Category Archives: news

Barbara Morris Prize benefits students in Skills Enhancement Week

Teaching Prize Success – winners of the Barbara Morris Prize for Learning Support 2013

The School would like to congratulate Dr Paul Fretwell, Director of Learning and Teaching and Employability and Events Coordinator, Ann Howe who are joint winners of the Barbara Morris Prize for Learning Support 2013, along with the Student Support Team at the School of Arts at Canterbury, for their dedication and input into the ‘Skills Enhancement Week’ in February, 2013.

The Skills Enhancement Week took place between Monday 18th and Friday 22nd February, which replaced ‘Reading Week’, provided an invigorated forum and a focussed few days of informative and inspirational events for students to be able to enhance their skills leading to improved employability.

Students were able to earn University ‘Employability Points’ by attending these events and prizes were on offer to the student who attended the most sessions and the event went on to lead to a number of student placements and internships with organisations such as Microsoft Computer Games, Zealous, Earcom Ltd and other work experience opportunities.

The team were dedicated to securing an array of industry-recognised guest speakers who provided lively talks, along with a week’s schedule of mixed study skills and employability-related workshops.  Activities such as workshops on self-employment, entrepreneurship, developing partnerships and networking spanned the five days and there were personal and professional development workshops too, where students could learn about how to build and develop their online presence and how to ‘market’ themselves, hone their CV writing skills and learn about the Year Abroad possibilities.

The judging panel were impressed with the team’s employment-focussed student support, as the Skills Enhancement Week clearly enriched the student’s experiences and provided a model which could be emulated across other the other Schools. It was also deemed an excellent example of external engagement, benefiting both students and the University through collaboration.

‘The week proved to be a great success and was even opened up to other University students to attend’ said prize winner Ann Howe. ‘It provided a great opportunity for career networking for students with external industry employers and gave students a chance to think holistically about their education, develop an awareness of skills needed for future employment and to actively build their own employability’

The Barbara Morris Prize of £5,000 is awarded annually for outstanding work in the area of learning support. The University encourages applications from all staff in the University, including those who work with or for students in a teaching, non-teaching or support role.

Prizes will be awarded by the Vice-Chancellor at a dedicated lunchtime ceremony on Thursday 3rd October in Darwin Conference Suite at the Canterbury campus.

Read more about the Teaching Prizes

Exciting and Innovative opportunity for students and staff at Hack The Barbican

A sensational new collaborative project called Hack the Barbican will be taking place at The Barbican Centre, London which includes a project run by Music Lecturers Kate and Duncan.

School of Music and Fine Art Lecturers Kate Halsall and Duncan MacLeod are running a project alongside some of the School’s students called Galvanize, as part of the Hack the Barbican Festival, held at the Barbican Centre, London between August 19 -23.

This exciting opportunity is London’s biggest ever experiment in cross-disciplinary collaboration and will take part over 4 weeks at the world-renowned Barbican Centre in London during August.  Set to explore new boundaries where nothing is off-limits bringing together around 200 artists, technologies and entrepreneurs in around 100 different projects. School of Music and Fine Arts project will take place for one week during August.

“For our contribution during Hack the Barbican, we are creating a series of small performances, installations and showcases for our project, incorporating lots of existing School of Music and Fine Art student work, reflecting the Historic Dockyard and we will be transporting these sounds and images to the centre of the City” says Kate Halsall, Music lecturer at the School. “We have student participants from the School of Music and Fine Art who are contributing to the collaboration into a thrilling showcase as a ‘performance’ of sounds and objects”

 Students are encouraged to flex their collaborative creativity where there are no boundaries and all mediums, including a cross-disciplinary projects are considered, including painting, sculpture, film, video, photography, installation or music and sound and this may involve running projections, recitals, short films or audio or even involve spontaneous developing hacks with other Hackers over the week.

There is still chance for students to take part and get involved, so please contact Kate Halsall by Friday 5th August on k.v.halsall@kent.ac.uk

Further information on the festival can be found online at – http://hackthebarbican.orghtb_logo_orange_200px1

Nomination for best newcomer in Medway student magazine

‘Best newcomer’ nomination for School of Music and Fine Art student Milli Midwood in The Medwire for her fashion blogging.

Amelia Midwood has recently been nominated ‘best newcomer’ for her fashion blog and writing in a publication dedicated for students living and studying in Medway, Kent.

Milli Midwood, student of Fine Art at the School of Music and Fine Art is head of fashion for the publication, has writing over 11 fashion posts and blogs in the past 5 months and has a comprehensive double-page spread in the June-August free issue.

The Medwire launched in 2010, provides online news and entertainment for students at universities with Medway campuses, so students of the University of Kent, University of Greenwich and Canterbury Christ Church. Aimed at providing students with quality local and campus news, politics, sports, entertainment, nightlife, as well as a 24-hour update on events and activities on and around campus.  Additionally, the Medwire magazine is printed twice a term to supplement the online site which offers more light-hearted articles and focus on fashion, gossip, and student antics.

