An interview with film-maker Ivan Barge about his award-winning short film “Madam Black”

Ivan Barge HeadshotIvan Barge directed the multi-award winning, Madam Black, a deliciously dark comedy with novel use for a dead cat.

On the way home from work, Marcus runs over a cat.  He meets its young owner, Tilly and tells her that Madam Black has gone on a round-the-world trip. When Tilly asks for evidence, Marcus promises to bring Madame Black’s postcards to her.

Hilariously funny and also charming, despite the slightly edgy use of a dead feline, Madam Black was a favourite with Edinburgh audiences this year, what was the inspiration behind the film?

Matthew Harris wrote the script and he was inspired by a couple of things. An unfortunate accident he had with a kitten that he stood on in the middle of night while nursing his crying baby, it was touch and go for a while but fortunately the kitten came through, however it never really purred the same again. As well as a story recounted by Dora iamant, the lover of author Franz Kafka. According to Diamant, she and Kafka met a little girl in a park who was crying because she had lost her doll. Kafka told her not to worry since the doll was away on a trip and would be sending correspondence.

Madam Black Scene from Ivan Barge on Vimeo.

How much of a challenge was it to obtain a lifelike cat corpse? Co-incidentally, someone I know is making a film that features roadkill, any advice?

It was really hard, we were two weeks out from shooting with no cat, which given the story was problematic. But my art director managed to find one at the eleventh hour, which meant all the postcards in the film had to be composited, as the stills shoot with the cat had to happen after the film as there just wasn’t enough time. I would suggest trying vets, we had a few options, but they weren’t quite right, ‘Madam Tortoiseshell’ doesn’t quite have the same ring to it.

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Has the cat loving community in New Zealand taken to the film, or do you get hate mail from cat fanciers?

There has been no hate mail thus far, in fact we won the Audience Award at the New Zealand International Film Festival and I’m sure there were a few cat lovers in the audience. It’s not like we put a hit out on a cat, although that would have been tempting given how close to the shoot we were when we finally managed to source one.

Thankfully when we got her ‘Madam Black’ had already passed into the afterlife, although there seems to be some truth in the proverb ‘A cat has nine lives’. She’s been immortalised onscreen and has had a festival run which doesn’t seem to want to end, we are 21 months in.

We especially loved the ending, where Madam Black marries another cat and settles down in Scotland (apparantly inside Eilean Donan castle!) Was that always in the script or were you just trying to impress us? A lazy writer might have got them married in Paris for example!

I had to go back to the script to answer that, as it’s been so long, Matt is a very visual writer and so he scripted most of the destinations such as Pisa, as wells as the forced perspective in that shot, and the Taj Mahal. However there was a bit of leeway with Scotland, Ginger Tom is scripted as wearing a kilt and they are both standing beside a wedding car.

I treated the postcards and the backdrops as a whole, I wanted the audience to think that perhaps the character ‘Marcus’ had bought them somewhere as a job lot, I wanted them to feel if as if they were part of the same world. I came up with some reference in terms of tone and photos of places that were shot as close to the angle we needed, so we had the right perspective.

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Local illustrator, James Stewart, nailed it and it’s a testament to collaborating with talented people, he took what I gave him and made something much better than I could ever have imagined. From there we had a lot of fun introducing foreground elements, such as props and wardrobe, to bring his 2d images to live.

In the wedding scene, we didn’t have money for a cat tuxedo and there are not to many available at the hire shops. So that’s a piece of MDF with a suit painted on to it, with the cats head and paws poking out.

As a child I spent a lot of time in the Highlands, my father lived in Inverness, it’s such a magical place that it seemed the perfect location for a cat wedding. It probably could have been any number of castles in that part of the world, but I found an image of Eileen Donan that felt like a great fit.

What changes to the film did the challenges of shooting it lead to?

We went into the shoot after a lot of read throughs, both between myself and the writer and the cast. As well as a storyboard for every frame, not that you have to be that rigid, but it meant we went into the shoot with a blueprint, which helped immensely.

