On Demand
BEYOND 2021 – Belfast
Watch on demand sessions from BEYOND 2021, with over 80 speakers across a two day schedule packed full of insight, innovation and inspiration. A hybrid conference, catch up on sessions recoded at Titanic in Belfast as well as many that featured on our online platform.
20 October 2021
Introducing BEYOND+
Susan Hayes Culleton, BEYOND MC , HayesCulleton Group
Opening Keynote: Sir Peter Bazalgette+
Sir Peter Bazalgette, Chairman, ITV plc
The New Heavy Industries: Building Belfast’s Creative Economy+
The Screen Media Innovation Lab (SMIL) is bringing Virtual Production facilities to support the fast growing creative economy of Northern Ireland, but the vision goes beyond physical infrastructure. This session tells the story of how SMIL came about and asks what is the real value and true potential of both Virtual Production and SMIL.
Prof Anthony Lilley OBE, Co-Director, Scenario Two
Dr Declan Keeney, Director of the Ulster Screen Academy, Ulster University
Eric Carney, Founder/CTO, The Third Floor
Fiona McLaughlin, Co-founding Director, TAUNT Ltd
John Greer, Director of Economic Development, Belfast City Council
Ministerial Address: Communities Minister Deirdre Hargey+
Deirdre Hargey, Minister for Communities of Northern Ireland, welcomes BEYOND attendees to Belfast.
Deirdre Hargey, Minister for Communities , Northern Ireland Executive (Sinn Fein)
Building (the) Dream+
This workshop and live demo will step through some of the technical processes and tools used to create Dream, the Royal Shakespeare Company collaboration with the Philharmonia, Marshmallow Laser Feast and Manchester International Festival, and explore the power of these technologies to create new digital stages for performance. Led by Dream movement director Sarah Perry and performer Maggie Bain (who played Cobweb) this is an opportunity to see the technological processes used and learn how performance makers are adapting their craft for these new mediums.
James Turnbull, Producer, Royal Shakespeare Company
Maggie Bain, Actor, Royal Shakespeare Company
Sarah Ellis, Director of Digital Development, Royal Shakespeare Company
Sarah Perry, Movement Director, Royal Shakespeare Company
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Fuelling the Future: How to Build New Place-Based Talent Pipelines+
At a time when the UK government is talking about national skills shortages across multiple sectors, is it time for the Creative Industries to take a different track, and time to recognise that skills issues in regional and local creative economies need regional and local solutions?
But can place-based talent pipelines be created and nurtured to successfully fuel growth in regional and local creative economies? How are different places across the UK approaching the question of where we need to get to and how we can get there? Where is this working and who can we learn from?
Dominic Lusardi, Advisor/NED, Digital Thinkers
Emma Turner, Head of Film CPD and Future Skills, ScreenSkills
Professor Frank Lyons MBE, Interim Executive Dean of Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences, Ulster University
Ms Rachel Nicholson, Head of Institution, Backstage Academy
Rosalind Coleman, Producer, Punchdrunk
Structuring Sustainable Success: Place-Based Investment and Infrastructure+
The recent Logan Review in Scotland identified ‘Education and Talent’ as one of the three fundamental pillars for a successful Technology Ecosystem.
Building on the previous session around talent pipelines, experts in funding and business development from Scotland and NI discuss the two other essential dependencies identified in the Logan Review – social/ physical infrastructure and funding – and explore how these map to strategies already in process to support screen and data-driven tech (AI/ AR/ VR) within the two regions.
Professor Chris Speed, Director Creative Informatics, University of Edinburgh
Ian Browne, COO, Ignite NI
Richard Williams, Chief Executive, Northern Ireland Screen
Gruff Rhys Hissing Currents/Seeking New Gods and the BBC audio orchestra+
Clwstwr is pleased to bring you an audio experiment specifically designed for Gruff Rhys latest solo record – Seeking New Gods. As part of his Clwstwr-funded project, Hissing Currents, Gruff and Kliph Scurlock partnered with the BBC R&D team and delved into sound via the Audio Orchestrator Tool. Jon Francombe from the BBC R&D team joined them on their journey of exploration all supported by Robin Moore and Ingrid Murphy. The team set out to challenge the traditional record release and create an immersive surround sound home set up. During this discussion you’ll hear directly from the makers, learn that this experiment pushed this record into the top 10 as it outsold Elton John and be invited to try the experiment for yourselves. NB: For the experiment you’ll need at least 4 devices (e.g. 1 desktop / 1 tablet / 2 mobile devices)
Gruff Rhys, Musician
Dr. Ingrid Murphy, Academic Lead (Lecturer) , Cardiff MET
Jon Francombe, Lead Research & Development Engineer, BBC
Kliph Scurlock, Musician
Robin Moore, Digital Innovation Consultant, Shwsh
The Great Uncoupling: The Digital Disruption of Fashion and Place+
An insight into how fashion is drawing on production skills in order to create one of the first really functional implementations of the Metaverse – generating entirely new markets and freeing designers from the traditional constraints of place
Alex Lambert, Creative Director, Happy Finish
Materiality in the Metaverse: Tools to Thrive in the New Spaces of Fashion+
Fashion experts from academia and industry explore the distinctions between the three levels of the new Fashion Metaverse, the opportunities and issues presented by each, and the tools required to support the next generation of designers and fashion entrepreneurs as they navigate these new worlds and markets.
