Thursday, 18 December 2008
Crackin' Nuts
Sad to see that this is the last Christmas that this particular production will be be staged but after 7 successful years I guess it's time for a change.
The wildly eccentric production is designed by Gerald Scarfe and choreographed by Christopher Hampson and features what I can confidently say is the largest stage fridge in any theatre in the country this Christmas....unless there's a panto about giant white goods that I don't yet know about...either way, their fridge probably won't have what seemed like a hundred snowflake dancers leaping out of it!
We weren't sure about the ending. Or lack of. But we still enjoyed it....a really seasonal class outing that's put us all in the right mood for xmas.
And just to prove we're in the right mood...we posed for a team xmas pic...our own live interpretation of Botticelli's nativity painting. The key artistic reference here is 'interpretation'....
Monday, 15 December 2008
Sky Arts' new media team pop 'round to Madame Zingara's place...

On arriving at Battersea Power Station we were told to walk down a darkish little alleyway made of bamboo that would have looked great in a more lush green environment but slightly odd in the carpark for the power station...and, as instructed, walked thought the loveheart and basked in the warm glow of the giant tent's entrance. It was bloody freezing last Thursday night so the very fast-moving Q at the door was a relief.
Inside, this was awesome. And not in a west coast USA I-say-that-all-the-time kinda way...I really mean it was awesome. And warm. Did I mention what a cold night it was?! Lavish, stylish, atmospheric and instantly welcoming, this whole evening was pretty special right from the start. Click on the TENT TOUR interactive 360 to see what I mean...and that was taken in the daylight - lit for the evening it was spectacular.
There's a fantastic HISTORY about the tent that's well worth a read - though the most incredible story from the night was the 40-strong kitchen staff, including 4 head chefs, that served the 400-strong restaurant the most incredible food in a rather unbeliveably efficient and stylish manner. The South African wine was also, naturally, excellent.
The old 'strangers are just friends you haven't met yet' definately came into play with our dinner companions...
Once seated, Raymond, our table's server looked after our every need. Though this was a media invite night and we didn't know who'd be sitting at our table...it turned out that they were as up for a good fun evening as we were so we all hit it off famously.
The acrobatics, fused with incredible choreography did not disappoint - we were all ooh-ing and aah-ing much as you'd have expected but the rounds of spontaneous applause when something particularly spectacular happened were far more frequent than certainly I was expecting. It felt like you weren't given a second to breathe (in a very good way!) as the entertainment and food were seamlessly served to you.
The food…ummm, the food. Serving the most tender, medium-rare fillets to a couple of hundred people at the same time might give you shivers of the hotel wedding kind – but fear not. This was exceptional. The ONLY food complaint is that there was far too much. It was all amazing.
Sky Arts' Sinead and Sari get into the swing of things at Madame Zingara in London...
The plate of little novelties that were presented to you upon arrival included a warm soup thing in a kind of a big shooter glass that was so incredibly delicious I could have drunk it, and it alone, all night and walked away content. The South African wine they chose for the tables was very good indeed and the menu choices were superb - extremely limited, but very well thought out.
Incredible handmade pasta stuffed with mushroom for starters, the Chocolate Chilli Fillet was my choice for main…or a choice of lamb shanks (they got a thums up from those at our tabel who enjoyed them) or freshly-caught fish or a four cheese polenta stack, with the desert being a plate of 3 mini deserts…a ‘to die for’ sticky toffee pudding, a light & fluffy tiramisu and umm…something else that I can’t remember but it was delicious whatever it was…chocolate mousse methinks? My taste buds were overawed with surprise and delight by this stage and I was a bit busy watching the final act to notice what I was actually eating...it was yummie anyway, whatever it was!
The dressing-up shop is a must-visit and with prices so low that you don’t even have to think twice about it – you can quickly pick up anything from theatrical hats and feather head-dresses to novelty glasses to…if you’re so inclined…fake burlesque boobs. A must for all the men…
Then, after all the acrobatic performances and the food, somehow, the whole tent…full of cynical media types, was up on its feet, dancing to the fabulous “Original Tons” belting vocals and having an all ‘round jolly time.