They say there is the film you imagined, the film you shot and the one you edited. That certainly was the case with ‘Madam Black’, particular the ending which was not working in the edit. The film finished at the party scene which felt abrupt and so a year after the shoot we did a pick up. We shot an album of the postcards over the shoulder of Pearl Everard, who plays ‘Tilly’, we had to as kids grow up so quickly.

It’s the final shot in the film, it add’s a comic beat but more importantly it gave us a full stop.

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What are you planning next and will it still be a comedy?

I’ve got a couple of feature projects at the early stages, I suspect there will be a few laughs in both, but like ‘Madam Black’ they are are a mixture of comedy and pathos, ‘make them laugh, make them cry, make them wait’. I like stories that mirror life, in our saddest moments there is often laughter and vice versa. It’s how we cope.

Matt is writing a script and I will be excited to read that as they are alway a joy. He creates wonderfully original narratives, he understands structure and writes fantastic dialogue. On top of that, I just love working with him, as he’s a great collaborator.

Also I have an adaptation of Laurence Fearnley’s novel ‘Edwin & Matilda (An Unlikely Love Story)’ in development with the New Zealand Film Commission. Martha Hardy-Ward, who wrote ‘Ellen is Leaving’ which won Jury Awards at SXSW and San Francisco a few years ago, is working on the second draft which I should get back at the end of April.

With film you never know what’s going to stick, what’s going to get made and so you just have to keep plugging away.

 

http://www.edinburghshortfilmfestival.com/


The Future of Tourism in Europe: Promoting Competitiveness Through Sustainability and Digitisation

public policy exchangeThe tourism industry is of great socio-economic importance for the European Union, accounting for 10% of EU GDP and employing about 12 million people (Eurostat, 2015). According to the latest report by the United Nations World Tourism Organization (UNTWO), a market share of 40.3% of the global international tourist arrivals are directed to the EU-28, making Europe the most sought-after destination in the world. Eurostat data published in January 2017, further confirms the good health of EU tourism, indicating that the number of nights spent in tourist accommodation establishments rose by 4% in 2015, totalling 2.8 billion.

In recognition of the industry’s significant role in driving pan-European job creation and economic growth, the European Commission has introduced various initiatives, particularly aimed at promoting sustainability, accessibility, culture, and at boosting low season and coastal tourism. The Virtual Tourism Observatory, the Digital Tourism Network, and the tourism managing tool, European Tourism Indicators System (ETIS), have been established to modernise European tourism and improve connectivity and competitiveness. In addition, the campaign ‘Europe. Wonder is all Around’ has provided an innovative platform for promoting a plethora of diverse, sustainable and high quality travel destinations across the continent.

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As tourists become more independent, connected and conscious of sustainability issues, Europe needs to embrace, and adapt to, their changing profile and priorities, and become better at promoting so-called smart destinations. New technologies moreover offer challenges and opportunities for European tourism. Whilst businesses need to adopt the latest digital technologies to remain competitive, research demonstrates that the smaller the business, the lower the rate of adoption of digital technologies (Report of the Strategic Policy Forum on Digital Entrepreneurship, 2016). In addition to digitising the sector, Europe needs to take opportunities to integrate culture and technology in new and innovative ways, targeting strategic investment in areas where it can be a world leader, such as cultural tourism.

This symposium will provide delegates with an invaluable opportunity to analyse the strategic role for the tourism sector in supporting economic and employment growth in Europe, and consider how opportunities offered by cultural tourism can be capitalised upon. Attendees will also scrutinise the challenges and prospects associated with the digitalisation of the sector and explore how ICTs can be better integrated into tourism and travel related services. The symposium will promote the exchange of ideas and encourage delegates to engage in thought-provoking debate.

Delegates will:

  • Examine initiatives implemented by the EU to promote and support tourism
  • Consider the economic and non-economic challenges facing the European tourism industry
  • Discuss the challenges and opportunities presented by digitisation and reflect on its implications for competitiveness and job creation
  • Assess how to improve digital competency and foster digital literacy amongst operators within the sector
  • Learn from successful projects on how to positively implement sustainability indicators systems such as the ETIS
  • Analyse strategies to boost city tourism
  • Engage in interactive discussions with stakeholders and trendsetters in the field of tourism
  • Share best practice of successful innovation projects to increase tourism accessibility

For further details, please refer to the enclosed event brochure. Do feel free to circulate this information to relevant colleagues within your organisation.

