Sheffield Doc/Fest now Accepting Applications for Projects From Creative Filmmakers

The annual Sheffield Doc/Fest held every summer isn’t just a great place to check out the latest indie film offerings, it’s also a great place for filmmakers looking for help and support. This week the event has now opened applications for the  Alternate Realities Talent Market and the MeetMarket 2020 to aid creatives.

Sheffield Doc/Fest

The Alternate Realities Talent Market is the place for those wishing to build partnerships with organisations which are keen to use modern digital tech for new storytelling purposes. The market is for discussing new projects that are interactive, immersive, virtual reality (VR), augmented reality (AR), AI, mixed reality (MR), immersive sound technology, videogames, 360-video, live performance, motion comic, room-scale experience and/or installation based.

Successful applicants will then be connected with funding bodies, NGOs, broadcasters, international festivals, galleries, and production companies. Projects then have the opportunity to return to the festival to present completed works in the Exhibition.

The MeetMarket, on the other hand, is a dedicated pitching forum for documentary films. Selected projects have the chance to meet from 300+ international funders, broadcasters, distributors and exhibitors. These include the likes of ARTE, BBC, Catapult Film Fund, Channel 4, Curzon, Cinereach, Dogwoof, The Guardian, Google, National Geographic, NETFLIX, New York Times, PBS, SKY, Submarine, SXSW, Universal and VICE.

Previous documentaries which have found partners in the MeetMarket include The Edge of Democracy, Unrest, Bobbi Jene, Searching for Sugarman, The Act of Killing, The Look of Silence, Black Panthers: Vanguard of the Revolution, A Family Affair, Forever Pure, Mavis!, 5 Broken Cameras, The Story of Film.

Sheffield Doc/Fest

The deadline for both the MeetMarket and Alternate Realities Talent Market is 14th February 2020. Submissions cost £26 GBP ex VAT and Sheffield Doc/Fest has partnered with Getty Images so that applicants have free use of its content.

If you’re selected then you’ll get pre-arranged, match-made meetings during the festival in June. 40-60 projects will be selected for MeetMarket, and 20-25 teams can pitch at the Alternate Realities Talent Market.

Sheffield Doc/Fest runs from 4th – 9th June 2020 with early bird passes now available for £239 + VAT. For further updates on the event and what VR/AR content will eventually feature, keep reading VRFocus.

2019 Programme for Sheffield Doc/Fest & Alternate Realities Exhibition Released

In January the Sheffield Doc/Fest opened submissions for its annual event, including the Alternate Realities Exhibition. With the festival now less than a month away the final programme has now been released detailing what visitors can expect to see.

Sheffield Doc/Fest 2019

The six-day event covers five programme areas; Film, Alternate Realities, Talks, Marketplace and Social, ideal for professionals and the general public alike. There will be a massive range of content on offer this year, under the tagline ‘Ways of Seeing’, with a film programme of international documentary features and shorts, an industry programme of 40 plus sessions, talks by Chidera Eggerue (aka The Slumflower), Paul Greengrass, Stacey Dooley, Nick Hornby and Sir Bradley Wiggins, as well as live music from Summer Camp, Kate Nash and Bo Ningen.

“This year’s Doc/Fest is a celebration of internationalism, creativity and discovery; looking at the world with new eyes and giving a platform to a multitude of voices and ideas,” said Melanie Iredale, Interim Director, Sheffield Doc/Fest in a statement. “I am so excited today to be unveiling a line-up of  180+ Films and 28 Alternate Realities projects – from over 50 countries around the world, and over 50% of which are made by women.”

The Alternate Realities Exhibition will be held across two locations in Sheffield, Subconscious Sensibilities at Site Gallery, and Converging Sensibilities in the VR Cinema at Sheffield Hallam’s Performance Lab plus a pop-up igloo on Site Square.  The exhibition at Site Gallery features 15 immersive and interactive artworks, while the VR cinema at Sheffield Hallam’s Performance Lab allows audiences to collectively experience twelve 360° narrative documentary experiences.

