Thought Starters

Informações:

Sinopsis

Produced out of White City Place, Thought Starters is a podcast about the relationship between business and creativity.

Episodios

  • A big shift in the world of start-ups, with Sophie Rochester and Miranda West

    04/10/2019

    Sophie Rochester and Miranda West reflect on the conversations they’ve had with investors, the importance of having a genuine social value at the core of a business, and why establishing a positive company culture from Day 1 is crucial.

  • In praise of the prototype, with Riya Patel and Dean Brown

    02/09/2019

    In the Pod today, a curator and a designer in praise of the prototype.

  • The power of the smaller details, with Alex Gore and Timothy Smith

    29/07/2019

    In this episode, a conversation with architects Alex Gore and Timothy Smith about the impact of the smaller details.

  • Raimund Berthold and Dal Chodha on digital distraction and gender in fashion

    18/06/2019

    A notoriously fast-moving industry, the world of fashion seems to be changing like never before: a hyper-quick metabolism for images which drives down our attention span, eco-consciousness, and the breaking down of the gender binary. In this episode, a designer whose brand has transitioned effortlessly from menswear to gender neutrality, and a journalist, consultant and teacher who helps readers, designers and students navigate these changes.

  • The do-it-all design work of Sella Concept

    22/05/2019

    The do-it-all design work of Sella Concept

  • The art of typography, with Alan Kitching and Anthony Burrill

    30/04/2019

    Graphic design and art often interplay, with boundaries regularly blurred. One element that often to link the two is type; using individual letters or words in a way that either subverts or elevates linguistic communication. In this episode we meet two artists whose successful careers have layered an expressive approach to typography with traditional techniques. Alan Kitching, one of the world’s foremost practitioners of letterpress typographic design and printmaking talks to Anthony Burrill, a graphic artist, print-maker and designer, renowned for his persuasive, up-beat style of communication.

  • Creative change with James Turner and Zac Schwarz

    15/04/2019

    When you're working in the creative industries, the dream is often to use creativity to fuel a social cause. Aspiring to make a contribution instead of simply fuelling consumerism. Sadly, that seems to very rarely come to fruition. But not so for our conversationalists today, who are co-founders of Glimpse, a creative collective that tries to cut through consumer and popular culture with a healthy dose of wit and compassion. Glimpse enables creative professionals to use their existing skills for positive social and environmental causes – their projects have included “Choose Love” the world's first store that sells real products for refugees.

  • Why craft matters, with Hugo MacDonald and Natalie Melton

    07/03/2019

    “Craft.” For a long time, the word has had been pushed to the periphery of the design world, disregarded for its perceived quaintness. But, thanks in part to the efforts of crafts organisations, that has very much been changing. “Craft” now has become associated not with homeliness, but with the highest forms of the discipline – creeping its way into the lexicon of luxury fashion, and architecture too. In the Pod today are two people who’re are helping the public engage with craft’s new identity. Hugo MacDonald, curator of Useful/Beautiful: Why Craft Matters at the inaugural Harewood Biennial speaks with the Craft Council's creative director, Natalie Melton.

  • The new crop of non-fiction with Kassia St Clair and Zahra Hankir

    18/02/2019

    As snappy as we seem to like our information these days, each year there are innumerable books of non-fiction that explore our world in great depth and thoughtfulness. These works can help us see the world in a new way, by exploring previously murky arenas of culture, or taking focus on themes that rarely get much breathing space. We have two such authors in The Pod today. Kassia St Clair, whose books have charted the curious histories of colour and fabric and Zahra Hankir, whose forthcoming book compiles essays by women reporting on conflict in the Arab world. What they have in common: selling the value of stories that had been pushed to the periphery – and experiencing the painstaking, nerve-wracking process of getting them published.

  • Ronan McKenzie & Esrael Alem are redefining the mainstream aesthetic

    25/01/2019

    As much as photography and video have gained in reputation in the world of fine art, they have also been democratised. Thanks to smart phones, 1.2 trillion photos were taken in 2017 alone.  Image-making is also something often scrutinised. It can reinforce strict and unrealistic standards of beauty or, collectively, define a narrow demographic of who and what gets to be represented. As ever, though, a new generation of photographers and videographers are challenging the rules and helping to redefine a mainstream aesthetic. Our guests today, Ronan McKenzie and Esrael Alem, are two such artists.

  • Celebrating social enterprises with Peter Holbrook CBE and Steve Coles

    24/12/2018

    These days, we expect brands to reflect a set of values, not simply provide products. No businesses do this better than those whose entire mission is to change the world for the better, even in just a small way – these are social enterprises. Combining commerce with social progress, they often work with vulnerable groups, offering work and a sense of inclusion that might not have been available to them, but in all cases, they reinvest or donate their profits to create positive social change. As we head into Christmas, we can think of no better sector to celebrate than social enterprises. In the Pod today, one man whose job it is to promote social enterprises in the UK. And, another, the CEO of a trust that operates social enterprises of their own. Our guests: Social Enterprise UK CEO Peter Holbrook, CBE, and Spitalfields Crypt Trust CEO, Steve Coles.

