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The Brigstow Institute brings researchers from different disciplines together with a range of partners across the city and beyond to experiment in new ways of living and being. The Brigstow Happenings includes updates and news from research projects funded by Brigstow, as well as upcoming events and opportunities. 

In September's Happenings.....

A message from Brigstow


You might want to know what Brigstow’s been up to and what our plans are going forward.  I think it’s fair to say it’s been a difficult time for everyone, both personally and professionally. So we thought it time to share some of our recent activities and future plans with you.

We knew this would be a challenging time for our seedcorn projects so we met with each of the projects shortly after lockdown to discuss how their research was affected, what could be changed and how we could help. Our approach was to be as flexible as possible – after all, the combination of people and research is never plain sailing!  We were hugely encouraged by the teams’ enthusiasm and determination to continue with their projects making use of digital methods of undertaking research and collaboration.

This particular September is quite a milestone for Brigstow – it will mark 5 years of Brigstow’s existence and the funding of 127 new engaged research partnerships and projects, and numerous events.   Sadly, our events have had to move online for the time being so we’re sorry we can’t offer tantalising conversations as well as a delicious lunch.  We did hold a number of events online though over the summer – if you missed our first Creativity and Policy meeting, you can catch it via Youtube. You can hear from two of our interdisciplinary and coproduced research projects discuss their different creative approaches to explore immigration policies from the perspectives of those directly affected.  Also available is a recording of the Hidden Histories meeting - two very different histories are explored: Ken Pryce's 1970s landmark study of Caribbean people in Britain is revisited, & the role of C19th asylums as therapeutic spaces is tested using stitching.

We’ve also had to rethink how and what we might fund in the coming year – we’re still keen to support new, experimental research partnerships but the timeline for the seedcorn and Ideas Exchanges competitions will change to later in the academic year.  We hope to announce the details and deadlines for these in the coming weeks and to give teams more time for developing ideas and the applications.  Our current thinking is that the deadlines will be early February 2021 with a longer production period to September/October 2021.  There will also be lots of opportunities for people to come and discuss (virtually!) their potential ideas with us over the next few months.

In the meantime, we’ve got an exciting opportunity coming up in collaboration with the Bristol Photo Festival for one research team to work together on a short project that uses photography as a research tool/approach/method.  We’d like the project to be, ideally, both interdisciplinary and co-produced, and fit broadly within the Brigstow theme of living well. We are especially interested in projects that involve participatory photography.  You can view Brigstow Institute and Bristol Photo Festival commission details here and the deadline for applications is 21st October 2020.

CALL OPEN: Brigstow Institute and Bristol Photo Festival.

Brigstow is delighted to be able to work with the Bristol Photo Festival to offer the opportunity for one research team to work together on a short project that uses photography as a research tool/approach/method.  

We invite applications from teams responding to either of the two themes identified by the Festival: Growing SpacesThe Living Room ArchiveOne commission will be made and the successful team will have a budget of c. £6k to fund costs such as fees and materials for the exhibition.

Full call information, including application process,eligibility and guidance is available here. 
The closing date is Wednesday 21st October 2020

CALL OPEN: for a creative partner to celebrate 100 years of postgraduate research

 
The University of Bristol is looking for a socially engaged artist or creative practitioner (in film, illustration, animation or other) working with digital media to facilitate a series of workshops and process of co-creation.

The Bristol Doctoral College and the Brigstow Institute at the University of Bristol are looking for an artist or creative working on digital outputs to collaborate with us to produce a short film, animation or other digital artwork to celebrate 100 years of postgraduate research at the University, and the diversity of our past and current post graduate research community. 

The project will take place between November 2020 and May 2021 and you will work with a team of four postgraduate researchers to co-create a piece of digital work that can be presented online. 
  • Project fee: £5,000 
  • Materials: £1,200 

Deadline for applications: 30 September 2020.
Further information and application process.


Kept Apart: 

Webinar and Book Launch

14 September, 6.30pm, Online
Registration and info

Since 2012, when the British government introduced new restrictions to family immigration, thousands of British citizens and long-term residents have been denied the right to live with their partners and/or families in the UK. Join 'Kept Apart: Making prose-poetry with people seperated from families by the immigration system' for a webinar to discuss these issues, and celebrate the launch of Kept Apart: a new collection of narratives and illustrations which highlights the pressures of navigating the UK family immigration system, and the profound impacts on individuals and families kept apart from their loved ones.

A Tale of Three Methods 

Brigstow funded Experimental Partnership 'Tackling Uncertainty Across the Centuries: Medievals and Moderns in Conversation' introduce their projects research methods in a new blog post. 
Read a Tale of Three Methods to find out about their co-creation model, and the development of an interactive device to be installed at Churches Trust Conservation sites.

MAPHIS: Using Machine Learning to understand city development

In this blog, Brigstow funded Experimental Partnership “MAPHIS: Mapping History – What historical maps can tell us about urban development”  explores how lockdown was both a blessing and curse in their research process.
Read MAPHIS: Using Machine Learning to understand city development.

Kept Apart - couples and families separated by the UK immigration system

Brigstow funded experimental partnership "Kept Apart: Making prose-poetry with people separated from families by the immigration system" have produced a blog for Migration Mobilities Bristol. The blog post, "Kept Apart - couples and families separated by the UK immigration system" discusses their research project to date.

Online Work in Progress Conversations


Did you miss our Work in Progress events? You can now catch up online!
Dip into our recordings to hear from research teams and find out more about their research progress to date. Click on the Work in Progress event you are interested in below, or visit the Hello Brigstow Youtube Channel to watch. 
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University of Bristol
Royal Fort House
Tyndall Avenue
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