Alex Lambert, Creative Director, Happy Finish
Miss Jade How, Head of Fashion, Lockwood Publishing
Prof Jane Harris, Professor of Digital Design and Innovation, Director of the Fashion, Textiles and Technology Institute (FTTI, UAL), University of the Arts London, London College of Fashion
Leanne Elliott Young, CEO & Co-Founder, Institute of Digital Fashion
Dr Mike King, CEO, Numerion Software
Warp and Weft: Weaving Sustainable Places+
Digital is exciting – but it isn’t the whole story for fashion and textiles. Drawing on innovative case studies using recycled or unwanted materials, this fireside discussion explores the tangible value of physical location to designers freed from geographical constraints.
Dr Dawn Ellams, Research Fellow, Future Fashion Factory, Royal College of Art
Dr Kate Goldsworthy, Co-Director, Centre for Circular Design, University of the Arts London
Dr Noshua Watson, Managing Director, Interwoven Impact
Blinkers Off: Seeing the World Through Equine Eyes+
What does the world look like through the eyes of a horse? Alan Hook introduces his research using immersive technologies to explore the borders between human and non-human animals.
Alan Hook, Associate Head of School – School of Communication and Media, Ulster University
Day One: BEYOND Wrap-up+
Susan Hayes Culleton, BEYOND MC , HayesCulleton Group
21 October 2021
Welcome+
Susan Hayes Culleton, BEYOND MC , HayesCulleton Group
The City: A Legacy System?+
Sinead O’Sullivan, a researcher at the Institute for Strategy and Competitiveness at Harvard Business School, investigates how the long-standing trend towards digital presence at work, which has been massively accelerated by our experience of lockdown, is changing how we manage creativity and innovation. And how, in turn, this is challenging our traditional notions of cities – and nations – and how we inhabit them.
Prof Alex McDowell, Director, World Building Institute and the World Building Media Lab
Dr. Mark Lutter, Executive Director, Charter Cities Institute
Dr Parag Khanna, Founder and Managing Director, FutureMap
Rosanna Covacich, Co-founder, The Place Bureau
Sinead O’Sullivan, Senior Researcher, Harvard Business School
Wide Open Spaces: Building Rural Creative Networks+
A third of creative business hubs are outside of the UKs big cities, and beyond them lie thousands of small innovators, entrepreneurs, creative practitioners and businesses, many in remote places. Regions where creative economies are dispersed face unique challenges as they grow, but are also ideally placed to reinvent themselves for the digital age, create new jobs, bring investment and provide a unique sense of place and place-making. This panel looks at what is needed if we’re to support and grow the creative economy in these places.
Emily Sorrell, Innovation Designer
Joanne Evans, Creative Industries Impact and Partnerships and Development Manager, University of Exeter
Dr Josh Siepel, PEC Work Strand Lead for Creative Clusters, Innovation and Access to Finance, SPRU, University of Sussex and Creative Industries Policy and Evidence Centre
Dr Karen Cross, Academic Strategic Lead for Fashion Management, Events, Tourism and Hospitality, Robert Gordon University
Altered Places: How Augmented Reality Could Change our Relationships with our Worlds+
In this video piece Augmented Reality Product Designer Campbell Orme asks if and how AR can change our relationships with places.
Campbell Orme, Product Designer, Facebook Reality Labs
Augmenting Places: AR for the People+
As the medium becomes more popular, what responsibilities do AR makers have to place – and the communities that live there? Angela Chan, an expert in innovative inclusion in storytelling, talks to leading AR makers to find out how it can be used to open up both places and our imaginations for new encounters with history, our environment and each other – before questioning how we should address the potential issues around accessibility, inclusion and ownership that this opening up of place can unlock.
Angela Chan, Head of Inclusion / Doctoral Researcher, StoryFutures, Royal Holloway, University of London
Charles Golding, Creative Director, CARGO Movement
Nosa Eke, Writer/Director
Dr Paul Clarke, Senior Lecturer in Performance Studies, Artistic Director, University of Bristol, Uninvited Guests
Rob Morgan, Creative Director, Playlines
Belfast Stories: Turning Place 360+
Founder of Belfast-based agency Yellow Design, Michael McGlade, explores their work in Belfast and London that is remaking and revealing new aspects of place, past and present, through AR.
Michael McGlade, Creative Director, Yellow Design
Belfast Stories: Beyond Barriers+
Filmmaker, Seán Murray and Artist Deepa Mann-Kler explore life and work in relation to notions of ‘place’ and ‘Identity’ in Northern Ireland. They discuss two very different stories and journeys in illustrating what belonging means and how the physical environment affects people, both deeply and generationally.
Visiting Professor Deepa Mann-Kler, Chief Executive, Visiting Professor, Neon, Ulster University
Dr Seán Murray, Film Maker, Relapse Pictures
Baff Akoto Fireside+
Angela Chan extends her inquiry into how immersive technologies are changing the landscape of public space art and intervention, talking with celebrated artist & filmmaker, Baff Akoto, about his work around identity, community and diverse perspectives in places of historical protest, the emergent role of the digital creative, and the opportunities and issues this shift are revealing.
Angela Chan, Head of Inclusion / Doctoral Researcher, StoryFutures, Royal Holloway, University of London
Baff Akoto, Conceptual Artist , Independent
Closing Keynote – Glenn Patterson+
‘Belfast is my city. That is where my imagination is most alive’.
Award-winning writer Glen Patterson has consistently put his home town at the heart of his novels, using its rich and layered past to explore the complexity of individual moments in history – and unpicking how its ultimate direction of flow is directly shaped by the interaction of complicated individuals within collective contexts.
Hear his personal reflections on the role of place in the creative process.
Glenn Patterson, Writer
Day 2: BEYOND Wrap Up+
Prof Andrew Chitty, Challenge Director, UK Research and Innovation
Prof Paul Moore, Director of Creative Industries Future Screens NI, Future Screens NI
Susan Hayes Culleton, BEYOND MC , HayesCulleton Group