  • Joyful design with Morag Myerscough and Ingrid Fetell Lee

    17/12/2018

    In design, there’s a certain aesthetic we imagine we hear the word “sophistication” – it’s likely muted, neutral, maybe even sombre. And, we apply it often: to offices, to homes, to restaurants, to hotels. But these spaces aren't often very ‘joyful’. Joyful spaces are playful and bright. And, so, we often think of joyful places as those for children. Rarely do we think the two can co-exist. One is mature, the other juvenile. More and more, however, designers are challenging this preconception, and questioning why we so often push joy to the margins and write it off as something that lacks in refinement or elegance. In the Pod today, two such people: Morag Myerscough and Ingrid Fetell Lee.

  • Architecture and VR – Softroom's Oliver Salway & Russell Potter of SODA

    19/11/2018

    In the field of architecture, communicating ideas has always been a challenge. A combination of scale models, illustrations, plans and renderings help explain how a space, a building, or even an entire city might look and feel. But all of that is beginning to change, with the introduction of cheaper, quicker and more elaborate VR experiences. Now, clients and even public can step inside buildings, guide themselves around them, and experience them in 1-to-1 scale. Will this make for better buildings? In the Pod today, to architects who’ve embraced the use of VR in the practices, two discuss what they see as the future of this technology in design.

  • Wolff Olins' Robert Jones and Jon Alexander of the New Citizenship Project

    02/11/2018

    For what seems like forever, we've been told we live in a “consumer society” – we are defined by how we spend, it is our most important expression of ourselves, our aspirations and our politics. And, while still a powerful concept, some have argued that we are sliding into a new era: a citizen society. Instead of simply a choice to purchase or not, we are feeling a greater power to influence through participation. We expect the brands we engage with to reflect our values – not just sell to us. Meet our speakers: Robert Jones, Head of New Thinking at Wolff Olins and Jon Alexander, founder of the New Citizen Project

  • British Vogue digital editor Alice Casely-Hayford and Refinery 29's Sarah Raphael

    17/10/2018

    Today, we delve into the world of digital publishing with two editors at the top of their game, for two of the most notable women-focus publications out there – industry-leading digital magazine Refinery 29 and one of the biggest names in fashion: British Vogue. Womens-focused publications have changed significantly since these Sarah Raphael and Alice Casely-Hayford were reading fashion magazines as teens. For one, the industry is turning around how it's representing women, and how it speaks to them. What else? A broader scope, a new tone of voice, and capturing attention in a ever-more cluttered landscape of content-creators.

  • Day 2 at LDF: V&A curator Rory Hyde and Digital Identities founder Abhay Adhikari

    25/09/2018

    The Pod is going on tour for London Design Festival! Last stop: Exhibition Road, outside the V&A as part of the Day of Design street party. We met Curator of Contemporary Architecture and Urbanism at the Victoria and Albert Museum, Rory Hyde and founder of Digital Identities, Dr. Abhay Adhikari. Together, they reflected on this year's London Design Festival as the city-wide event came to a close. Tune in for an invigorating chat about the future of cities, and how digital culture shapes our behaviour.

  • Day 2 at LDF: Design curator Max Fraser and editor Priya Khanchandani

    25/09/2018

    The Pod is going on tour for London Design Festival! Last stop: Exhibition Road, outside the V&A as part of the Day of Design street party. We met editor of Icon magazine, Priya Khanchandani, and design curator Max Fraser. Together, they reflected on this year's London Design Festival as the city-wide event came to a close. Tune in for wrap-up for this year's London Design Festival.

  • Day 1 at LDF: architect Kelechi Odu and Thomas Matthews' Sophie Thomas

    24/09/2018

    The Pod is going on tour for London Design Festival! First stop: The Brompton Design District. Today we met architect and furniture designer Kelechi Odu of Oparanze Collective and Sophie Thomas of communications design studio Thomas Matthews. Tune in for an invigorating chat about the reuse of materials in design, enjoyable ways to tackle not-so-enjoyable subject matter (such as pollution), and: is London too clean?

  • Day 1 at LDF: V&A curator Johanna Agerman Ross and Tetsuo Mukai of Workshop for Potential Design

    24/09/2018

    The Pod is going on tour for London Design Festival! First stop: The Brompton Design District. Today we met Johanna Agerman Ross, curator of contemporary design at the V&A and Tetsuo Mukai of the research and design and research consultancy, Workshop for Potential Design. Tune in for an invigorating chat about how we display design in museums, how we can learn to appreciate past objects in new ways, and the challenges of curation.

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