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Highlights of Campfire with David Rowan

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“The future is already here – it’s just not evenly distributed.” Those ten simple words were projected in large letters on the screen behind David Rowan, revered editor of Wired Magazine, as he took centre stage for our twenty-fifth Campfire and possibly our best attended to date.

The words belong to William Gibson, of course, author of A Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy and much else besides. And what they were intended to mean, we suspect, is that certain individuals – the inventors, the programmers, the visionaries blessed with unnerving foresight, and the technologists squirreling away in their labs – have already invented the future. Now they’re just waiting for the rest to catch up.

It’s a description that also applies to Wired Magazine (tagline – The Future As It Happens) who’ve been on the forefront of the technological revolution for almost 20 years (in digital years, that’s an aeon). And we like to think it also applies to ditto. Ahead of the curve is where we’ve perennially found ourselves, and that’s exactly where we intend to remain, especially if we follow some of the ideas that David Rowan entertained us with during the course of his enthralling talk.

On a subject which needed little rehearsal for this seasoned guest speaker, David, dressed sharply for the occasion, proceeded to explain the ways in which technology has changed human behavior, and gave us a glimpse of the world of start-up billionaires, maths geniuses and web gurus who are boldly going where no man has gone before.

By way of introduction, David showed us a clip from the film 1999 A.D. Released some 45 years ago, it predicted with unnerving accuracy 21st century “push button” phenomena such as internet shopping. What it failed to predict was the sexual revolution, and a world where women no longer needed their husband’s credit card to pay for their shopping – but you can’t be right about everything.

David then undertook to be our humble guide to the future, accompanying us on a tour at the speed of light through DNA-based social networking, social commerce, mobile payments, 3-D printing and some of the issues surrounding web privacy (what has elsewhere been referred to as our ‘digital soul’). It was a truly global trip, taking in rural Kenyans using their phones to send money, Russian billionaires creating location-based dating services via mobile and European P2P lending websites.

The pace of technology change over the past few decades has been truly astonishing. Things that used to take our breath away as children watching Tomorrow’s World, today we take for granted. Inevitably, it is the youngest generation who are the first to embrace the potential new technology, as David explained to the audience. Teenagers today will probably be doing jobs with titles that haven’t been invented yet. For the rest of us, it’s a case of keeping abreast of each new wave of change – probably by reading Wired.

While David was the undisputed star of the show last night, we must also mention the exceptional art that was on display in our gallery space. Kinetica Art Fair is a yearly show dedicated to kinetic, electronic and robotic art. As a prelude to their 2012 show taking place in London this February, we featured a selection of Kinetica installations including a dyspeptic antique typewriter (it’s the literary equivalent of a barrel piano) which clacks out reams of abuse for being consigned to scrapheap of technology.

There was also a piece called Robot Birds, which are mechanical birds made of broken mobile phones. Each has a unique phone number, and when you call it, the bird flaps its wings and coos electronically. The creators Neil Mendoza and Anthony Goh were around the ditto offices all day and we were glad to make their acquaintance.

Upstairs the motion graphics studio, The Darkroom, created a miniature installation of their enormous light shows, which they take all around the world. They were also projecting images from our beautiful 2011 Compendium, hot off the press, which everyone who attended Campfire got to take home with them.

With so much going on, and a VIP cast of past and future Campfire speakers in attendance, this was a sensational start to 2012 and it will take some beating… Who would have thought, when we began our journey at ditto three years ago, that we’d reach this point? The future may not be evenly distributed, but it is most definitely here, you can be sure of that.

David Rowan, The Darkroom and Kinetica

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To inaugurate the 2012 series of talks, and celebrate Campfire’s second anniversary, it is with great fanfare that we confirm David Rowan, the UK editor of Wired Magazine, as our January storyteller.

Published by Condé Nast, Wired Magazine is the publication that no self-respecting technophile would be seen dead without. For decades it has predicted, with the unerring accuracy of a Casio wristwatch, where technology will take us and how it will transform our lives.

As its UK editor, David Rowan lives his life on the far side of Moore’s curve, anticipating future trends in their embryonic state. A seasoned speaker with a busy calendar of appearances, his talk promises to be of great interest to all Apple Store Geniuses, Silicon Roundabout entrepreneurs, GeekDads, WebMonkeys and Laundry-Folding Robots. So if you’re any of the above, make sure you reserve your seat fast.