Sheffield Doc/Fest 2019

Content featuring in the Alternate Realities Exhibition will include festival commission, Spectre by Barnaby Francis (aka Bill Posters) and Dr. Daniel Howe, The Smartphone Orchestra presents: The Social Sorting Experiment and The Justice Syndicate.

Also taking place will be the Alternate Realities Summit, a day-long event examining the art and craft of digital storytelling,  with talks, presentations, panel discussions and performances from leading immersive and interactive storytellers.

“This year the Alternate Realities programme returns with a focus on our sensibilities; our ability to interpret, understand and appreciate the world of the aesthetic and the experiential. New ways of seeing, new ways of hearing and new ways of participating  await audiences in the unique immersive and interactive experiences within our exhibition,” said Alternate Realities Curator, Dan Tucker.

The Sheffield Doc/Fest 2019 runs between 6th-11th June, for more info including tickets, head to the official website. For any further updates, keep reading VRFocus.

Sheffield Doc/Fest 2019 Reveals The Latest In VR Documentaries

Sheffield Doc/Fest 2019 Reveals The Latest In VR Documentaries

In an increasingly busy VR festival circuit, the annual Sheffield Doc/Fest has long stood out for its focused look at immersive documentary making. In fact, last year’s showing topped even E3. The 2019 edition looks to be no different.

Sheffield Doc/Fest returns to the UK city on June 6 with a slate of immersive projects. The show’s Alternate Realities section continues to integrate non-VR projects this year, but there’s plenty for headset fans to look forward to. For starters, Sheffield Hallam University’s Performance Lab will host a VR cinema showcasing 12 360 degree films. These include Potato Dreams, which follows the story of a young boy growing up as a homosexual in the Soviet Union.

Other projects include some of the best picks from other recent festivals. VR City’s fantastic Common Ground, which charts the story of a London social housing block, will feature as will SXSW installation, The Atomic Tree. Felix and Paul’s recent Sundance project, Traveling While Black, will also make an appearance. All in all it looks to be another strong showing of how VR and other technologies are pushing documentaries forward.

Half of the 28 of this year’s Alternate Realities projects were made by women. The Alternate Realities Talent Market, meanwhile, will host 25 teams pitching creative projects in an effort to inspire collaboration.

As always, the festival’s immersive efforts are bolstered by a day of talks and showcases at the Alternate Realities Summit. This year it’s being held on June 9 and will host the likes of Google Creative Lab creative director, Tea Uglow.

Doc/Fest 2019 will run from June 6 – 11. You can grab tickets here.

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Sheffield Doc/Fest 2019 Launches £20,000 Commission For VR/AR Docs

Sheffield Doc/Fest 2019 Launches £20,000 Commission For VR/AR Docs

Sheffield Doc/Fest 2019 is on the hunt for its next big documentary using immersive tech.

The festival today announced the launch of its Alternate Realities commission. It’s offering £20,000 to produce a new digital project that could use either AR, VR or other media. That’s quite a jump on last year’s £12,000 commission, which produced a VR experience called Face to Face. Previous projects also include the emotionally moving Future Aleppo.

This year’s winner will feature at the festival in June. But Doc/Fest has also partnered with digital creativity festival, MUTEK. The winning experience and its creator will travel to the festival in Montreal, Canada for the show from 20th – 25th August. You’ll also have a chance to speak at the event.

The piece will also feature in the Alternate Realities Exhibition Tour that travels across the UK and beyond following the festival.

“I am thrilled to welcome Site Gallery, British Council and MUTEK as new supporting partners, alongside Arts Council England; these new relationships will amplify the impact of the project and offer prestigious exhibition opportunities and profile for the successful artist,” said Dan Tucker, Curator of the Alternate Realities programme, in a prepared statement.

