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Launch of the School for the Cultural and Creative Industries (SCCI)

12 October 2023

This week marked the launch of the School for the Cultural and Creative Industries (SCCI) at ¹û¶³Ó°Ôº East. To celebrate the launch we decided to find out a little more about Professor Haidy Geismar, the Director of SCCI and a Professor of Anthropology at ¹û¶³Ó°Ôº.

Haidy Geismar

School for theÌýCreative and Cultural Industries Launches.

On 11th OctoberÌýthe ¹û¶³Ó°Ôº School for the Creative and Cultural Industries celebrated its official launch and unveiled a new exhibition in the Culture Lab - Power!ÌýThe celebration was held in the newly opened Marshgate building atÌý¹û¶³Ó°Ôº EastÌýwhere SCCI showcased some of itsÌýstate-of-the-art spacesÌýand highlighted teaching and research by its academics andÌýprogrammes. You can read more about the launch here. In order to learn more about the history and work of SCCI, we interviewed Professor Haidy Geismar the Director of SCCI.Ìý

Get to know:ÌýHaidy Geismar,ÌýDirector of SCCI and Professor of Anthropology

Where would we find you on campus?
I’m the Director of the ¹û¶³Ó°Ôº School forÌýCreative and Cultural Industries (SCCI) and a Professor of Anthropology, so I divide my time between ¹û¶³Ó°Ôº East and Bloomsbury.Ìý SCCI works across three faculties – Arts and Humanities, Social and Historical Sciences, and Education and Society, linking taught courses and researchers working across media, art and creative practice, public history and heritage, conservation and collections. SCCI supports teaching and research in our new spaces at ¹û¶³Ó°Ôº East, and it fosters new relationships across the creative and cultural sector.Ìý I’m particularly proud of our two public facing spaces: the ¹û¶³Ó°Ôº Urban Room in One Pool Street and the ¹û¶³Ó°Ôº Culture lab in Marshgate. They show our commitment to reaching out to the public through experiential and visual project work, and through our collections, making the work of student and researchers accessible and visible and bringing in voices from outside the university.Ìý

What brought you to ¹û¶³Ó°Ôº East?
From very early on in discussions about East Bank, including with the V&A, it was clear that there was an interest in the power of museum and archive collections. Because these are also my research interestsÌýI was a part of this conversation within ¹û¶³Ó°Ôº. ¹û¶³Ó°Ôº is renowned for its strengths in object based learning, and since these conversations have started we now have an object learning classroom and the Institute of Making in Bloomsbury as well as the spaces that are part of the School for the Creative and Cultural Industries at ¹û¶³Ó°Ôº East. Working with anything from artworks, artefacts and archives to digital versions of objects, this form of learning is now a central vehicle for teaching and engagement here at ¹û¶³Ó°Ôº East. That experiential learning promotes critical thinking and analysis, connects people with the past, and gives us a greater understanding of what we’re studying or exploring with communities and visitors.Ìý


Where excites you about ¹û¶³Ó°Ôº East?
The collaborative ethos here excites me most. Our new buildings enable us to work beyond the silos of disciplines, departments, and even faculties. You can see in action in our current Culture Lab exhibition,Ìý
Power!,Ìýwhich I co-curated with Johanna Zetterstrom Sharp, and a team working across all our museums and departments. It explores the concept of power in different ways and includes collections from around ¹û¶³Ó°Ôº. We’ve left a case empty to be animated by young people, working with a visual artist, to respond to the exhibit over the next few months.ÌýÌý

By visibly demonstrating the value of thinking through culture, from collections and archives to audio-visual, digital and immersive media, SCCI highlights the importance of the methods, practices and questions that emerge within the humanities and social sciences. We want to challenge the ways in which the visual and creative arts can be undervalued as vital components of contemporary society. Our strategy is working, as evidenced by the number of partners who are keen to work with us and the students that have already joined our brand new courses.Ìý

What are you into at the moment?ÌýÌý
I read all the time and find walking and cycling around London particularly inspiring. You can see some objects that I collected with my daughter (with the right permissions I should add) by mudlarking by the Thames in the Power! exhibition.ÌýI’m also in a singing group and sing opera.ÌýÌý

Your favourite opera?ÌýÌý
Hmmm, it has to be a toss-up between La Traviata and The Marriage of Figaro. You can’t beat the classics

haidy and daughter in a museum arm in arm