Video Republic
How young people are changing Europe
Production companies and broadcasters no longer hold a monopoly over moving-images - instead, a new theatre of public information has emerged. Spread across the internet, television, festivals and campaigns this emerging ‘Video Republic’ is a messy, alternative realm of video creation and exchange, dominated by young people. Who inhabits, shapes and regulates the Video Republic?
"youngpeople"
5 items tagged with this theme in this project. Find more on this theme : » show items from across the site
- Helsinki, 18-22 February 2008 Celia and I have just got back from a fantastic week in Helsinki, where we were visiting week-long video workshops at the Kiasma Museum of Contemporary Art. It was the first of our research trips to Stranger Festival workshops, designed to help young people across Europe make videos about themselves and their impressions of the world around them. from : petebradwell 23rd February 2008
- Gerard Lemos Gerard Lemos from : petebradwell 25th February 2008
- Helsinki workshop video When Celia and I were in Helsinki we made a video of some of our initial thoughts on the process and research, and of our conversations with to two of the young filmmakers and one of the facilitators. Here's the short piece of film from our trip. from : petebradwell 29th February 2008
- Berlin. 24-25/03/08. On 24th and 25th March I spent two days at the marvellous Schlesische 27, a youth arts organisation in Kreuzberg, to the south east of Berlin. It's nestled in a set of buildings off Schlesische street, in an area with growing numbers of artists and an established Turkish population. There were six young filmmakers in the workshop, all aged between 17 and 22. Thanks, first off, to the facilitators and filmmakers for being so welcoming. I was only there two days so unfortunately I haven’t... from : petebradwell 8th April 2008
- Pew Internet: Teens and Social Media "Content creation by teenagers continues to grow, with 64% of online teenagers ages 12 to 17 engaging in at least one type of content creation, up from 57% of online teens in 2004." from : petebradwell 6th August 2008