Interested? Submissions are open now so have your proposals at the ready. You have until midnight GMT on February 25th to get them in.

Sheffield Doc/Fest runs from June 6th – 11th. You can expect the return of the Alternate Realities exhibition, which has hosted some of our favorite VR experiences of recent years. We’re looking forward to it.

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Submissions Open for Sheffield Doc/Fest’s £20,000 Alternate Realities Commission

As part of the annual Sheffield Doc/Fest which takes place every June is the Alternate Realities Commission which seeks artists to create a digital project. The festival has now opened submissions for the 2019 exhibition, where one lucky creator will receive completion funding worth £20,000 GBP.

Face to Face Project Still

Supported by Arts Council England, Site Gallery, British Council and MUTEK, the Alternate Realities Exhibition is looking for a new digital project focussed on non-fiction. The Festival is particularly keen to receive applications from artists, organisations and institutions working in multidisciplinary installation, augmented reality (AR), interactive art, 360º video, virtual reality (VR), a room-scale experience, gaming, motion comic formats and live performance.

Dan Tucker, Curator of the Alternate Realities programme said in a statement: “This is an exciting year for Alternate Realities at Sheffield Doc/Fest, and in particular for the Commission. I am thrilled to welcome Site Gallery, British Council and MUTEK as new supporting partners, alongside Arts Council England; these new relationships will amplify the impact of the project and offer prestigious exhibition opportunities and profile for the successful artist.”

The successful project will be unveiled at the Alternate Realities Exhibition located at Site Gallery. Artists to have previously had their work chosen include Heather Phillipson, Oscar Raby, Alex Pearson/Marshmallow Laser Feast, Darren Emerson and Michaela Holland/Michelle Gabel. Additionally, the successful commission winner will have the opportunity to speak about their work at MUTEK, Montreal (20-25 August 2019), and tour their project as part of MUTEK Montreal 2020 edition.

“Site Gallery is absolutely delighted to be supporting this year’s Alternate Realities Commission. Especially as the deservedly-celebrated Alternate Realities Exhibition will be coming home to Site, after first debuting here in 2014. As Sheffield’s international contemporary art space, focusing on New Media, Moving Image and Performance, we are perfectly placed to support and develop the exhibition’s evolving ambitions,” adds Sharna Jackson, Artistic Director Site Gallery.

Artists from across the globe are encouraged to submit their proposals to the commission, with the closing date being 25th February 2019. The Sheffield Doc/Fest will take place from 6 – 11 June 2019. For further updates on the exhibition and the content being shown at the festival, keep reading VRFocus.

London’s Barbican to Present Highlights From Sheffield Doc/Fest’s Alternate Realities Exhibition

The Sheffield Doc/Fest celebrated its 25th anniversary in June and as part of the event held an Alternate Realities Exhibition  inviting audiences to experience virtual reality (VR), interactive documentary, gaming and augmented reality (AR) across 27 projects. For those unable to see the exhibition in Sheffield it’s now gone on tour with the Barbican presenting four highlights later this month.

TERMINAL 3

The first leg of a UK-wide tour, the Alternate Realities Exhibition at the Barbican will be showcasing Grenfell: Our HomeTerminal 3Life in VR – California Coast and Sanctuaries of Silence across Barbican’s Level G with support from Arts Council England.

These cutting edge projects, which include an interactive VR piece using the latest headset technology, a 360-degree video documentary and a third screening installation will be the only opportunity for London audiences to experience this content.

“This collaboration with Doc/Fest stems from our increasing interest in work which thrives beyond traditional exhibition and performance space. The four installations in Alternate Realities are particularly well suited to the rich and complex social context of the Barbican’s Level G, and I’m intrigued to see how the multitude of communities in these spaces respond to and engage with the worlds that we’re attempting to draw them into,” said Sidd Khajuria, Senior Producer, Barbican in a statement.