In the meantime, to ensure your organisation is represented, please book online or complete and return the registration form at your earliest convenience in order to secure your delegate place(s).

Flyer of the event (PDF, 1 Mb


Flower Power 2017, Miguel Chevalier: spring campaign LOVE IN BLOOM, Jing An Kerry Centre, Shanghai (China)

Miguel Chevalier has created three monumental installations, especially for the Jing An Kerry Centre in Shanghai, that are an ode to nature, announcing and celebrating the arrival of Spring.

 

“Digital Water Lilies” is a new site-specific virtual interactive garden that comes alive after sunset on the Piazza of the Jing An Kerry Centre, next to the former house of Chairman Mao. It’s a lush parterre of flowers and different varieties of luminescent plants. In this garden Miguel has included some varieties of flowers rich with symbolism and good auspices during the Spring in China, such as African lilies, Orchids, Camellias and Peach Tree flowers. Flowers appear randomly, come to full blossom and fade away, only to be reborn again. The garden renews itself time after time, constantly changing and flourishing into its summer glory. As visitors walk around the 600m² flower carpet, the garden senses them and shifts around them with the flowers opening up paths of discovery. As a new form of “Digital Impressionism”, the title and the cosmic sensibility of the work play homage to Monet and his research on light, seasons and nature.

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Digital Water Lilies 2017, Miguel Chevalier
South Piazza, Jing An Kerry Centre, Shanghai (China)
Software: Claude Micheli
Technical Production: Voxels Productions
Courtesy Puerta Roja Gallery – Hong Kong

 

The second installation, “Trans-Natures” transforms the Jing An Kerry Centre tunnel into a lush 360-degree garden of mysterious arborescence, hiding and revealing flowers which generate a symphony of luminescent forms and colours. “Trans-Natures” announces the revival of nature. The stationary frescos on the walls are accompanied by four interactive virtual flowerbeds projected on the ground thus creating a fully immersive sensation.

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Trans-Natures 2017, Miguel Chevalier
B2 tunnel, Jing An Kerry Centre, Shanghai (China)
Software: Claude Micheli
Technical Production: Voxels Productions
Courtesy Puerta Roja Gallery – Hong Kong

 

The last installation, “Dreamed Gardens” transforms two of the glass bridges at the Jing An Kerry Centre into huge colored stained glass windows, rich with translucent imagery. During the day, the soft light and richness of colour creates a magical environment reflected on the floor and ceiling and embracing visitors.

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Dreamed Gardens 2017, Miguel Chevalier
L3 Bridges, Jing An Kerry Centre, Shanghai (China)
Technical Production: Voxels Productions
Courtesy Puerta Roja Gallery – Hong Kong 

Miguel Chevalier’s immersive environments place visitors at the heart of a reinvented nature, an intriguing and poetic botanical universe, a place between dreams and reality. His installations surprise us by creating a new poetic relationship between art and vegetation, and recreating the conditions of symbiosis between humankind and this reinvented Nature.


Workshop on “Advances in Digital Cultural Heritage”

ADCH

In Madeira it is organised a Workshop on “Advances in Digital Cultural Heritage”, next 28th of June 2017.

This Workshop aims to bring together experts, stakeholders, policy makers and leaders from the domain, addressing current challenges in the field and continuing the multidisciplinary dialogue of our Action.

Call for Papers: PDF, 2 Mb

Expected contributions include technical papers (presenting recent advances on Digital Cultural Heritage) and project papers (describing Digital Cultural Heritage major outcomes).

Selected and presented papers will be published as a chapter in a Springer-Nature book (Advances on Digital Cultural Heritage) reflecting the breakthroughs and future perspectives of Digital Cultural Heritage.

The conference will be held in one of the most beautiful Europe’s islands: Madeira, Portugal.

