In pursuit of repetative beats, August, 2024

I was a student in Manchester in the seventies when punk and new wave were the big thing. I caught up with the New Romantics music whilst in London.  In the eighties it was all about getting my qualifications and working for promotion. Family arrived and that was my life.  The rave culture happened and it was just news headlines. I loved the music and often read about the rave gatherings that were taking place in Coventry and Birmingham.  Sadly, I never attended a rave although the popular music of Orbital, Future Sound of London, Massive Attack and Underworld was very much a fav at the time.

In pursuit of repetative beats, August, 2024
Getting ready to see where the illegal rave will be. Wow an A-Z map and cassettes.

When I read about “In pursuit of repetitive beats” at Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery, I knew that I must experience it. This art installation transports you into a wild and immersive VR experience. You are thrown into a story set in 1989 about attending an illegal rave around Coventry.  The story focusses on three young people attending the event alongside the accounts by police who were trying to stop the illegal raves from taking place. 

In pursuit of repetative beats, August, 2024
Here I am kitted out and dancing in my VR space.

Once I was kitted out with Virtual Reality headset and hand controllers, I was ready to go into this virtual world.  The experience was surreal.  You followed the story by picking up leaflets with your virtual hands and there was a talking head providing information as you removed around your virtual world. In one part, I was flying towards a gigantic eye with electricity bolts steaming out of my hands.  It was so cool. I became immersed in the story of an illegal rave.  Realistic car journeys,  the police chase and then the rave itself. All the time I was moving and dancing with the beats of the music. I must have looked a real sight whilst I was in a virtual world! Still such great fun. Attention to detail was spot on.  

In pursuit of repetative beats, August, 2024
A range of posters that were used to advertise the upcoming raves.

Whilst I am unable to provide pictures of the VR experience there were pre-show displays at the entrance to the experience. This detail is from the phone box display which was set up to show how people communicated and navigated to the raid before the advent of mobile phones.

The trailer for In Pursuit of repetitive beats.

Over the summer, I experienced an amazing photographic exhibition by Mat Collishaw called “Thresholds” and it is best to read the website that gives details of it www.somersethouse.org.uk/whats-on/mat-collishaw-thresholds

This extract is taken from the Web Site “Using the latest in VR technology, Thresholds restaged one of the earliest exhibitions of photography in 1839, when British scientist William Henry Fox Talbot first presented his photographic prints to the public at King Edward’s School, Birmingham. The experience was a fully immersive portal to the past; people were able to walk freely throughout a digitally reconstructed room, and touch the bespoke vitrines, fixtures and mouldings; even the heat from a coal fire was recreated. A soundscape for Thresholds included the sound of demonstrations of the Chartist protesters who rioted in 1839 on the streets of Birmingham, and could be glimpsed through the digital windows.”  Take a look here youtu.be/acktp-Wy8Nw

This picture shows a women picking up a text to read it. I am taking the picture though a window into the hall. When I suited up with the VR technology it was quite an experience to wander around the room.  I meant to write a blog on the experience and then I got prompted to do so as I learnt that the BBC web site used my image under CC Licence.  It is a blog on the BBC R&D section discussing reality labs.  Always nice to know your image is being used and here is the BBC Blog bbc.in/2eJKo1g