
Creative Data Club x Music Hackspace: Track. Translate. Transmit.
Date and time
Description
Sound and Music is teaming up with celebrated information design agency Signal Noise for Creative Data Club Data Gazing Trilogy – a series of special future-focused data events.
We will be bringing our signature blend of creative speakers to brand new venues across the capital, alongside a special event in Manchester, as part of our Data Gazing Trilogy beginning this autumn.
Data Gazing #2
Creative Data Club x Music Hackspace: Track. Translate. Transmit.
In November, we will be collaborating with our friends at Music Hackspace to bring creative data right to the heart of LimeWharf’s cultural innovation hub in East London.
As artists, scientists, designers and entrepreneurs, we often find that, even through the smallest of explorations, there is a mass of data sitting at the very edge of our fingertips, waiting to be used. But how do we use it? Are we open with it? Do we seek to share it with others? And if so, what does that process of sharing involve?
How do we translate and retransmit the data that we have been tracking?
Speakers Tim Exile, Olivia Rzepczynski (what3words) and Alexis Kirke will be joining us to explore a breath of innovative and experimental uses of data sets; from generating sound and multimedia performance to providing an insight into better addressing the complex world in which we live today.
#creativedata @MusicHackspace #SignalNoiseLDN
This is a free event, so join us on a creative expedition of data interpretation today! Audiences will be admitted on a first come, first served basis.
About Creative Data Club
Creative Data Club is a platform for artists, scientists, agencies, designers, marketers, programmers and even the odd data cynic to listen, debate and be inspired by data and creativity. We bring together a handful of speakers from different backgrounds to share their thoughts and experiences, exploring the expanding world of data with the likes of Sam Aaron, creator of Sonic Pi, Sandy Black from the London School of Fashion and Jay Short from design agency Inition.