Important Dates:

• EXTENDED Submission: 27th May 2017

• Notification of Acceptance: 9th June 2017

• Camera-ready for publication: 23th June 2017

For paper submission please go to:

https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=dch20170

The workshop will be co-allocated with the 23rd ICE/IEEE ITMC Conference. Workshop participants should register in the conference, taking advantage of all conference’s plenary keynotes, sessions, coffee-breaks, meals and social program.

For more information, please go to the conference webpage: http://www.ice-conference.org

The workshop will be organized in collaboration with:

  • COST Action TD1406
  • H2020 ViMM
  • DARIAH-CY
  • H2020 INCEPTION
  • Europeana Task Force Group on Advanced documentation of 3D digital assets
  • SHCity
  • ITN-DHC

 


e-AGE 2017 “Education, Science and Innovation”

e-AGE 2017 BannerThe e-AGE conference had established itself as an important venue for networking among experts and scientists. In 2017, e-AGE will be held under the patronage of His Excellency Ahmed Aboul-Gheit, the secretary general of the League of Arab States in Cairo, Egypt during 3 – 4 December 2017.

In e-AGE 2017, the focus will be on  Intercontinental Connectivity, and how internetworking has contributed to Science and Innovation. The e-Infrastructure has evolved in the Arab region at both national and regional levels as more than 17 National Research and Education Networks (NRENs) in the Arab countries. At the regional level, ASREN announced the operation of the Arabian Global Educational Open PoP (AGE-OP) in London in cooperation with GEANT. In short words, e-AGE 2017 is coming with “EDUCATIONSCIENCE AND INNOVATION” as the main theme of the conference and all activities will be centered on it.

e-AGE 2017 will include events, workshops and meetings centered around the following themes:

  • The 10th Event on Euro-Mediterranean e-Infrastructure
  • The 7th annual meeting of ASREN
  • AROQA 9th Annual Conference
  • EUMEDCONNECT3 and Africaconnect2 Project Meetings
  • Technical workshops on R&E networking

Moreover, special sessions will be dedicated to specific domains, mainly focusing on experiences in connectivity and e-Infrastructure, applications and services across a variety of scientific domains. It is also important to show how research infrastructure creates tangible benefits to communities and collaborations. It is still critical to demonstrate how research connectivity can promote collaboration and innovation. Different discussions will be stimulated during e-AGE to drive outcomes and concrete results on practical steps towards developing a regional e-Infrastructure.

Website: http://asrenorg.net/eage2017


e-AGE 2017 / Call for Papers, Presentations, Posters and Participation

e-AGE 2017 Banner

Under The Patronage of His Excellency Ahmed Aboul-Gheit Secretary General of the League of Arab States

e-AGE 2017 Call for Papers, Presentations, Posters and Participation
7th International Platform on Integrating Arab e-Infrastructure in a Global Environment
League of Arab States, Cairo, Egypt, 3-4 December, 2017

“EDUCATION, SCIENCE AND INNOVATION”
Integrating Arab e-infrastructure in a Global Environment, e-AGE, is an annual international conference organized by the Arab States Research and Education Network, ASREN. Since the launch of ASREN in December 2010 at the League of Arab States, it was decided to organize e-AGE every year in an Arab country. e-AGE is in line with ASREN’s major objectives that are related to dissemination and awareness, promotion of research collaboration and joint activities, and establishment of research networks in the Arab region and worldwide.

e-AGE is meant to be the launching pad for Research and Education connectivity and cooperation. It brings together ASREN, EUMEDCONNECT, AfricaConnect, GÉANT, AfREN and INTERNET2 stakeholders and the region’s foremost innovators, leaders, scientists, and businesses to discuss and debate new models of innovation, integration of research and education networks, policies for sustainable development in education, means of knowledge sharing and dissemination, capacity building programs, and region-wide e- infrastructure deployment to tackle today’s crises in climate change, global economy, food, water scarcity, alternative energy, and environmental issues. The forum can lay the foundation for a dream of many of today’s leaders towards a global e-infrastructure for R&E, based on real life inclusiveness beyond any political protocols.