On the ditto doors, Kinetica Art Fair will be sharing a sneaky advance view their 2012 exhibition, with displays by interactive artists Tom Wilkinson, Neil Mendoza and Anthony Goh. Staying with all things digital, we’ll also be having a surprise installation from the amazing motion graphics studio, The Darkroom, in our upstairs space.

And we’ll be celebrating our Campfire anniversary with the release of our 2011 Compendium, a print magazine and accompanying app featuring highlights from last year’s Campfire, Fireside Favourites and ditto doors. Be sure you don’t go home without yours.

So join David, ditto and all the artists in celebrating all things digital, in a very analogue way, with a room full of interested and interesting people, and a few bottles of wine. We can hardly wait, and neither can our office iMacs, which are already performing recursive searches in anticipation.

Join us at the Lighthouse on the 19th January from 7pm. Unit 1A Canonbury Business Centre, 190 New North Road – Islington – N1 7BJ

RSVP: campfire@ditto.tv

Highlights of Campfire with Matthew de Abaitua

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THE ART OF CAMPING

Matthew de Abaitua was in every respect the perfect speaker to round off the 2011 Campfire calendar. We folk here at ditto think we know a thing or two about Campfires, but Matthew is a real, bona fide expert (as the author of The Art of Camping, you’d expect as much) and was about to reveal to us the meaning of the campfire.

Forget sitting round in a field, toasting marshmallows and singing ‘kumbayah’, the origin of the campfire can be traced back many millions of years to when our simian ancestors took an evolutionary leap down from the trees. Prehistoric man (and woman) would tend to sleep in trees, alone. When they finally learned how to tame fire, however, they could begin to sleep together and form pair bonding. And from there it’s just a short step to Ikea beds and electric blankets.

So there you have it, an abridged history of mankind, and it all began with a campfire. We’d been hosting our Campfire events for two years. And since our monthly events are all about bringing people together, down from their trees, so to speak, so they can communicate, collaborate and create, well it seems we’d stumbled on exactly the right word.

Camping holds a special place in Matthew’s heart. As an acclaimed author – his debut novel, The Red Men is presently being adapted for the big screen by Shynola/Warp Films – it’s for his second book The Art of Camping that Matthew is perhaps best known. It chronicles, with some verve, his memories of family holidays spent in the south of France, trips to Ireland with his wife and daughter, and many other expeditions too. But what is also important to Matthew is the symbolism of camping, as an escape and an alternative way of life.

“People have used camps as places to explore and discover alternative ways of living,” he told the audience. “That’s going all the way back – the origins of the word go back to campus, the Latin word for field. Ancient Rome had the campus martius, the place where soldiers were trained and foreign dignitaries were met.”

In the 1920s, it was a group of Germans called the Wondervogel who traipsed around the German countryside in strange Teutonic uniforms (when they weren’t in a state of complete undress) and went on to inspire the naturists, the hippies and many other youth movements of the 20th century.

Camping, however, in the British popular imagination at least, is perhaps most synonymous with Glastonbury, that long weekend in June when a sea of tents turn the fields of dairy farmer Michael Eavis into a makeshift canvas city. It’s what political writer Hakim Bey might describe as a Temporary Autonomous Zone, a place where you can make your own rules.

“After a weekend of camping, civilisation seems a lot more arbitrary,” said Matthew. “Our concrete cities seem less like the laws of physics handed down to you, and more some kind of aberration, a wrong turn taken at some juncture in our collective history.”

In 2011, it was another image of tents that flooded the media with the Occupy Movement. The guys and poles first went up in Zuccotti Park in September, quickly followed by protesters on the steps of St. Paul’s Cathedral and across the globe, from South Africa to Chile, Italy to Australia.

Camps are a breeding ground for alterative thought, Matthew stressed, and it’s pointless to criticise the Occupy Movement for not having an agenda. “At a march, you know what you want,” said the author. “A camp, on the other hand, is where you work out your demands. It’s pointless to criticise them for not having their demands. In a camp you’re trying to work it out, that’s what’s been wonderful about this movement, that it’s been a place of exploration.”

