Wednesday 26 October 2011

Visits for Brief Handover & Q+A: Museum + Beeline

The Beeline Storytelling brief was explained on Tuesday 1st Nov by the Project Manager Steve Boffy. Steve went on to explain the nature of the festival, who the audience were and their likely wants as well as trends in the area of children's literature that may have a bearing on your initial ideas.

An MP3 of the discussion is available [here].
[May take a while to display in browser or download - large file: 48Mb]

Worcester City Museum on Foregate St in the City on tues 25th Oct. Tours and brief talk-throughs were undertaken by the Museum's David Nash and Garston Phillips who also took questions about the brief based at the museum. It was clear that what you can see upstairs in the Museum was only a fraction of the amazing things that the facility has in it's stores..

Students looking over the Bredon Roman coin hoard.

Stephen examines the William Morris textiles

Jesse and Nik look over Art Nouveau furniture

Examples of how the museum focuses on the human story of artifacts.


Albert the [Famous] Albatross!

Garton in the stores - a real Aladdin's cave..

Students hear David discuss the items on the stores

Some of the delicate butterfly and moth collections kept in storage

For your consideration...
Above the door of the former Post Office Research station at Dollis Hill North London is written:

"RESEARCH IS THE DOOR TO TOMORROW"

Visual trends come and go but the need for good research underpinning good and clever solutions will never wain. Please don't think any solutions for our briefs are just about 'eye candy' - they need to be a rounded solution which are well understood and thought-out for the audience[s].

Dollis Hill was where the world's first semi-programmable electronic computer was designed and built in WW2 [Colossus] by a British team including bricklayer's son Tommy Flowers. A world first.

2 comments:

  1. A. Headspeath - Andy Stevenson

    A worthwhile visit, particularly following Mondays visit to the London museums. As indicated, what is displayed is only a fraction of the objects and artefacts that museums store (an iceberg is a good analogy). This gives a really good opportunity for a website to showcase local collections that may not normally feature regularly within the museums showcase due to limited space (and perhaps financial constraints).

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  2. Good point Alan.. It was important to see and look around if you're going to do this brief..

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