20 5 / 2011
Some of my fellow @kaospilots alumni are running a visualizing project for Roskilde Festival
If you’ve been looking for a way to change the world, have fun, make money and look ridicously good at the same time, you’ve just found it. Both the KaosPilots and Roskilde Festival have a longstanding tradition in social innovation and I’ll gladly vouch for them being awesome, I’ve attended both university and the festival for years ;)
This year Roskilde Festival(June 30 till July 3 with the warm-up starting three days prior to that) has chosen to focus on cpoverty and inequality, and the fact that even in Denmark one of the world’s richest countries, poverty and inequality are issues that needs to be addressed. Your challenge is to communicate this in a way that make spectators think about poverty and inequality in their surroundings.
Create a piece of work that clearly communicates the need for creating new ideas that reduce poverty - win your ticket and join our team of Rapid Visualizers!
The Rapid Visualizers team makes quick visualizations of the ideas that are created by Festival guests in the Lab during the warm-up days before the Festival. The visualizations could be drawings, renderings, animations, videos, photos etc. You will be part of a team of creative people and you are encouraged to have as much fun as possible.
Send your entry to creative@roskildesociallab.dk before June 13th
The best submissions will be part of our exhibition and we will invite the best visualizers to join our team and get a free ticket for 2011
More KaosPilots social innovation:
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26 11 / 2009
Back to KaosPilot style - weirdo creative facilitation for Youth Media Meeting
Yesterday’s graphic recording for Deutsche Bank and FAZ was all about suits and seriousness (and I do have it in me to find that immensely interesting), today it is facilitation for a great bunch of young people from all across Europe. These pictures are from this morning’s opening session. KaosPilots will probably recognize it - it’s a fun exercise to kick-off a group meeting and introduce each other. Great job the team did there! Supersizing the European map was a bit of a “challenge”: I didn’t quite place Serbia and Romania correctly. Please forgive me, dear friends ;) But at least the participants had the opportunity to shape their own country. And all it took was a pencil. Revolution was never easier.16 11 / 2009