Read about Mili’s blogs >

The Medwire Magazine >

Milli_Midwood_Nomination the Medwire

 

 

Music students end the year in style

School of Music and Fine Art students gave their end-of-year performances in great style.

We would like to congratulate students for their End-of-Year Performance held in the University of Kent’s Colyer Fergusson Hall in Canterbury campus in May.  More than 20 students studying for BMus degrees in Music and Popular Music at the School of Music and Fine Art’s Medway campus, gave performances ranging from Stevie Wonder’s Sir Duke to Hungarian Folksongs, no 127 (Bartok), The Pink Panther (Mancini) and students’ own compositions.

The performances were introduced to an audience of staff and students by Duncan MacLeod, Lecturer in Music and Audio Arts, who said: ‘It’s a great opportunity for our students to perform for the first time in these professional surroundings.’

Student performers included: Emma Burton, Lindsay Edmondson, Andrew Flintoff, Tom Graves, Liam Greene, Philippa Hardiman, Jake Heath, Ray Lawrence, Sharon Siew Yee Li, Gareth Mangion, Sam Miri, Amy Morgan, Fay Nastou, Ricco Osobu, Rhian Powell, Dave Rondeau, Dom Scialo, Tsang Yau Violet Yung, Alfie Walke-Pawsey, Luka Wrobel.

Performance module convenor and ensemble coaches were Lisa Davies, Kate Halsall and Duncan MacLeod.

Colyer-Fergusson Music Recitals May 2013
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Music Student features as ‘Scholarship Spotlight’

Music student Philippa Hardimann features as ‘Music Matters’ Scholarship Spotlight.

Continuing a series profiling some of this year’s Music Scholars, the Music Matters website features soprano Philippa Hardimann, 2nd year music student at The School of Music and Fine Art shares her childhood musical journey and how her passion for music lead her to study here at the University of Kent.

“From a young age it was apparent that I had a particular flare for music, to which my parents invested much time helping me explore various creative avenues. Commencing my musical journey, at Brentwood Pre-Preparatory School I was encouraged to take up piano classes. With a growing interest in musicianship I then went on to play the ‘cello, which opened the door to a spectrum of new and challenging possibilities.”

Read more about Phillippa on Music Matters >
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Outstanding Contributions to University Music

‘Jack revolutionised the musical life of the Medway Campus’ by raising the profile of music at Medway.

At this time of the year as the academic year draws to a close, the University takes the opportunity to recognise the contributions to its musical life from a few outstanding students. At a ceremony on Friday 5th July, Music student Jack McDonnell was among the five students were awarded prizes in honour of their efforts.

The University Music Awards Committee Prize was given to a student who has made a special contribution to music at Kent, was awarded to the indefatiguable Jack McDonnell. In his final year studying Music Technology, it’s no exaggeration to say that Jack has revolutionised the musical life of the Medway campus, in his role as this year’s President of the Medway Music Society and Secretary last year, including setting up regular performing nights at Coopers (the campus bar), organising events, arranging deals for music students with shops in the town, and generally raising the profile of music at Medway.

The Music Awards Committee has a difficult decision to make each year, a task made almost impossible in the face of the large numbers of students who participate regularly, and with such vibrant enthusiasm, in all the music-making that goes on at the University.  The Music Awards Committee is a chance to pay especial tribute to a few who have made a significant impact through their involvement in the musical life of the University, and our thanks and congratulations to them.

Read the full article >>

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Jack Mcdonnell, Steph Richardson, Kathryn Redgers and Aisha Bové with Professor Keith Mander, the Hon Jonathan Monckton and Kerry Barber of Canterbury Festival.

Vice Chancellor 2013 Prize goes to Fine Art student for her collaborative work

MA Fine Art student gets awarded the University’s highly reputable ‘Vice Chancellor Prize’ for her performance-meets-fine art working practice.

The Vice Chancellor 2013 Prize for Fine Art has been awarded to The School of Music and Fine Art’s postgraduate student Natasha Pocock who successfully completed her MA in Fine Art for her collaborative performance and Fine Art based degree show work, showcased at the School’s Degree Show held at the Historic Dockyard Chatham in May.

Pocock’s piece was a working practice that explored issues of identity and passage of time through textiles, sculpture and performance with a focus on Dockyard-specific history. Her work was articulated through the process of garment construction, where the manipulation of materials and non-material realities were forged together to form a sense of place and presence. Through conducting a force of energy through integral threading, interweaving and vocal dialogue, thinking in an established rhythm to problem solving and problem-finding, Pocock  literally ‘took matters into her own hands’, with the fusion of materials, process and techniques.

The site-specific industrial and historical male dominance of naval presence brought a nostalgic reference to notions of resilience, determination, devotion, loss and separation as Pocock utilised the illusion of performances in life and highlighted the fragility of memory. The work also reflected the imprisonment to duty and working with closed fixed systems of craft production. The Craftsperson battling from being ‘swallowed’ by the  machine, through continuous strokes by attaching the power of manipulation to established systems, thus  showing the Master Craftsperson is instinctively a crafter in all that can be manipulated and working with resistance being the key to survival.