There was one problem with the whole night…we didn’t pre-order a cab to get us back to our respective train stations and hailing a cab late at night in Battersea is, as we found, like panning for gold in the Thames. Be warned.
So, if you’re going to be visiting London in the next 3 months MAKE SURE you book a table at Madame Zingara for a night of full-on entertainment that you won’t forget for a long, long time. We loved it :-)
Read our PREVIEW on skyarts.co.uk
Friday, 7 November 2008
Hello Arts Virgins...
We're coming to Virgin!
From Thursday, Sky Arts 1 and Sky Arts 2 will be available to all those Virgin cable customers who subscribe to the XL package of channels.

Welcome Virgin households, to the wonderful world of arts broadcasting....
Tuesday, 28 October 2008
Returning to something resembling normality...
We're currently recording a brand new second season of What The Dickens? with Sandi Toksvig and a third season of The Book Show with Mariella Frostrup (episode 2 onair this Thursday) as well as being in pre-production on our fantastic new Bridge programme that you may have read about in the media - Celebrity Bridge: Grand Slam.
Our launch drinks on Wednesday were a very pleasant affair with people like Tim Marlow, Peter Ackroyd and Antony Gormley...

Can you guess what the theme was in this corner of the room where we had our "Sky Arts Class of '08" photo taken? The clue is probably in the green 'grass' carpet and the stacked bales of, ahem, hay, ahem....
We hope you're enjoying the new channels and finding the kind of programmes that you want to watch.
Monday, 27 October 2008
I survived MIPCOM 08
For a channel our size these are important markets as it's where a lot of our cool content comes from. The excellent doc "Who's Afraid of Michel Gondry?" for example. Found at MIPTV in April. "Queen Rock Montreal"? April again.
We buy content from all over the world so twice a year we actually get to meet, in the flesh, the distributors and producers. You get a good working relationship and everything's cool - distributors will come to you with new programming and that saves time - and shoe leather. Imagine a giant trade fair held across multiple floors with thousands of TV types from all over the globe running around trying to look more important than anyone else. Want to stand out from the crowd? Wear a ridiculous Rupert Bear-style checked suit. No one will forget you in a hurry. Even if that's for all the wrong reasons. It wasn't me either before you suggest such a thing. Probably American.
In the month or so before MIP you start making appointments with your regulars (oo er) as well as wading through the tons of e-mails from distributors who've accessed the buyer database. The latter is supposed to help them target their mail shots. It's getting better but I still don't remember ticking the "animated Russian pornography" box on the list of programming I was looking for.
On the flight try and avoid eye contact with strangers less you get pitched at... though I did manager to get pitched whilst waiting to collect my case at Nice airport. Got to admire that I guess...
Then it works like speed dating. You have a calendar that's a series of 30min meetings back to back - maybe with a lunch or a break for lunch - between 9ish and 7pm (there are team breakfasts most days too at 8.30am). This is all fine if, like my colleague Phil, you plan your diary so you don't have to run around - a day of meetings in the Riviera Hall, then a day down in the Bunker (it's much worse than it sounds). Of course you can do it like me, which means starting out with these good intentions then losing track or just forgetting and finding yourself running all over the place between meetings. And if you don;'t build in at least a free slot you can find, thanks to people overrunning, that you have about 10mins to actually talk about programming. If it's the first time you're meeting a distributor there's a few minutes small talk, a coffee or water (depending on whether you look like you're about to fall asleep or collapse), some talk about the channel (this time around about our relaunch plans) and then you get onto the catalogue. If you're not meeting them on stand but in the buyer's lounge then it's true speed dating territory as people furtively cruise the room looking at everyone's badges to find who they're supposed to meet. One guy last year attached a photo to the e-mail request - forward thinking if a little odd at first.
Comfy trainers are one thing. Dried fruit and/or snack bars and water help too. A large bag even more so. Delegates get a bag when they register. Strangely they've never quite mastered the idea that carrying a bright red or orange bag around that screams "tourist!!" isn't what everyone wants. My local charity shop gets two a year - though demand in Holloway is probably even more limited. Anyway, the reason for the large (preferably expandable) bag is for the flyers and DVDs. They add up. This year I was snowed under after my first meeting (old school producer who doesn't do websites but prefers programming info in hardcopy form). Got a break when a meeting got rearranged and had half an hour to leg it back to the apartment and in a Black Hawk Down style remove anything and everything surplus to requirements - a rainforest of catalogues, tons of DVDs etc etc
So, highlights...
