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Lalya Gaye
Since 2002
Works in Newcastle upon Tyne United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland

BIO
Born in 1978 in Geneva, Switzerland, Lalya Gaye is a Swedish and Senegalese-Malian digital media artist and interaction design researcher based in Newcastle upon Tyne, UK. At the convergence of art, technology, and design, her work explores the poetic integration of digital technology into everyday environments, behaviours, urban space and everyday artefacts, in order to grasp and revisit our physical and emotional relations to the everyday, to space and to distance. She builds public art installations with various media such as steel, light and sound, takes part in site-specific audio experiments, teaches digital media and interaction design at graduate level, delivers creative electronics workshops, and regularly organizes cross-disciplinary research workshops and small music and sound-art festivals.

Lalya received a B.Sc. in Physics at the University of Geneva, a M.Sc.Eng. in Electroacoustics at the Royal Institute of Technology (KTH) in Stockholm, worked several years at the Future Applications Lab, Viktoria Institute, worked on a PhD in Applied Information Technology at the University of Göteborg, and taught at the Interaction Design programme at Chalmers Technical University. In 2009, she was a Visiting Professor and Artist in Residence at the Digital + Media department at Rhode Island School of Design (Providence, RI, USA), before joining Culture Lab Newcastle in the UK in 2010. She is also a founding member of the Swedish art group Dånk! Collective from Göteborg, Sweden and was a steering committee member of the International Mobile Music Workshops series.
Discussions (4) Opportunities (7) Events (4) Jobs (0)
EVENT

DATA IS BEAUTIFUL – Arts | DATA VISUALIZATION IN ARTS, SCIENCE AND DESIGN – INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM AND EXHIBITION


Dates:
Tue Oct 02, 2012 00:00 - Fri Oct 05, 2012

Location:
Budapest, Hungary

//Data Visualisations are new knowledge practices that aim to make complex information accessible through visual means and, discover new patterns and meanings in life.

//Whilst the data boom of recent years has brought huge amounts of unprocessed data, simultaneously more and more creative tools have emerged that make access to and working with digital data simpler.

//Bridging the arts, sciences and design, data visualisation has become one of the most prominent creative practices. With its origin in info-graphics and scientific visual analysis, this emerging crossdisciplinary territory presents us with new potentials that need to be tackled.

//Our aspiration is to accentuate the future facets of this rapidly evolving practice by bringing together creative communities and sharing inspiring ideas, new findings, critical theories and contemporary practices.

//Events and activities will create a diverse platform of knowledge exchange for artists, scientists and designer including symposiums, an exhibition, workshops, hacking events, demo talks and a concert.

(PS: posting this information on behalf of Dr Brigitta Zics, Culture Lab Newcastle)


OPPORTUNITY

Call for Applications - AHRC Collaborative Doctoral Award (PhD), Digital Art


Deadline:
Fri Aug 24, 2012 23:59

Location:
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland

AHRC Collaborative Doctoral Award (PhD), Digital Art
Closing Date: 24th August 2012
Duration of the award: 3 year PhD
More information: http://www.ncl.ac.uk/postgraduate/funding/search/list/sac12

This collaborative doctoral project will be a partnership between FACT Liverpool and Newcastle University's Culture Lab, and provides a unique opportunity for an ambitious practitioner who can gain invaluable academic and real life experience that is new in its kind.

Project Title: 'Living Laboratories: Enhancing Audience Engagement through Making and Curating Digital Art'

This practice-based research focuses on the currently evolving questions of digital art works, their importance as cultural products, and their place in the institutional settings of the cultural sector in the age of information technology. This research project will critically engage with digital art production, participatory forms and practices, current schemes and models of curatorial (institutional models) and production spaces (labs) of digital artworks. It aims to bridge practices and methodologies between the fields of art practice, audience research and human-computer interaction (HCI). Research project might be linked to existing FACT initiatives as Media Facades; Connected Cities (Telepresence); Art, Content management and Personal Data; or Talent lab.

Supervisors

Dr Brigitta Zics, Culture Lab, Newcastle University
Prof Mike Stubbs, FACT Liverpool

CDA PhD Host Institutions

Culture Lab is a world class, interdisciplinary research facility with cutting-edge kit for carrying out research in areas of experimental media, digital interaction, film and video, design fabrication, cultural ecologies, and the digital humanities.

FACT (Foundation for Art and Creative Technology) has been leading the UK video, film and new media arts scene for 20 years with groundbreaking exhibitions, education and research projects.

Eligibility

Candidates are advised to check the AHRC's guidance on eligibility for studentship awards which can be found on pp. 69-73: http://www.ahrc.ac.uk/FundingOpportunities/Documents/GuidetoStudentFunding.pdf
The expected starting date is October 2012.

Person Specification

Candidates should hold a first degree at undergraduate level and a masters degree or have a proven track record of working continuously within industry or professional practice for a minimum of three years. The candidate might have a background in digital art & digital design, creativity and HCI or digital humanities. They would benefit from having understanding of curatorial practices, challenges of working in arts industry environment or applications of practice-based and HCI methodologies.

How to Apply

You must complete the University's postgraduate application form (http://www.ncl.ac.uk/postgraduate/apply/form/). Select ‘PhD School of Arts and Culture (full time), Digital Media’ as the programme of study. Only mandatory fields need to be completed (no personal statement required) but you must attach a copy of your CV and a covering letter, quoting the title of the studentship and reference number SAC12.

