 21st October, as part of the Made in Roath Festival.

* Ghostbusters at The Gate on Thursday 1st November (The Day Of The Dead).

* The acclaimed hip hop film Beats, Rhymes & Life at Clwb Ifor Bach on Friday 16th November as part of the Soundtrack Festival.

Find out more www.darkenedrooms.com
@darkenedrooms
www.facebook.com/DarkenedRooms 

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Lumen Prize web

The winners of the first competition for digitally-created fine art by artists from around the world were announced in Cardiff today.

Tommy Inberg from Upplands Väsby Sweden, won US$3000 for his evocative photomontage, Torn. Runner-up prize of US$1000 went to Patrick Van Roy, a Belgian artist, with his social commentary photomontage, the church, and third place went to Stephen Hilyard, artist and Associate Professor of Digital Arts at the University of Wisconsin, USA for a time-based work called One Life.

(c) Jo Mazelis

The Lumen Prize is based in the city of Cardiff as part of a three-year partnership with Cardiff Council. Ken Poole, the city’s head of economic development, said: “This partnership is another step forward as Cardiff generates a growing reputation for innovation and as a hub for creative industries. We are looking forward to working with the Lumen Prize during their world tour when the name of the capital of Wales will be associated with this far-sighted initiative. It will certainly help to showcase the city’s business credentials and encourage more digital investment into the city, which was recently boosted by a £11 million investment in superfast broadband.”

The winners were selected by an international jury panel from over 500 works submitted from over 30 countries globally, all of which  were created with a wide range of cutting-edge tools, including tablets, smartphones, digital photography software and moving-image technology.

“The extraordinary high quality of the Lumen Prize winners show that this genre of fine art is coming of age,” says Professor Gaynor Kavanagh, Dean of the Cardiff School of Art and Design, who awarded the prizes at a ceremony at City Hall.

Today’s three winners will also feature as part of The Lumen Prize Exhibition that will travel to venues worldwide starting in January 2013.

Find out more www.lumenprize.com
@Lumenprize


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