Team dinner on Sunday was fun - most of the Sky people had arrived (granted not everyone's luggage had but...). Downside, my quitting smoking lasted about 3/4 hour when willpower went and I bummed one off Ian Lewis who runs movies. Shameful but God hates a quitter.
Brit Films - was introduced to Nick from Britfilms by Ian from Eureka! (UK's best DVD label who release the "Masters of Cinema" titles). Britfilms have a shortfilm competition which we might be able to collaborate on. And Nick asked if I'd be interested in being a judge next time.
Dinner with Sandrine from Euroarts - one of our regular suppliers of classical/opera programming. We alternate who buys dinner and this market it was Sandrine who took Phil and I out for dinner.
This was followed by the Beat Club launch party - Andrew and Will from Eagle Rock got Phil and I in (technically we were gatecrashing but my invite arrived on the Monday I got back into the office). Mungo Jerry (ask your parents) playing live in a tiny bar followed by some appropriate tracks from the likes of the Stones, Hendrix etc. Try to get a late/early drink at 2.15 but tonight, for some reason, the bar at the Grand is shut. Given the prices they may have run out of room to put all the cash from the bar...
Drink with John Wyver from Illuminations - he wanted to see the England game so we're in the Irish bar next door to the Irish bar where the previous night's Beat Club party was held. Then a change of shirt (no time for shower so it's a "spray aftershave in the air and walk through it" moment) then off to the Eagle Rock team dinner. A great crowd - welcoming, entertaining and fun. Tonight the Grand has deigned to stay open so a few late drinks (Wednesday is my last full day as I fly out tomorrow after one last meeting), say au revoir to the Eagle crew and back to the apartment where, a 2.45am, the key snaps in the lock. Wonderful. I've had this apartment on 5 occasions now and the key has got steadily more bent. Tonight's the night it breaks. The concierge speaks no English, my French is somewhat basic but dangling the remains of the key in the air with a plaintive "monsieur" is more than enough. There was a worrying "non" and a shrug as he tried to open the door but with a screwdriver he got me in. Thank you sir! Obviously I still need to be able to get back in tomorrow so a quick rummage through the kitchen drawers and I finally settle on the knife that will trip the lock (where most of the key remains).
Been a bit of rush today - and 4 hours later sitting in the cafe waiting for the team I wish I'd checked the crackberry the previous night. That way I might have seen the message "Team breakfast cancelled. So don't turn up!". Oh well 4 hours sleep is plenty. If I was half my age and not hungover.
Final meeting a breeze. One result of the solo team breakfast was that I was 2nd in queue to Fed-Ex the catalogues, DVDs etc back to the office. Slight moment of paranoia as I walked up to the MIP security and realised I had a small vegetable knife in my bag (the key to my apartment).
Time for a dash to the shops to buy Jake (my son) a car and some clothes. Quick trip to FNAC (French Borders) - blu rays and DVDs horribly overpriced. Though wish I'd brought "MR73" from the director of the excellent "36" as it's not out here for yonks if at all.
Jump on case, go to the lettings office to show them the key - "oh, it's finally broken" one of the women in the office says. Hmm.
Cab to the airport where I meet a woman outside struggling to find her lighter. I give her mine and tell her to keep it. She makes a joke about another person quitting after the market and hope it lasts this time. Of course it will I reassure her.
Waiting to drop my case I bump into Andrew from Eagle who's on the earlier flight. "Fancy a quick fag?" he asks. Ignore the sound of willpower crashing down and join him outside. Luckily my lighter recipient isn't there.
Am seated next to a former colleague from Sky, Kate, who now works for five. She settles down with an heroic dose of crap mags while I kick back and enjoy the majesty and splendour of "The Inglorious Bastards". Wish I'd known about the nude scene though. Kind of embarrassing sitting next to someone you know while the obligatory B-movie skinny dipping is taking place...