As Matthew rounded off his invigorating Campfire performance, he also put a full stop to our 2011 series of talks. These too have all been a place of exploration, venturing into topics as diverse as: how to programme a Cultural Olympiad, how to produce cult cinema classics, how to develop the business leaders of tomorrow, and how to have an international #1 hit. It’s been one hell of a ride, and it’ll begin all over again in January. But for now, adieu, sayonara, ma’salama, adios and farewell as we go put our feet up for a well-deserved break.

Written by admin

December 20th, 2011 at 11:41 am

Matthew De Abaitua, writer, chap, and camping enthusiast

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If you go down to the woods today… you’ll find yourself in The Lighthouse. Bring along your tents, sleeping bags and sense of wonder, as we’re transforming our studio into an urban idyll, an island of canvas in the concrete jungle, and a celebration of our December Campfire speaker, Matthew De Abaitua. It’s an odd Christmas party, but looking at the inspirational 23 Campfire’s that have gone before, what would expect from ditto?

Amongst a host of other achievements and enthusiasms, Matthew is the author of The Art of Camping: The History and Practise of Sleeping Under the Stars. A gorgeous book that takes the reader on a personal, social and historical excursion through our obsession with sleeping in the great out doors. What exactly is it about a campfire experience that connects us so?

Matthew’s CV places him as editor-at-large for the Idler, writer for The Guardian, novelist with a work in development with Warp films and Shynola, lecturer of Creative Writing at Brunel University, and a great deal more. But whatever the task, Matthew brings two key bits of kit in his knapsack: a profound love of the written word, and the ability to inspire others with his boundless enthusiasm. Bring your marshmallows, and settle back for a proper story, told with love.

The ditto doors will be right on theme, featuring the astonishing work of celebrated wildlife photographer, Iain Green. With an amazing body of work capturing the power and beauty the tiger, and a menagerie of distant animals, Green has gone greener. Concerned over the environmental damage done by long-haul flights, Iain has turned his gaze closer to home, with a breath-taking collection of the undomesticated denizens of Wild London.

It is a Christmas party after all though, and a celebration of Campfire reaching the grand old age of 2, so Michael Wilson and Phillip Long will be going late and loud on the 1’s and 2’s. You can also expect an extra special present to take away with you: for ditto the pleasure is in the giving, and Campfire is about sharing.

You can try before you buy (it’s all free really) with Matthew De Abaitua, by checking out his story of warmth, wisdom and wit on Radio ditto’s Fireside Favourites with Really O’Reilly. Give it five minutes, and we guarantee you’ll be hooked, and champing at the bit for his Campfire.

Join us at 7pm, Thursday 15th December, at ditto’s studio: The Lighthouse, Canonbury Yard, 190 New North Road, N17BJ.  RSVP: campfire@ditto.tv

Highlights of Campfire with Hamish Jenkinson & War Boutique

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This month’s Campfire saw Hamish Jenkison, creative director of the Old Vic Tunnels come to share his story. Hamish has had an eclectic career, working for four and a half years for Madonna and Guy Ritchie, before becoming executive assistant to Kevin Spacey who was just beginning his new role as creative director of the Old Vic Theatre.

It was an amazing sequence of events that saw Hamish discover the Old Vic Tunnels. Despite Hamish’s best efforts, Kevin Spacey had passed on a prior opportunity to meet agent provocateur of the art world, Banksy. Fortunately, Hamish gave him a second chance and organised for Kevin to be taken down to a disused taxi rank at Waterloo train station where the artist was embarking on a new project.

Banksy had boarded up the road on either side, deployed security guards at both ends and had flown in 29 different graffiti artists from around the world who were busy spraying the walls, carving out brick walls with a jack hammer, using burnt out cars as sculpture, and installing a tree with CCTV cameras instead of leaves.

“It was this incredible world that Kevin and I walked into, but because of all the spray paint, the air was unbreathable. So they had to open the side doors, which led to these archways and I went to use the toilet just inside the entrance to one of these archways.”

But rather than going back to where all the graffiti was being sprayed, Hamish decided to explore inside. “I found this door which, with a well-timed kick, opened onto somewhere I shouldn’t have been. What I found was 29,000 sq. ft. of abandoned Victorian tunnels that hadn’t been used for 20 years. I ran out, grabbed Kevin, and knew straight away that we had to do something with the space.”