Terminal 3

Alongside the Alternate Realities Exhibition will be a programme of documentaries in Barbican Cinema 2 with a line-up which includes Central Airport THF, Werner Herzog’s Cave of Forgotten Dreams 3D and Marc Silver’s Who is Dayani Cristal.

“We are thrilled to be working with the Barbican, to present a selection of story worlds from Alternate Realities,” adds Dan Tucker, Curator of Alternate Realities. “This partnership between the Barbican and Sheffield Doc/Fest brings new audiences into experiences that explore identity, the natural world and stories of community through ground breaking virtual and augmented reality art works.”

Sheffield Doc/Fest’s Alternate Realities Exhibition will run from 20th – 27th August at the Barbican for free, head here for further details on its events. For the latest VR art installations, keep reading VRFocus.

Sheffield Doc/Fest Reveals Line Up for Alternate Realities Touring Exhibition

The 2018 Sheffield Doc/Fest saw the festival introduce a new exhibition which focussed on various interactive and immersive projects, including virtual reality (VR), augmented reality (AR) and interactive documentary projects, called Alternate Realities. The exhibition will be touring various locations in the UK, Canada and Argentina. The line-up for the travelling exhibition has now been revealed.

A total of fourteen projects will be joining the tour, though not every project will be available at each stop. The tour will be visiting the Barbican, London; Lighthouse, Brighton; and National Science and Media Museum, Bradford; and beyond the UK to Phi Centre, Montreal, Canada and Noviembre Electrónico Festival, Buenos Aires, Argentina.

2016 Sheffield Documentary Festival
Photo Credit David Chang

Several of the interactive installation which were available at Trafalgar Warehouse during Sheffield Doc/Fest will be joining the tour, including The Voice of the Unicorn, which features work by Atelier Corners, a group of autistic artists based in Japan. Also on display will be works such as Belongings, Sensible Data/Mixed Emotions, Is Anna OK?, Manic VR and Life in VR – California Coast along with several other acclaimed projects.

Dan Tucker, Curator & Executive Producer of Alternate Realities says: “I am extremely excited about the national and international Alternate Realities Touring Exhibition this year. From London to Buenos Aires, we will be bringing the most immersive, impactful and innovative works to art centres, museums and festivals during our four months of touring. Enabling new audiences to engage with complex and urgent social issues through augmented reality, journey into the minds of others through virtual reality and explore stories about neuro-diversity through multi screen installations. The pieces of work we are showing this year are extraordinary and guaranteed to generate powerful and potent reactions. We are so thankful for the support of Arts Council England in funding our programme and UK Tour and to British Council who have funded our international tour for the second year running. Also to our tour partners supporting us with equipment and expertise – RYOT, Rewind, Unlimited and the BBC.”.

Those interested in attending the exhibition are encouraged to visit the website for the venue to find more information. VRFocus will continue to provide coverage on new and upcoming VR events.

How Sheffield Doc/Fest 2018’s VR Showcase Bested Even E3

How Sheffield Doc/Fest 2018’s VR Showcase Bested Even E3

Dan Tucker is apologizing again. We’re stepping over cables, ducking under scaffolding and trying to hear each other over the drone of drilling on the first day of Sheffield Doc/Fest. Things are running a little late and the Alternate Realities Arcade, a staple feature of the festival that highlights VR and AR’s work in the documentary field, isn’t quite up to where it’s meant to be. Tucker points to a hole in the wall leading into a dark exhibition space and explains that an inflatable mushroom crowd will fill the gap, promoting Gabo Arora and Saschka Unseld’s nuclear disarmament piece, The Day The World Changed. There’s a sense that something special is just a few hours away from being born (and, as this 3D scan shows, it was), though right now tensions are a little high.

But Tucker needn’t be so apologetic; it’s painfully clear that we’re on a late start simply because Doc/Fest is trying to make a VR exhibition unlike anything you’ve ever seen before. The actual work speaks to that.