Get home around 7 Jake waiting for his present (I shouldn't' have tipped him off). He loves the car but loves the box more. It's a cliche but true - we still have the box from our TV which, armed with a Stanley Knife and Duct Tape, I turned into a racing car for him about a year ago.
Relaunch pending so have two continuity scripts to check as soon as the paper's been ripped off the box/car.
Some excellent programmes out there at MIPCOM - hopefully you'll get to see some of them in the next few months
Wednesday, 15 October 2008
Think you know a bit about Italy?

The new Sky Arts channel logos
Sky Arts 1 logo
Sky Arts 1 logo
Sky Arts 2 logo
Sky Arts 2 logo
Sky Arts HD logo
Sky Arts HD logoWednesday, 24 September 2008
Classic FM Gramophone Awards - the day before
But hey ho, I'm very glad Sarah J has joined the Sky Arts team as for a little while I was juggling my old role and my new one. Now I can fully concentrate on my channel which is a daunting task. Adrian et al are convinced I'm the right person so I will try not to disappoint. December has been started now and it's going to be a cracker of a Christmas. You are all going to be spoilt rotten with the choice available.
Anyway, just wanted to express the extreme fear I am experiencing at the moment. Apparently, with a new role, comes new responsibilities and opportunities to leave good ole Osterley for a gander in that busy town called London. To the Classic FM Gramophone Awards to be precise. I shall be walking nervously towards The Dorchester tomorrow in my fancy frock, notepad in hand, with the target to speak to at least 2 people at the Awards. You see, I'm not good at networking or going to fancy do's on my own. The lovely Sinead just makes too much darn sense and all my protestations (2 days worth of saying I really can't do this) came to nothing. And so, tomorrow I shall be trying my best to smile sweetly, big up Sky Arts and try not to look or sound like a fool. Please think of me. It all starts at 11.30 and I'll be so nervous.
Best be off now. I must decide what to wear for tomorrow and try not to think too much about what could possibly go wrong. I shall definitely be taking advantage of that champagne that is sure to flow (though not too much mind, I am 'working').
Tuesday, 23 September 2008
Behind the scenes shooting Friday Night Hijack
In the above image, eagle-eyed viewers can spot the PM giving his conference speech on the left monitor coming from the Sky News Centre next door - while we're recording an exclusive Q&A with Nina for the website (we'll have it on the Sky Arts website the week she's 'hijacking' the channel!).
Dan can be seen here hard at work- all the glamour of telly (no-one ever belives us that it's just a desk job...with a very big desk...and, y'know, lots of twiddly things and big TV screens everywhere...) in the clip below...
Wednesday, 10 September 2008
collaborative canvas
This is quite a nice thing to do - join in their collaborative drawing during your next coffee break.
It's a giant expanding canvas that anyone can add to, and you can send your drawing on to a friend once you've finished as well...
Update on the new channel...
Adrian, Tracy & Sarah are working away on the new schedules for Sky Arts 1 and Sky Arts 2 and we're looking forward to launching the new brands and new programmes on Oct 20th.
On the web side, we're editing more web video clips than ever before so there'll be lots to enjoy on the new video player and the whole site will have a much better design finish to it, with faster page loading times and better internal search.
Our Interactive Media Design Agency and our Small Projects Team have been working away on my wishlist for an improved viewer experience online and although we can't have everything ready in time for the channel launch, we'll have launched with quite a bit done by then...and we'll keep rolling out the improvements for you over the following months.
So much to do, so little time...
Thursday, 4 September 2008
This week in Sky Arts Corner...
We're also back into pre-production on The Book Show as of this week and the production team are lining up the guest authors for the forthcoming new season - due to start back onair next month.
Don't forget to watch David Gilmore live at the Royal Albert Hall on Sky Arts this Saturday (6th) at 9pm - part of our Centre Stage concerts line-up....
A few fun things we like...
Mix some sounds & record them :-)
http://www.becks.co.uk/mixer.aspx
This beer company have actually done some pretty interesting this lately, like this:
http://www.becks.co.uk/canvas.aspx
Total silliness by the Iceland tourist people...but good fun all the same: http://www.icelandsocks.com/
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Tuesday, 26 August 2008
Tuesday, 19 August 2008
Big news here in Sky Arts Corner...