That was 2008. By 2011, the Old Vic Tunnels, as it is now known, had hosted events ranging from Michelin-starred pop-up restaurants to hit-shows from the likes of immersive theatre company Punchdrunk. That event sold 20,000 tickets in the space of six hours and gleaned no shortage of media coverage. Banksy too wanted a piece of the action, and turned the space into London’s darkest and dirtiest cinema, Lambeth Palace, which for a week screened previews of his street art documentary, ‘Exit Through the Gift Shop’.

If it weren’t for that fateful kick, the Old Vic Tunnels would never have come into existence. Like so much in Hamish’s life, it’s been about being in the right place at the right time with the right attitude. Hamish is a consummate networker, even if the word ‘networking’ sounds a little squalid to his ears. But how else would you explain the fact he’s smoked cigars in Cuba with Raoul Castro, had dinner with Hugo Chavez eating his fine Venezuelan chocolates, or played poker in the Ritz with Bill Clinton.

These days, he is also busy as Chairman of Free the Children UK, a charity dedicated to improving the lives of children across the world. Hamish met the founder Craig Kielburger in Toronto and on their next meeting pledged to become a global ambassador for Free the Children. Hamish’s humanitarian streak is also apparent in his choice of artist whose work was displayed on the ditto doors, War Boutique.

War Boutique is the pseudonym of Kevin Leahy, a Scotsman who studied textiles at university. Although his lifelong ambition was to design clothes for Action Men figures, after his degree Kevin found work with a defence constructor designing body armour.

Haunted by the fact that he work was being ordered by rogue states and Middle Eastern governments, Kevin wanted to change what he was contributing to society. He gave up his job and enrolled at Goldsmiths University. After three years, he put together his first collection using ballistic military materials to make his artwork.

Both Kevin and Hamish demonstrated how art can be used for beneficial ends, not only entertaining audiences but providing a vision of a better world. It’s something that ditto is proud to support, as we share their vision that art opens hearts, minds and doors.

ditto is… celebrating all things festival with the Campfire Summer Cookout

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The clouds lay heavy across the rooftops; there was a hush, a rustle, and then the heavens opened, turning Canonbury into a boating pond. As we pressed our noses against the windows and cursed this inclement barrage, it dawned on us we’d rather brought it on ourselves. Announcing that August’s Campfire, our Summer Cookout, would be festival themed… what had we been thinking?

Downstairs on the ditto doors we hosted a selection from photographer Liam Bailey’s extraordinary book documenting his twenty year relationship with Glastonbury Festival. Upstairs, as the clock ticked closer to 7, the ditto girls (chivalry lives) waded into the tempest to wrangle a gazebo upright and provide cover for Brian and his BBQ. Life imitating art?

Robert Castellani, virtuoso guitarist, and returning ditto performer, began to tune up – the rain thundering on the Lighthouse roof forming an interesting percussive addition. It was beginning to look like The Summer Cookout might be a Washout.

Then the strangest moment – as the first guests began to appear, the deluge ceased, and something remarkably like the sun began to poke through. Fortune smiles on the brave, and the sun shines on the righteous. Or we just got lucky. Anyway you look at it, it was an omen that kicked off an epic night. The winners of our inaugural online independent music festival, Sunset, were announced to great applause. With a total of almost 50,000 votes cast, the competition was fierce, but the winners deserving. Ori Pliner won the public vote with his delicately crafted Dark Light, while Raz Olsher scooped the critics’ choice for his darkly mesmerising Prelude with Attitude. You can listen to their music and the other entrants here – and it’s definitely worth a visit. Real music from real people, and not a Svengali in sight.

As drinks were drunk, and BBQ munched, the evening began to spiral. It began to really feel like a festival. A spellbound crowd watched Robert transfixed – the only motion that on camera phones being trained on him. In the calm that followed the obedient throng were then whisked outside to witness fire poi, and the unusual spectacle of woman take an angle grinder to her metallic undercrackers. ditto’s queen of culture even took to the stage (ok, car park) to hurl some fire about.

Throughout the evening, guests tried their hands at juggling, plate spinning, diablo and balloon animals, with some interesting results. Suffice to say it was all fun, AND nobody lost an eye.

