For immediate release
Alpha-ville 2011
International Festival of Post-Digital Culture

Theme: “Zeitgeist, from digital to post-digital”
Dates: 22nd-25th September 2011
Venues: Netil House, Whitechapel Gallery, the V&A, Rich Mix, Space Studios, 
XOYO, Hearn Street Warehouse, the streets of Hackney and online

“The idea that digital is something new and transformative is now quite old. So 
the question for most creatives is not about going digital - it's about making 
it feel less digital, about making participation and interaction feel 
post-digital; making the tech less techy. We see this reflected back in the 
freshest creative and cultural work and Alpha-ville is probably where you see 
that most vividly in this country.” Tom Uglow, Director of Creative Labs at 
Google. 
The 2011 edition provides an online and live platform to
 explore, test and disseminate new ideas, emerging trends, collaborations and 
groundbreaking works. Running from 22-25 September the programme presents 
social media and interactive art, open labs, meet-ups, talks, workshops and 
screenings alongside with live music, visual performances and parties. Taking 
place alongside the London Design Festival, the 2011 edition enables a network 
of satellite events spreading across different London boroughs and links with 
other European cities such as Madrid (Twin Gallery) and Brussels & The Hague 
(Todays Art). Selected venues include the Whitechapel Gallery, Rich Mix, Netil 
House, Arcola Tent, XOYO, Hearn Street Warehouse and Space Studios. The 
festival programme also connects east and west London thorough a link with the 
V&A Digital Design Weekend.

Gathering artists, creative coders, new media technologists, designers, 
architects, professionals, musicians, researchers and academics, some of the key
 names are: Tom Uglow (Google Creative Labs), Marius Watz, Filip Visnjic 
(Creative Applications Network), Man Bartlett, Daito Manabe, Moritz Stefaner, 
Keiichi Matsuda, James Alliban, Pantha Du Prince, Jon Hopkins, Jacaszek and 
Kangding Ray.

“The digital revolution is over” Negroponte for WIRED, 1998 
This year’s programme addresses the transition from a digital to a post-digital 
culture, that looks beneath technology at how human behaviours such as 
collaboration, participation and interaction have redefined the creative 
practice and society itself, and at how the physical boundaries between reality 
and online are being blurred.
Alpha-ville incorporates the first London Symposium on Post-digital Culture, 
festival director Estela Oliva comments, “this year we are joining the 
discourse about a post-digital age. The festival and more specifically the 
symposium will provide a forum to exchange knowledge and inspire discussions 
about the
 future of digital culture.”
Four interconnecting strands run through the format of the festival: 
Innovation, Live, Screening and Exchange, offering a range of activities that 
aim to unlock people’s creativity.

Innovation: Friday 23rd - Sunday 25th September
Netil House, V&A, Space Studios and the streets of Hackney
Dynamic environments featuring works created with new media through 
participation, collaboration and interaction. It will features data 
visualisation, social media and kinect based art, digital fabrication, 
augmented reality, html5 experiments, open frameworks and more.
 
Live: Thursday 22nd - Sunday 25th
XOYO, Rich Mix and Hearn Street Warehouse
Presenting a selection of live electronic music, sound experiments and 
audio-visual performances.
Over 20 musicians and visual artists presenting purely live shows.

Screening: Friday 23rd - Sunday 25th
The Vortex and Platform at Netil House
A
 showcase of the latest digital film-making trends including short film, 
animation and
documentaries. Screenings curated by Alpha-ville and guest curators including 
Athens Video Art Festival, Unit 15’s Bartlett School of Architecture and Paul 
Purgas.

Exchange: Friday 23rd - Sunday 25th
A series of events and a one-day symposium bringing together thinkers, 
professionals, researchers and creatives from the technology, design, media and 
cultural sectors. The first Alpha-ville Symposium covers topics around the 
creative use of the public space, mobile learning, the role of the new artist, 
challenges to archive digital content and open source

Alpha-ville commissions
“Cell” by James Alliban and Keiichi Matsuda
As identity becomes a broadcasted commodity, our constructed personae enmesh 
and define us. cell is an interactive installation that exposes our virtual 
reflections, luminous clones that replicate the body movement of
 visitors to the space. Personal data mined from internet profiles is randomly 
tagged onto these bodies, revealing the second self while simultaneously 
allowing us escape from it.
“Networked Cities” by Fabian Neuhaus, UCL Centre for Advanced Spacial Analysis. 
Animated real-time data visualisation piece based on the geo-located tweets 
collected for 4 different European cities: London, Brussels, The Hague and 
Ljubljana. The aim is to analyse how users behave when they connect to social 
media and how the activity is distributed in the locations.

Post-digital Culture Symposium Speakers
Filip Visnjic - Architect, Lecturer and Founder of Creative Applications 
Network.Net
Tom Uglow - Director of Creative Labs Europe, Google
Bill Thompson - Technology Writer at BBC
Drew Hemment - Director & Founder of Future Everything
Keiichi Matsuda, Designer and Film-maker
Patrick Hussey - Digital Manager at Arts &
 Business
Martin Ahe - Business Development at Stiktu
Mortiz Stefaner - Information Designer
More to be confirmed soon.

Art & Innovation
Daito Manabe, JP, selection of works
Aaron Koblin, US (Google), selection of works
Moritz Sefaner, DE, ‘Better life index’
Man Bartlett, US, installation & performance
Marius Watz, NO, digital fabrication webinar
V4 Lab, exploring and creating reactive/interactive projects using vvvv 
language.
Soundcloud Clinic, hand-on insights into co-creation and sharing music and 
audio.
Social Innovation Lab: Alpha-ville will invite developers, designers, creatives 
and thinkers to work on a data set and come up with a workable solution of a 
common issue raised publicly.
Supported by Culture Hack Day.
Plus outdoor interactive installations in the Borough of Hackney by blablabLAB 
(ES)

Live music and audio-visual
Pantha Du Prince, Rough Trade, DE (Live)
Kangding
 Ray, Live AV, Raster Noton, DE (Live AV)
Jon Hopkins, Live AV, Domino Records, UK (Live AV)
Jennifer Cardini, Kompakt, FR
Jacasezk, Gosthly, PL (Live)
Svarte Greiner, Miasmah, NO (Live AV)
Max Cooper, UK, Traum Schallplatten (Live)
Illum Sphere, Hoya:Hoya, UK (Live AV)
Truss, Perc Trax, UK (Live)
Anstam, 50Weapons/Modeselektion, DE
Emptyset, Subtext, UK (Live AV, London Premiere). A that project investigates 
the sonic potential of experimental bass driven music, reflecting upon the 
legacy of dub, techno and sound system culture whilst integrating aspects of 
feedback and minimalism. The 

Alpha-ville show will be a special collaboration with designers Clayton Welham 
and Sam WIlliams.

Screening
Press Pause Play, a documentary about the hopes and fears of the digital 
culture. Premiered at SXSW, this documentary contains interviews with some of 
the world’s most influential creators such us Moby and
 Apparat.
Bartlett’s Unit 15 film showcase
Selected works of students from one of the most cutting edge design units at 
Bartlett School of Architecture (UCL). Unit 15 specialises in the use of film, 
CGI, animation and motion graphics to explore and investigate new forms of 
architecture.
International moving image competition Alpha-ville Festival presents the awards 
and screening of the finalists of the 2011 film competition in collaboration 
with Vimeo.
Alpha-ville Screening Programme
Nobody Here programme
Online programme available in Mubi.com

Laura Plana Gracia




Festival Assistant
Alpha-ville




22-25 September 2011
+44 (0) 776099 6868
http://www.alpha-ville.co.uk





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