Monday 24 September 2012

The Dark Outside dates live

All locations and dates for the Dark Outside work linking to the Wigtown Book Festival are now live on the website www.thedarkoutside.com

Also check out  www2.astronomicalheritage.net the new integrated web portal for the Astronomy and World Heritage Initiative, launched on August 24, 2012


Astronomical heritage is evidence relating to the practice of astronomy and to social uses and representations of astronomy. It exists in the form of the tangible remains of monuments, sites and landscapes with a link to the skies that constitute a well-defined physical property. It can also involve movable objects such as instruments and archives, intangible knowledge—including indigenous knowledge still preserved in the world today—and natural environments that support human interest in astronomy, for example through the cultural use of their horizons or dark night skies.

Sunday 19 August 2012

New Website

We've just made our new website live. This will feature all the work we're doing to co-incide with the Wigtown Book festival - Drive in Movie, Shrines and Radio Transmissions.

We're going to be adding to it weekly and will put up the times/dates/places for all the work as soon as we have them. You can leave your contact details and we'll let you know as soon as info goes up.

www.thedarkoutside.com


Tuesday 14 August 2012

Drive In Movie

We've been working with Wigtown Book Festival and The Forestry Commission to put on the City Dark as a Drive in Movie ( see earlier post about the movie)

The Drive in will take place on 3rd Oct at 7.30pm at Kirroughtree Visitor Centre DG8 7BE £8 per car

This is a  rare chance to experience a drive-in movie under the stars in the Galloway Forest Park. A hit on the film festival circuit, The City Dark is a documentary about the loss of night. When film-maker Ian Cheney moved from rural Maine to New York City, he asked a simple question: do we need the stars? This visually stunning film follows him around the world as he talks to astronomers, cancer researchers and ecologists to find out what is lost under the glare of the city lights. (Film running time: 84 minutes.) 
Online booking at www.wigtownbookfestival.com
Made possible by the Forestry Commission, Creative Scotland and Wide Open

Collaboration with Jean Atkin

Last week we had a very productive meeting with poet Jean Atkin, who has researched and written some beautiful poems about the loss of farms within the area of the Dark Skies Park. The  skies are so dark in the Park because of the very low population and many once working farms have been abandoned.

A book of her poetry called 'The Dark Farms' is being published shortly and she will be reading some of them at the Wigtown Book festival 28 Sept - 7th Oct.

See http://www.wigtownbookfestival.com

"Jean Atkin’s new collection of poems focuses on the Galloway Forest Park, its depopulated glens, shrinking agriculture and extraordinarily dark skies. This is poetry about the ghosts of sheep, countless stars and generations of paths obliterated by pine forests. Jean Atkin is a previous winner of the Ravenglass Poetry Prize. She worked on The Dark Farms for eight months during 2011, walking the forest, talking to residents and reading old books and maps"

We are hoping to collaborate with Jean and incorporate some of her writing into new work we are making to be highlighted as part of the Dark Skies programme at the Wigtown Book Festival

Friday 3 August 2012

We watched 'In the Shadow of the the Moon" last night. It was fantastic -  the interviews with the astronauts included them talking about how the amazing experience of going to the moon and back had affected them.

The official blurb goes as follows:

In the shadow of the moon is an intimate epic, which vividly communicates the daring and the danger, the pride and the passion, of this extraordinary era in American history. Between 1968 and 1972, the world watched in awe each time an American spacecraft voyaged to the moon.Only 12 American men walked upon its surface and they remain the only human beings to have stood on another world. Now for the first, and very possibly the last, time, In the shadow of the moon combines archival material from the original NASA film footage, much of it never before seen, with interviews with the surviving astronauts. The astronauts emerge as eloquent, witty, emotional and very human.


Tuesday 31 July 2012

We've had some time away from the residency working on other projects, but are now back and working on pulling our research, interests and ideas together.

We are working in collaboration with the Wigtown Book Festival 28th Sept - 9th October www.wigtownbookfestival.com to put on the City Dark as a Drive in Movie and to showcase some of our new work. The book festival has many talks and events relating to Dark Skies as part of it's programme this year. We're also hoping to screen the City Dark as part of the Film Festival in November.

We're working on a new website which will detail our work relating to the residency and when and where you can find it. We'll post details as soon as its live.

On a more global note, the image below is the surface of Mars where the new Rover 'Curiosity ' will be landing on Monday. Check out www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/msl/index.html for more information on the mission and what Curiosity will be doing over the next 2 years.



More locally, Steve Owens the Dark Skies Development Officer, has visited the new observatory at Dallmelington that we posted about earlier in the year. You can find more about it on his blog darkskydiary.wordpress.com/author/sadbagger and a recent image is below. Its looking good.


Tuesday 15 May 2012

Galloway Forest Park and The Dark

Galloway Forest Park is the Natural Boundary for the Dark Skies Park and Keith Muir, the Head of Tourism, Recreation and Communications, was instrumental in the the Galloway Forest Dark Skies Park application to the International Dark Skies Association.

www.darksky.org
Galloway Forest Park Dark Skies Application

There has been a huge interest in the Dark Skies Park since the successful designation in November 2009 resulting in an increase to visitors to the Forest Park. This has been great for tourism in the area and has also increased numbers visiting the Forest Park. Keith is working an a massive development plan for the Park including designing new visitor centres and 4 new trails. A lot of work is going into creating exciting new interpretation facilities for visitors.

We met with Keith to hear about his work, he explained that he is passionate about making the experience of the night sky accessible to people. He said that in some places there are 5 generations of people living with perpetual light, never experiencing total darkness. As 90 percent of visitors to the park are from urban areas, there is a real opportunity for people when they come to the Galloway Forest Dark Skies Park to have this experience. Keith is equally passionate about reducing light pollution. he would love to have a region wide lights off!

A few years ago Jo made a short film called Night Life which was shown at the Climate Change Summit in Copenhagen 2009 raising issues of light pollution and energy wastage.




During the residency, we will be looking at peoples psychological responses to the dark. What is our relationship with the dark and the night sky?  Have we lost our connection to this part of of our heritage? Do we as humans have an ancient link to the dark? Do people remember their first experience of total darkness as a child?  Do those memories inform our response to the lit world?  How does it feel to look up from a dark world and see an illuminated Universe?

The film, The City Dark was released last year and poses the question " What do we lose, when we lose the night?" We are hoping to show it as part of the Dumfries and Galloway Film Festival later this year.

Watch The City Dark Trailer