Huge thanks to everyone who came along – from the performers and contributors who made the evening so special, to the guests who braved the rain and then threw themselves into the proceedings. As the evening wore on it became progressively tougher to tell the two groups apart. What a perfect celebration of festivals in all their forms; how they throw people together, and how they can bring out the best in us.

ditto is… still buzzing about last week’s Campfire

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Campfire is about many things. On the surface, it’s about promoting originality in whatever form it may take.  Usually, that’s our excuse to invite our own personal heroes and various national icons as guest speakers, be they from the business world or the creative sector, individuals whose stories we’re certain will inspire and entertain. It’s also, obviously, a chance for ditto to forge links across the various industries we work in. But, just as importantly, possibly even more so, Campfire is about the people who attend – the regulars and the uninitiated, the spontaneous and the eternally curious.

Whichever way you look at it, audience matters. You could watch the greatest band in the world play a secret gig, but if they’re playing to a group of dental hygienists from Maidstone, the show is unlikely to go down in history. Conversely, you could be invited to the dreariest art exhibition since Mr. Brainwash’s debut show, but be surrounded by the most exuberant, intriguing people and end up having a ball. Sometimes I suspect that people go to events not to see a show but to be surrounded by other people. I don’t know. It’s just a hunch I get.

The audience for each edition of Campfire is always different and reflects the distinct tenor and tone of the event. Last week’s event was slightly unusual in the sense that there was no guest speaker. Instead, we converted the Lighthouse into a pop-up cinema where we screened a selection of the best entrants to the 2011 Sunrise festival and crowned the winners of the competition, as well as launching Sunset, our online music festival.

People were stuffing their faces with popcorn and nachos, the Jeremiah Weed Root Brew and Sour Mash Brew were beginning to take effect. And when people weren’t glued to the screens watching the work of the immensely talented graduates from Norwich University of the Creative Arts, or listening to the tracks made by the Sunset entrants, they were deep in conversation – huddled together on the front steps, splayed out on the bean bags, perched at the bar, or ensconced in the black pleather armchairs.

There were intense conversations about Oscar-winning female directors, about the difficulty of securing funds for festivals, about product placement, about Fang Floss and Zombie Mints, about sponsored Everest climbs, about a night called Glug, about Localytics, about a film about lobsters, about David Bowie and about the manufacture of nacho cheese sauce, about Chinese tea, about lutes and sheep guts, about ATP, about flooding, about Breton stripes and how much popcorn you can fit in your mouth.

In every corner there were exchanges, glances and sympathies, debate, disagreement, curled lips, smiles, frowns, and the peal of laughter. Without the people, without that energy, Campfire is nothing more than a great idea. So thanks to each and every one of you that attended and made it another memorable night. And never underestimate the power of the crowd. Whether it’s large gatherings in Tahrir Square or small swirls of activity in a business unit in Canonbury, you never know where it might take you and how it might grow.

The Sunrise Online Independent Film Festival 2011 Campfire

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Last Thursday saw an historic day for ditto: not only was it the first time we took Campfire out of London, and on the road to Norfolk, it was also the launch of Sunrise, our third annual independent online film festival. Sunrise is made up exclusively of entrants from the film and animation courses at Norwich University College of the Arts, and is open to a public vote; check out the entrants here, and see if you can pick the next stars of UK film.

With a great sense of excitement, Team ditto headed in convoy to The Curve Cinema in Norwich – Campfire’s home from home for the day. For the assembled students, film lovers and press, there were plenty of treats in store. Not just the first glance of the amazing student videos, but in true Campfire style, talks from established industry experts. NUCA course leaders and artists in their own rights, Suzie Hanna and Liam Wells spoke movingly about the importance of fostering new talent, and the benefits to the students of Campfire’s exposure. These filmmakers are not engaged in a hobby, but building the skills to enter a competitive, vibrant and rewarding commercial industry.

It was also our pleasure to welcome two industry experts, who made the journey up from London to generously share their knowledge and insights. First up was the award winning animator Steve Smith. With over ten years in the game, a BAFTA and a British Animation Award to his name, just name but a few of his accolades, Steve was uniquely positioned to advise the assembled crowd on what it takes to make it in the modern world of UK animation. A gifted animator and a director himself, Steve now runs the successful up-and-coming animation studio Beakus, winning business and nurturing new talent. Above all else, Steve underlined the importance of enthusiasm, dedication, and being able to make the most of new technologies. As he explained, there is a brave new world of animation out there, and talent will out.