On Oct 20th 2008 we'll have Sky Arts 1, Sky Arts 2 and Sky Arts HD on your EPG. We're doing major background improvements on the website too and will launch the new upgraded version at the same time.
Adrian Zak, our head of planning...
We've interviewed our head of planning HERE about how it all came about & what viewers can expect from the channels and there's a load of articles in the media about it today:
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The Guardian
BBC
Variety
Mad
CNN
Digital Spy
Brand Republic
Broadband TV News
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and of course, wikipedia's already bang up-to-date :-)
...and a rather nice comment piece in the Guardian's Comment section mentioning us in relation to arts on TV in general...
"BBC4 used to be the best place for world cinema, but now Sky's Indie channel generally seems the best bet for seeing what the rest of the world looks like. And Sky Arts now often offers the best arts programming of the week, given the off-air channels' increasing timidity over any serious arts coverage. How long before Murdoch finds another niche to slip into and gives us a proper summer season of music? It would be the supreme irony if the old devil ended up with all the best tunes."
You can add your own comment below the full article HERE.
Tuesday, 29 July 2008
Dan in Paris...
On show was an exhibition about the Czech photographer Miroslav Tichý. It’s the first of its kind in France. He’s 80 now and has taken a huge array of photographs that obsessively catalogue the world around him. A place it appears that is singularly made up of women either in their stockings or out and about in their bikinis.
Something of a marginal figure he steadfastly refused the social, political and personal values of the Communist period. Living alone, surrounded by his photographs, he’s practiced his art without, it seems, ever having much of a care that any of it be considered as art. His pictures were left to the ravages of time, either being damaged by dripping water or gnawed on by passing rats.
Tichý took up photography in the mid-1950s, reinventing it as it were from scratch and building his own cameras and enlargers from shoe-boxes, tin cans, recycled glass and other waste materials. His work has only recently been rescued from neglect by his neighbour, the film director Roman Buxbaum.
Often described as timeless, Tichý shoots instinctively or carelessly on his handmade cameras.. What comes out of it are these other worldly images that are often erotically charged. Here’s a link to his work
http://www.tichyocean.ch/Documentations/Works
Dan
Wednesday, 23 July 2008
Our producer/director Dan, at the Latitude Festival...

Sigur Ros were probably my highlight. They headlined the main Stage on Saturday. I listened to a couple of their albums before going and frankly didn’t really get it, but having seen them live I can now confirm them to be glorious. I think they’ve just announced a UK tour and would recommend anyone go and see them.
Singer and actress Soko was a nervous wreck but all the more beguiling for it. She’s 22, French and sings songs like this: http://www.myspace.com/mysoko
Metronomy were joyous, they played in the Sunrise Arena which was an idyllic venue situated amongst the flora and fauna of the Latitude forest. They are re-mixers par excellence having twisted a few knobs for Kate Nash, Franz Ferdinand and the Klaxons. They seem to get bracketed into the math rock sub, sub, sub, sub genre whatever that is, either way they are great fun and got everyone leaping about. Fans of mathematics and rock can enjoy this: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Math_rock
An honourable mention for Crystal Castles a truly wonderful band from Toronto. Alice Glass is their mascara laced singer. Here’s a picture: http://i.realone.com/assets/rn/img/0/2/3/2/18412320-18412322-slarge.jpg
She was nearly hauled off the Glastonbury stage in June for clambering on a speaker stack. At Latitude she repeated her antics, this time jumping into the photographers pit and launching herself towards the crowd. She was repeatedly hauled out by security probably fearing that she was going to get swallowed up. One particular sortee saw her bash someone over the head with her microphone (I think they’d tried to tamper/grab her). Infantile hands aside, this was another triumph from Alice and friends. I do worry about her a bit though. It can’t be good for you all that shouting and jumping about. Here’s some shonky old footage of Crystal Castles playing Latitude that you can’t really see or hear: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q6uKTxaqXbE
Saddlers Wells layed on a series of splendid world class dance performances in particular the Boy Blue Entertainment hip hop group and Wayne McGregor’s Random Dance Company who jolted their way through what looked like a bone crunching 25 minutes of contemporary dance. All the dance events were layed out next to the Latitude lake, a beautiful setting which managed to attract huge swathes of enthusiastic audiences.