Authors are invited to submit full papers reporting on their original and unpublished research in e-Infrastructures and computational and data-intensive sciences. All papers will be peer-reviewed and accepted papers will be published in the conference proceedings.
Topics of interest include, but not limited to:

  • Scientific computing and data-intensive e-Science in the scientific areas related to energy, environment, health, climate, water, agriculture, biology, economy, medicine, as well as in social sciences and humanities.
  • Perspectives on NRENs, including challenges, operation, sustainability, funding, governance, business models, security and services.
  • Problem-solving environments, Virtual Research Environments, Science Gateways and collaborative tools, applications and services
  • Education and e-Learning Technologies, access to educational resources, repositories, libraries and contents, clouds, grids, parallel and distributed computing, and high performance computing.
  • Internet technologies and trends, Internet of Things, Security, SDN and AAIs.

More Information: www.asrenorg.net

Download the Call for Papers (PDF, 379 Kb)


Join the Group of Experts for the creation of the EU H2020 Manifesto on Digital Heritage and Virtual Museums

u0-bXc87_400x400Virtual Multimodal Museum (ViMM – www.vi-mm.eu) is a high-visibility and participative Coordination and Support Action (CSA), funded under the EU Horizon 2020 programme (CULT-COOP-8-2016). ViMM brings together Europe and the world’s leading public and private sector organisations working on Virtual Museums and in the wide sector of Digital Cultural Heritage (DCH) to support high quality policy development, decision making and the use of technical advances. The partner consortium (see below) will be supported by an expert Advisory Group in building the ViMM Framework, involving decision-makers and practitioners in defining and resolving issues spread across 7 interlinked Thematic Areas (‘the 7 Ds’): Definitions, Directions, Documentation, Dimensions, Demand, Discovery and Decisions.

Login/Register on our platform and join the Group of Experts: www.vi-mm.eu

Major results will include:

/ A highly interactive and wide-reaching ViMM communication platform which will:

  • enable focused contributions and discussion by everyone interested
  • represent excellence in Virtual Museums and DCH
  • provide a decision-support tool for stakeholders

/ Key events at policy and practitioner/ stakeholder levels and extensive use of the media

/ A clearer, evidence-based view of the impact of Virtual Museums and Digital Cultural Heritage on society and the economy

The final result of the project will be the EU H2020 Manifesto and Roadmap for Action, which will be validated at the final ViMM international conference in 2019.

Please activate the Login option and register on the platform!

Join, follow and like us on: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/virtualmultimodalmuseum
Join us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/vimmuseum

List of consortium partners:

  • CYPRUS UNIVERSITY OF TECHNOLOGY Cyprus / Digital Heritage Research Lab – Coordinator
  • FOUNDATION FOR RESEARCH AND TECHNOLOGY HELLAS Greece
  • 7REASONS MEDIEN GMBH Austria
  • UNIVERSITE DE GENEVE Switzerland
  • STIFTUNG PREUSSISCHER KULTURBESITZ Germany
  • UNIVERSIDAD POMPEU FABRA Spain

OPEN CALL Ar(t)chaeology: Intersections of photography and archaeology

This Call invites artists who particularly work with photography to respond to the theme of the International Association of Photography and Theory’s first collaborative project entitled Ar(t)chaeology: Intersections of photography and archaeology. The project will run from May to December 2017 and will include regular meetings and a creative process that will result in an exhibition, a parallel one-day seminar, and a visual publication, which will negotiate themes that are considered central to this project.

The project seeks to investigate the relationship between archaeology and contemporary art photography. Cyprus, an island, the identity of which was born out of contested histories and conflicting narratives, can serve as a case study for the examination of the connection between these two seemingly diverse fields of practice. On the one hand, archaeology in Cyprus is usually seen as the meticulous, objectivity-driven, study of objects, artifacts, and material culture, which often uses photography as a tool for purposes of documentation, archiving, and representation. On the other hand, contemporary art photography can be seen as an entirely different practice to archaeological processes of presentation and preservation. Yet, both archaeology and contemporary art photography are connected by a common engagement with ideas beyond the tactile, and with an equally significant – often indirect – fascination with affect.