Next up to the lectern was a copper bottomed legend of the film world – Don Boyd. In a career stretching over the decades, Don has literally seen and done it all – as a writer, director and producer, he’s worked both here in the UK and in Hollywood. With disarming frankness, Don took us through his career – the lows as well as the highs, the moments of doubt just of those of inspiration. Looks on faces grew steadily more incredulous, as Don skipped through his CV; directing actors of the calibre of Ray Winston, Richard Harris, and Jon Hurt. Let’s be honest: if you’ve produced the likes of Robert Altman, Jean-Luc Godard, Derek Jarman, and Ken Russell (in one film!) it’s a foolish film fan who misses the chance to hear you talk. Added to this, Don’s candour, and evident enthusiasm for film inspired all those in the room. Comparing the current technological leaps forward in the film and online worlds, to the Gutenberg revolution, Don enthused about how growing freedom of the means of production will herald a new era of creativity for those who grasp the opportunity. It’s hard to imagine a better call to arms to nearly graduated filmmakers and enthusiasts, and it was a privilege to see a major player still championing new talent.

But let’s not forget those students – and their films. It’s fair to say that ditto, the assembled audience, Steve and Don et al were blown away by the breadth and quality of the films displayed. Those creations are now available to view and vote for at www.ditto.tv/sunrise_2011 and I’d urge you to do so. Getting eyes on their work is the lifeblood of new filmmakers – encouragement and support is essential to fostering their vision and belief. If you don’t want to be stuck watching dreadful Hollywood sequels in ten years, put your money where your mouth is. Watch the films. Vote. Tell your friends. Tell them to vote. It’s a pretty easy way to support tomorrow’s artists, today. Voting is open until 16th July and the winner will be announced on 21st July.

With one of ditto’s full time members already garnered from Sunrise 2010, we are looking to repeat the success, and swell our talent pool with a new NUCA arrival. Have your say – let us know who you love and why. If you’d like to get in touch with any of the filmmakers, be it with a question, a suggestion, a commission, or simply some encouragement, please just drop us a line at collaborate@ditto.tv, and it’ll be out pleasure to put you in touch.

ditto would like to extend our heartfelt thanks to all those who made the Sunrise Campfire day such a success; guest speakers Don Boyd and Steve Smith for their time and expertise; BBC East, Evening Norwich News/EDP, Film & Festivals Magazine, Empire MagazineLittle White Lies Magazine, Future Radio Breakfast Show, and 99.9 Norwich Radio for helping us shone a light on new talent; Suzie, Liam and the whole NUCA for all their energy and enthusiasm in creating a place where artists can grow; everyone who attended for their applause and support; and most of all the students, who’s work inspires us to want to share it with the world, and who we’re eagerly watching emerge to make their mark on the world.

Highlights from Ruth Mackenzie’s Campfire

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You get the sense that Ruth Mackenzie rarely suffers from stage fright, possibly as a result of early stage performances with the London Schools Choir as a singing snowflake in The Nutcracker. Or maybe  it was her time after university with an experimental feminist theatre group in Lincolnshire where she performed for the benefit of a not-always fully receptive local community.

So addressing a captive audience at ditto HQ was a walk in the park for this artistic director, curator and spokesperson for the arts. Ruth advised five successive culture ministers under New Labour and now has the daunting task of programming the London 2012 Festival – 10 weeks of events across Britain to coincide with the 2012 Olympic Games.

The audience for May’s Campfire, a cross-section of people working in the creative industries from curators to festival programmers, from record label managers to graphic designers, hardly let their attention drop for one second as Ruth regaled them, in her practised laissez-faire manner, with stories from her trajectory through some of Britain’s best arts institutions, from the Nottingham Playhouse to the Scottish Opera, via the Chichester Festival Theatre and the Manchester International Festival.

But this was as much an exercise in self-deprecation as anything, with Ruth explaining how her own limitations as a performer in an experimental theatre group drew her into arts programming, and how as soon as she had a large enough budget to hire acts superior to her own, she did just that. Ruth has always been open to other people’s ideas, and she told the audience how after one belligerent punter at the Nottingham Playhouse laid out a furious critique of her programming, she hired him to the team. That punter, as it so happens, was ditto’s very own Andrew Chetty.

Ruth is a brilliant and convincing spokesperson for the arts – she’s someone who, after many decades working in the industry, still believes strongly in the rewards that the best art can bring to audiences. Having worked at the highest levels and dealt with entrenched bureaucracy, Ruth somehow manages to be not even the slightest bit jaded, but possibly more inspiring than ever.