Finally, Joanna Newsome set just the right tone on Sunday afternoon plucking her way through highlights from her two albums and then treating the audience to a couple of new tracks. Here’s some dreadfully wonky footage of some cloud + a bit of Joanna playing the piano: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UE-WUiCfKZY
Simon Armitage, one time Friday Night Hijacker also read from his book ‘Gig: the Life and Times of a Rock Star Fantasist book.’
Dan. (...enjoying spending his weekends in fields...)
Monday, 21 July 2008
What Dom's watching tonight...
I saw a clip at our monthly highlights meeting and it looks like an amazing life story. Jimmy Rosenberg was a guitarist with the world at his feet, but his life, like those of so many musical geniuses, was haunted by drugs and psychiatric problems. Touted as the next Django Reinhardt, Jimmy's guitar skills were second to none and, at the age of just 15, he signed a million-dollar contract (Everyone’s dream… you must agree!). With the help of his ambitious father, Jimmy toured extensively, performing several concerts, culminating in a packed gig at the famous Carnegie Hall. But as life on the road and the intense pressure of stardom started to take their toll, Jimmy began to lose control of his life.
It’s an unbelievable true story… Tune in!!! Right back to my desk job, here’s hoping that I’ll find a million dollar contract in my inbox – I just wouldn’t want to end up like Jimmy!
Until next time, enjoy!
Dom (Programme Information and king of disguises)
Tuesday, 1 July 2008
Graffiti... it certainly gets your opinions going


Tuesday, 25 March 2008
Venice Biennale 2007 - Better late than never
Anyhow, Biennale in Venice. Amazing art from all over the world in one place (well, two big areas with some scattered amongst buildings in the city).
The best exhibitions I thought were the ones by Mexico and South Korea. The Mexican work was video installations employing security technology such as motion and heat sensors to allow interaction with the work - so you enter a room of chairs and they start to rise and fall as you walk around them (see video below). Best bit was a room with projections of people asleep on the floor - as your shadow hits them they wake up and wave, smile etc. Er, you had to be there. Anyhow, his name's Rafael Lozano-Hemmer so Google him and see his work if you get the chance.
The Taiwanese work was a load of rubbish. Literally. Various bits of rubbish such as old TVs, plastic bags, fans etc wired up and (hard to describe, see video below!)
What else can I remember?
Kept bumping into Jeroen Krabbe - Dutch actor/director best known for his work in early Paul Verhoeven films or for playing the villain in "The Fugitive"- in main pavillion. Wasn't actually stalking him
British pavillion - Tracey Emin - and some bizarre merchandising such as a stick on tattoo of an Emin drawing of what can only be described as a bird perched on a penis. I have two (copies of the tattoo) so if anyone wants one send an SAE to the Sky Arts address..
Sam Taylor-Wood - why was her work in the Ukranian exhibition?
Christ on a bike. Or at least a jet (see right)
Sophie Calle. Something to do with a letter and being dumped. Lots of famous women reacting to reading said letter. Sponsored by Chanel.
Crass piece inspired by 9/11 - plane on a stick flies past some sky scrapers before crashing. One of the first pieces I see. Heart sinks. Close by is the Jesus jet. Not a great start. Maybe I just don't like art with planes.
This amazing piece was one of the highlights
To get a sense of it, here's the detail
Interactive art - in this case a giant dartboard
A new piece by a promising young talent
Who preferred puddles, cats, ice cream and chasing pigeons
Transcendental Realism - The Art of Adi Da Samraj
Quandra Contemplating the Fruits of Perfect Knowledge.
This guy's work was the first thing I saw. Having lost my notes I don't have anything except a rather glossy press pack. So, on the grounds that they gave me that I've included a mention. Which I just did.
Final pics
the British Pavillion
Crazy bird-headed people in the Canadian pavillion (a homage to Chicken Lady in "Kids in the Hall"?)
Smug Sky Arts employee in hat (note gondolers for authenticity)
and, finally, a giant Zippo
Thursday, 31 January 2008
Create your own Jackson Pollock

Tuesday, 29 January 2008
She stoops...she scores!






