Une compagnie de danse de la région parisienne propose à des artistes, valides ou non, de composer les dix tableaux d'un spectacle multimédia. Les premières représentations auront lieu à l'hiver 2013.
Via Living Lab Pôle Numérique
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Rescooped by association concert urbain from Du numérique dans et pour la culture onto actions de concertation citoyenne |
Une compagnie de danse de la région parisienne propose à des artistes, valides ou non, de composer les dix tableaux d'un spectacle multimédia. Les premières représentations auront lieu à l'hiver 2013.
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A conversation with urban sociologist Zachary Neal on his new book, The Connected City.
Cities are obviously more than just the sum of their physical assets — roads and bridges, offices, factories, shopping centers, and homes — working more like living organisms than jumbles of concrete. Their inner workings even transcend their ability to cluster and concentrate people and economic activity.
As sociologist Zachary Neal of Michigan State University argues in his new book, The Connected City, cities are made up of human social networks. Neal took time to discuss his book and research with Atlantic Cities, explaining how cities work as living organisms and why what happens in Las Vegas cannot stay in Las Vegas. Via Lauren Moss Delete the scoop?
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Combining street art and urban planning, Candy Chang created fill-in-the-blank stickers that say “I wish this was ____.” With support from the Ethnographic Terminalia exhibit, she placed boxes of free stickers in businesses around the city and posted grids of blank stickers and a permanent marker on vacant storefronts to invite passersby to write their thoughts. The stickers are vinyl and they can be easily removed without damaging property. Responses ranged from the functional to the poetic: I wish this was… a butcher shop, a community garden, a bike rack, an affordable farmer’s market, a Chinese restaurant, a place to sit and talk, Brad Pitt’s house, real soul food, a dancing school, full of nymphomaniacs with PhDs, Heaven. It’s a fun, low-barrier tool to provide civic input onsite, and the responses reflect the hopes, dreams, and colorful imaginations of different neighborhoods. Via Sylvia Fredriksson Delete the scoop?
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