More specifically, the project wishes to include works that:
•   Explore the role of the artist as archaeologist
•   View the photographic archive as a space of archaeological excavation
•   Address the politics of archaeology (and photography)
•   Involve processes of archaeology and photography
•   Investigate the relationship between museums, archaeology and photography
• Address issues of authenticity, originality, the counterfeit and fictitious in archaeology and photography
•   Approach critically archaeological knowledge and narratives
•   Re-invent archaeological sites of knowledge through photographic practices
•   Offer alternative forms of preserving the past through photography
•   Explore notions of “extend” (space) and “duration” (time) in both archaeology and photography
•   Reflect critically on the intersections of photography, archaeology and ethnography
•   Engage with landscapes and other fabrics of heritage in photographs
•   Explore – and ‘exploit’ – ruins, absences and erasures through photography

Important Deadlines:
Phase I, DEADLINE FOR PROPOSALS | Sunday, May 21st, 2017: Submission of proposals for existing ongoing works or new productions. Proposals need to be a maximum of 300 words and to clearly describe the proposed work, its concept and rationale, and its expected contribution to the general themes of the exhibition. They must also be accompanied by short biographies of participating artist(s) (up to 200 words) and, depending on the project, by visual material and technical specifications. All proposals must be submitted electronically to [IAPT] at: info@photographyandtheory.com. The submitted proposals will be reviewed, and up to 15 proposals will be selected, by an invited Selection Committee based on artistic and conceptual merit. Artists will be notified on the selection by Sunday, June 9th, 2017. A small budget will be made available to the participants for the realization of their work.

Phase II, COLLABORATION / WORK PREPARATION |From June, 2017 to December, 2017:
Selected artists/photographers will then have six months to finalize their projects and prepare for the exhibition. The process of preparing for the exhibition will be based on a collaborative and dialogic exchange between artists and between artists and members of the selection committee and the exhibition coordinator. For this reason, at least four meetings will be scheduled which selected artists will have to attend. During these meetings, artists will be given the opportunity to exchange ideas, discuss their process and progress and offer their constructive feedback for the completion of all projects.
Download the call (PDF, 78 Kb)

Website: http://photographyandtheory.com/


Education and Museum: Cultural Heritage and Learning

edmuse

EdMuse project – Education and Museum: Cultural Heritage for science learning is a two-year Strategic Partnership (2015-2017) funded by the EU Programme Erasmus+, Key Action 2 Cooperation for innovation and the exchange of good practices.

The project works for the promotion of initiatives, starting from primary school, for using ICT, open educational and digital resources of cultural heritage for the improvement of science learning. The EdMuseaim is to promote new ways of learning and teaching through innovative methods, using technologies and open digital resources that can be non-formal content for designing the curricula. It also proposes a new approach for the cooperation between schools and museums.

The Sapienza University, coordinator in the Erasmus+ Edmuse project, in cooperation with the Michael Culture Association, organizes an International Conference to disseminate the results of the initiative and to provide a place of discussion on the importance of cultural heritage in learning environment.

DATE AND TIME
Mon, Jun 26, 2017, 8:00 AM – Tue, Jun 27, 2017, 8:00 AM CEST

LOCATION
Sapienza University of Rome
5 Piazzale Aldo Moro 00185 Roma

REGISTRATION

CONFERENCE PROGRAM Available soon!

For any enquiries, please contact edmuse2015 @ gmail.com.

We look forward to seeing you at the conference “Education and Museum: Cultural Heritage and Learning”.

Website: http://www.edmuse.eu


PREFORMA presented at OPATL in Girona

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Sònia Oliveras i Artau from Girona City Council, one of the memory institutions participating as procurers in PREFORMA, presented the PREFORMA project to the Permanent Observatory of Archives and Local Televisions (OPATL) in Girona.

 

Permanent Observatory of Archives and Local Televisions (OPATL) is a collaboration project started in 2008 with its main aim to preserve the local television heritage at the regions of Catalonia and Andorra.

 

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The annual plenary meeting of OPATL took place in Girona the 27th March. In this plenary meeting there were 35 professionals attendees of 18 institutions who manage local audiovisual heritage.

The professionals focused their questions on the presentation of the conformance checker results and on the file format selected.