Her artistic credo – one that forms the basis for the 2012 London Festival, and her career as a whole  – is that world-class art should be accessible to everyone (something she’s carried with her ever since her radical, feminist experimental theatre groups). Ruth explained that these world-class works are important because they are transformative, either in conjuring a better world or describing complex emotional experiences; and finally that the best work always takes risks or challenges the status quo. When she commissioned a contemporary opera in Mandarin to be performed in Manchester as the centrepiece of the Manchester International Festival, there were questions whether they could fill the 30,000 seats required. It helped, of course, that Damon Albarn and Jamie Hewlett of the Gorillaz were involved, but still, it was a risk – but one that paid off with dividends.

Ruth’s biggest challenge of her career, however, will be to deliver a 70-day calendar of events– the London 2012 Festival. She’s been busy commissioning work from headline-grabbing British talent, and we were privileged to hear about and see some of the material in its early stages of development. Ruth spoke at length about Peter Sellars, Toni Morrison and Rokia Traore’s interpretation of Desdemona’s story from Shakespeare’s Othello showing at the Barbican; she waxed lyrical about the

production of Dr Dee directed by Rufus Norris with music by Damon Albarn that will be taking place at the Palace Theatre in Manchester. She whet our appetite for the Big Dance, the world’s largest dance programme, as well as a number of Pina Bausch pieces in development, and work from David Hockney, Rachel Whiteread and Olafur Eliasson.

With more acts to be confirmed nearer the time, the programme is already shaping up to be something that is not just risk-taking and world-class, but also inclusive and aiming to place the cultural agenda firmly at the heart of the 2012 Olympics, just like it was in Ancient Greece.In the Q&A session, Ruth managed to deal with questions hurled at her like a prize fighter parrying punches: ‘Isn’t her cultural programme elitist, appealing to the highly educated elite rather than the general public?’ asked one audience member. ‘How can she justify spending this huge budget at a time when arts budgets and social programmes are being scrapped across the country?’ wondered another. Unfazed, she emphasised that the 2012 Festival was designed to be inclusive and if she hadn’t achieve that goal, then she would have failed in her job. She added that while she wasn’t going to condone the government’s cuts, the value that the 2012 Festival would bring to the country’s cultural industries, with the eyes of the world watching, could provide the kick-start to the economy that this country is so desperately looking for.

It was on that rallying call that Ruth’s Campfire came to an end, and as audience members rose from their seats, careful to avoid knocking over their empty wine glasses, the murmur around the room was of people expressing to each other, almost with surprise, just how inspiring Ruth’s talk had been. Some tried to corner Ruth to pitch their own ideas for the 2012 Festival, others needed a refill at the bar, and as the evening wore on, and the sun went down, Ruth was still sat in the studio, drinking a glass of white wine and talking animatedly to a smaller but still captivated audience of admirers.

Sunrise film festival with guests Don Boyd & Steve Smith

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To celebrate the third edition of Sunrise festival –ditto’s online film festival for film and animation graduates from Norwich University College of the Arts (NUCA) –  we’re very excited to announce that Campfire will be decamping to the provinces for one night only, so ready yourself for what will be a celebration of the moving image and the infinite possibilities of film.

Leaving the Lighthouse behind us, this June Campfire will take place at the Curve Auditorium in Norwich. In this fantastic space we’ll be showcasing the entrants for the 2011 Sunrise competition as well as holding a retrospective of Sunrise 2009 and 2010. On hand will be NUCA course director Liam Wells and Professor Suzie Hanna who will introduce the work of the university’s aspiring David Finchers and Sofia Coppolas.

There will also be talks from revered Scottish film director and producer Don Boyd, as well as from Steve Smith, an animator and director with London-based production company Beakus.

Sunrise will be hosted online, with the 20 best graduate student films and animations subject to a public vote during the course of one month. Make sure you have your say – maybe you can pick out the stars of tomorrow.

Don and Steve’s Campfire will take place on: Thursday 16th June

Time: 2-5pm with drinks after

Location: The Curve Auditorium at the Forum

Address: Millennium Plain, Bethel Street, Norwich – NR2 1TF

Drop us a line at campfire@ditto.tv for free tickets, and we’ll see you there.