Friday 22 May 2015

TATE Britain // Open call for submission: Pixelate 1910


From http://www.tate.org.uk/whats-on/tate-britain/special-event/open-call-submission-pixelate-1910 
  • Tate Britain, 1910
  • Thursday 14 May , 10.00Sunday 31 May 2015, 0.00
  • The open call for submission is for young people aged 18–25

This open call for submission invites you to experiment with pixel art to transform selected artworks on display in Room 1910 at Tate Britain.

Simply put, a pixel is the smallest point that can be represented on a screen, and appears in the form of small squares, dots or lines, which make up every digital image. To pixelate an image is to abstract its appearance by changing, altering or manipulating the image pixel data. For example, expanding or reducing the pixels per inch (ppi), changing the shape of the pixels, or like some pixel artists, building a digital image from scratch, pixel by pixel.

 

Get involved

Take part by choosing one of the selected artworks from Room 1910, save a copy and get creative with its pixels.

Submit your pixelated artworks to us via the Tate Collectives Tumblr or by emailing collectives@tate.org.uk

Dealine for submissions: Sunday 31 May at midnight.

A curated selection of your submissions will be screened at Late at Tate on Friday 5 June 2015 in Room 1910 at Tate Britain. 

 

Terms and Conditions

From the entries submitted Tate will, at its discretion, select those to be shown in the display as part of Late at Tate Britain, on the Tate website or on any other third party platform.
The open call for submission is for young people aged 18–25.

Don’t be rude. Anything defamatory or obscene won’t be accepted.

By sharing and uploading any contribution (including any text, photographs, graphics, video or audio-visual material) with Tate you agree to grant to Tate, free of charge, permission to use the material in any way it wants (including modifying and adapting it for future operational or editorial reasons) for Tate services in any existing or future media worldwide (including on Tate’s site accessed by international users) and in perpetuity. You waive any moral rights in your contribution in order to permit Tate to edit your material as appropriate. You also grant to Tate the right to sub-license these rights to third parties.

We won’t use your content for commercial purposes but we may use your content to promote our platform or project. If your content contains third party material e.g. images, video, music etc you must have obtained the necessary third party permissions to use the material.

Copyright in your contribution will remain with you and this permission is not exclusive, so you can continue to use the material in any way including allowing others to use it, including licensing that material to other websites.

If you do not grant Tate the permission set out above on these terms please do not submit or share your contribution with our to Tate.

View Tate’s full website terms and conditions.

No comments:

Post a Comment