As part of the Vice Chancellor Prize, Natasha Pocock will be asked to replicate the ethos behind the works in a new piece for display, based on her degree show work at the University of Kent, we look forward to seeing her new piece.

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Dockyard becomes hub of art and creativity as Medway degree show opens

A full-sized, self-built conservatory, a ‘crashed’ car and the hull of a ship are a just a handful of large-scale installations featuring in a new exhibition by University of Kent students at the Chatham Historic Dockyard.

Titled Joining the Docks, the Fine Art Degree Show was officially opened on Saturday 25 May 2013 by Victoria Pomery, Director of the Turner Contemporary, Margate.

Prominently dotted across various parts of the Dockyard and the University’s School of Music and Fine Art gallery spaces, the installations will be on display from May 26 – June 1. The exhibition is free and open to the public.

Alongside pieces from Fine Art students, the exhibition also features works by students from the Music and Audio Arts, and Creative Events; Design and Production courses.

Opening the exhibition, Victoria Pomery, said: ‘I’m delighted to open the degree show and have really enjoyed seeing some of the amazing work on show. Turner Contemporary looks forward to an on-going relationship with the University of Kent.’

Tim Meacham, Lecturer in Fine Art, said: ‘This year’s group of graduating students are the first true Medway Fine Art cohort. Some of the first students to work in the historic buildings of the Dockyard, this year’s group have helped to transform the space into creative and vibrant working environments. The presence of these students was symbolic of a new life for the Dockyard and a continuation of the tradition of making on the site and in the wider area.’

Joining the Docks is the first degree show of its kind to see students collaborate from the three courses – Fine Art, Creative Events; Design and Production, and Music and Audio Arts – at the University’s new School of Music and Fine Art.

The exhibition follows a year of exciting developments for the University’s provision of Arts and Music at its Medway Campus, including a £5million investment in its facilities on the Chatham Historic Dockyard at the end of last year.

For more information on the exhibition, visit: www.joiningthedocks.co.uk.

Contact: K.Scoggins@Kent.ac.uk

Professor Tim Howle – Inaugural Lecture

Friday 22 March, Grimond Lecture Theatre 1, 6pm

‘Seeing Sounds and Hearing Images – Composing with Audiovisual Materials’

Abstract

This lecture will examine the nature of new compositional ideas that are formed when sonic art is combined with video art.

At a recent competition for composers of sonic art, two thirds of the submissions were audiovisual. The jury ranked the purely musical pieces whereas the AV works were problematic in terms of criteria and were left on one side. The language of electroacoustic music is understood; the language of audiovisual music is another matter.

Given that the number of audiovisual outputs is increasing it is interesting that the underpinning theoretical and historical aspects lag behind. There are some obvious connections: graphic scores are pictorial; there is a hybridization of technologies (superficially the software used for audio editing looks the same as that used for video – suggesting a similar paradigm.) The materials can be manipulated in parallel; they can be treated as if they are part of the same phrase.

What is clear is that there is a form of counterpoint taking place between the modalities, pointing towards relationships that go much further than those offered by more traditional ‘film sound’ approaches. Counterpoint is more equitable. It suggests the possibility of audiovisual objects that function like chords pointing towards the potential for consonance and dissonance.

Skills Enhancement Week

Skills Enhancement Week Spring term running in Week 18 – 18th – 22nd February 2013

Timetable (pdf)

We have been very fortunate in getting some exciting and industry recognised guest speakers to give talks along with our usual mix of study skills and employability- related workshops.

Each day has a theme running through it:

  • Monday 18th February 2013 – Day 1 – Self-Employment/Entrepreneurship
  • Tuesday 19th February 2012 – Day 2 – Industry Talks /Developing Partnerships/Networking
  • Thursday 21st February 2013 – Day 3 – Marketing Yourself/ Developing Online Presence
  • Friday 22nd February 2013 – Day 4 – Year Abroad /CV & Writing Skills / Employability at Kent

To book a slot email: M.J.Fullman@kent.ac.uk or call in at Reception, The Old Surgery

 

Also running are Pro-Tools 101 and Pro-Tools 11Certified Training Courses

Monday 18th  February 2013 Tuesday 19th February 2013 Pro Tools 101 is a 2 day course delivering an introduction into Avid Pro Tools 10 Digital Audio Workstation software, with hands on projects and exercises to complete. Along with teaching you are also supplied with a certified textbook to keep. At the end of the 2 days there is an optional test to take, if passed, you will receive certification as proof for completing an industry recognised course.

Wednesday 20th  February 2013 Thursday 21st February 2013 Friday 22nd February 2013 Pro Tools 110 is a 3 day course delivering a more detailed look at the production techniques used in Avid Pro Tools 10 Digital Audio Workstation software, with hands on projects and exercises to complete. Along with teaching you are also supplied with a certified textbook to keep. At the end of the 3 days there is an optional test to take, if passed, you will receive certification as proof for completing an industry recognised course

All Music and Audio Arts Year Group students are welcome to attend

Max of 16 people for the Pro-Tools 101 and 10-12 people for Pro -Tools 110 First come, first serve basis

To book a slot email F.Walker@kent.ac.uk