Further Information
For further details, please contact Dr Brigitta Zics:
Tel: +44 (0)191 246 4644
Email: brigitta.zics@ncl.ac.uk


OPPORTUNITY

Call for Applications - M.A. in Creative Arts Practice, Culture Lab Newcastle, UK


Deadline:
Tue Jul 31, 2012 23:59

Location:
Newcastle upon Tyne, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland

We are pleased to announce that Newcastle University's new M.A. (Master of Arts) in Creative Arts Practice is now open for applications!

One of the first transdisciplinary M.A. courses in the UK, this programme offers a unique combination of creative disciplines within a vibrant arts community and world-class research facilities.

Based at the University’s cutting-edge research hub Culture Lab Newcastle in the middle of the vibrant city of Newcastle upon Tyne, this innovative and flexible M.A. is a practice-based and transdisciplinary programme that focuses on emerging creative practices and creative entrepreneurship in the digital age. The aim of the programme is to train young professionals in critical thinking and provide them with cutting-edge skills that will help them respond to the requirements of the rapidly growing culture sector and creative industries.

The M.A. is targeting artists, designers, musicians, writers, computer scientists and practitioners who are interested in expending their work portfolio by applying novel approaches to creative disciplines through transdisciplinary practice, and in learning new technologies and skills. They will have the opportunity to explore a broad range of fields including film, music, creative writing, theatre, fine art, digital media and creative computing, in a creative and collaborative environment.

More information and instructions on how to apply can be found here:
http://www.ncl.ac.uk/postgraduate/taught/subjects/digitalmedia/courses/658


EVENT

Connected Communities - "United We Act" book publication


Dates:
Thu May 31, 2012 15:05 - Thu May 31, 2012

The Creative Media Team at SiDE/Culture Lab Newcastle is pleased to announce the publication of a book entitled "United We Act: a Scoping Study and a Symposium on Connected Communities".

This book is a follow-up to a scoping study conducted within the AHRC (Arts and Humanities Research Council) programme "Connected Communities", and to an international symposium on the same topic which was held at Culture Lab last september and gathered an interdisciplinary group of artists, academics, practitioners and members of communities from across the world.
http://side-creative.ncl.ac.uk/communities/
It contains the said scoping study, an extended bibliography and descriptions of the projects that were presented during the symposium.

The book is sold "at cost" and is currently available at: http://www.lulu.com/shop/joëlle-bitton-and-andreia-cavaco-and-lalya-gaye-and-ben-jones/united-we-act-a-scoping-study-and-a-symposium-on-connected-communities/paperback/product-20122783.html
In a few weeks it will also be available on Amazon.

We hope you will enjoy reading it!


EVENT

Connected Communities Symposium @ Culture Lab


Dates:
Mon Sep 12, 2011 10:00 - Wed Sep 14, 2011

Location:
Newcastle Upon Tyne, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland

Culture Lab Newcastle is hosting an international interdisciplinary event open to the general public, on the topic of “connected communities”.
This symposium includes talks and projects from theorists and practitioners alike.
Registration is now open: 
http://side-creative.ncl.ac.uk/communities/symposium11/registrations/

TOPIC
In an era where digital technologies have supported transnational forms of connectedness and the efficiency of grassroot movements,
communities are once again looked at as innovative fertile grounds for alternative social organisation.
As these trends can be manipulated by current governmental agendas, the Connected Communities symposium aims to critically explore notions of community, as evolving with the creative uses and the effects of digital technologies.
The topic will be addressed in 4 different contexts :
- A conference over 3 days, with talks selected from submitted expressions of interests under the topics of: Collective Action, Participative Platforms, Engagement,
Economies, Transnational, (Hi)stories, Technology & Society, Community Art, and Co-Creation.
- An exhibition at Culture Lab OnSite, centred on the notions of community and digital media. This will include blogs, documentation of community-based art workshops,
art and ethnographic projects. The exhibition will run until the 18th of September.
- A half a day workshop using the symposium as a temporary community of practice to explore deeper questions of community.
Registration is limited to 15 people and will be opened soon.
- A Beats and Pieces party at the local community space Star and Shadow (http://www.starandshadow.org.uk/).

PROGRAMME
For a detailed programme of the conference, please visit:
http://side-creative.ncl.ac.uk/communities/symposium11/conference/

FEE
The symposium, all events included, are FREE of charge and open to all.

REGISTRATION
As we only have limited space available, please register in advance to the conference in order to avoid disappointment:
- Day 1: http://connectedcommunitiesncl2011day1.eventbrite.com/
- Day 2: http://connectedcommunitiesncl2011day2.eventbrite.com/
- Day 3: http://connectedcommunitiesncl2011day3.eventbrite.com/

CONTACT AND INFORMATION
For more information, please email us at ConnComm2011@gmail.com and/or visit the symposium website:
http://side-creative.ncl.ac.uk/communities/symposium11/

ORGANISERS
Joëlle Bitton, Lalya Gaye, Andreia Cavaco, Ben Jones, Graeme Mearns and Atau Tanaka (SiDE, Culture Lab Newcastle)
Ranald Richardson (SiDE, Center for Urban & Regional Development Studies, Newcastle University)
http://side-creative.ncl.ac.uk/communities/
http://culturelab.ncl.ac.uk/
http://www.ncl.ac.uk/curds/
The symposium is funded by the AHRC research program “Connected communities” and SiDE research program at Culture Lab.
http://www.ahrc.ac.uk/
http://www.side.ac.uk/