Frankly, Alternate Realities did more to validify VR’s artistic potential this year than the entire gaming industry could muster in an enormous LA-based convention hall running concurrently. In a backroom of the Trafalgar Warehouse in which the arcade is situated, a handful of experiences shown to me on laptops and mobile headset easily drowns out the busy work in the background.

As always, Doc/Fest’s curated list of experiences is rarely an easy watch. This year’s arcade is made up of two floors that Tucker explains he pieced through in order to provide two different experiences. On the lower floor are installations that put you in the shoes of others, utilizing VR’s ability to help us take on new roles. In Porton Down, for example, I relieve the experiences of an ex-serviceman that was subjected to unconventional testing in the 50’s. I sit on a chair and complete reaction-based tests like pressing a button as quickly as possible while my vision becomes increasingly hazy. At the end of the experience, I’m shown that all of my data throughout has been tracked and that I myself have been a test subject. It was a sensation I will never forget.

Other experiences delve deeper into the tricky landscape of mental anguish with harrowing efficiency. In Aaron Bradbury and Paul Mowbray’s Vestige I’m given a first-hand account of dealing with grief after a young woman loses her soulmate. Painted into reality with vibrant threads, the piece has a warm glow to its nostalgic memories that’s quickly stripped away as Lisa describes the pain of watching the man she loves die. Reality itself begins to scramble and, for a brief few moments, you feel yourself lost in her suffering in a way you might not on the big screen.

Mind at War from VR artist Sutu has a similar effect. It tells the true story of Scott, who joins the military in the wake of 9/11 and only finds his decision to carry great personal cost. Brought to life via static Tilt Brush scenes, Mind at War is unflinching, making no apologies in how it brings the weight of Scott’s PTSD onto your shoulders before taking a deeper look at a crisis that sweeps the US. There’s an intensity to the immersion that has you drowning in its more visceral moments, with nothing but a dark void and a distressed voice to guide you through.

Certainly, it takes some mental fortitude to immerse yourself in these difficult topics. But in addressing these issues, these projects are breaking new ground in VR and digging into the heart of the medium. Whereas this year’s E3 confirmed games developers are still struggling to get a real grip on VR’s true power, it was evident in almost everything I saw in Sheffield.

I discover a personal highlight amongst the curated playlists of 360 videos that Tucker has prepared for the show. While Benoit Felici and Mathais Chelebourg’s The Real Thing proves to be perfect justification for the format with its bizarre tour of synthetic Chinese cities that copy some of the world’s most famous landmarks, it’s Grenfell: Our Home that strikes a real chord. Commissioned by the UK’s Channel 4 and created by Jonathan Rudd, it tells the story of a handful of residents of London’s Grenfell Tower which suffered a disastrous fire last year, tragically killing 71 residents.

Our Home brings Grenfell back to virtual life in powerful ways. Residents first speak not of that tragic night but the lives they built for themselves inside the block of apartments. Their homes are rebuilt around the viewer as they talk; one couple describes their growing family of plants and we’re suddenly immersed in a deceptively dense indoor garden, while another resident talks about the last surviving picture of her child taking centerpiece in her home before it was destroyed. As the discussion inevitably shifts towards the fire, I had a greater idea of what had truly been lost than I ever had before.

But Alternate Realities isn’t just about these heavy themes; it also paints a bright picture of VR’s future as a tool for learning. Hold the World, a piece that stars legendary naturist, Sir David Attenborough, allows you to tour London’s Natural History Museum with 3D scans, capitalizing on that potential for VR education that we’ve only really heard talked about so far. The BBC’s Life in VR, meanwhile, provides a peaceful moment’s wonder as you explore the seabed of the Californian coast.

Later in the evening, I’m back down in the main hall, and things are finally taking shape for the week ahead. There’s a genuine sense of creativity in the air, and excitement for the week ahead. If there’s a running theme of VR fatigue in 2018, it’s nowhere to be found here, and I believe that’s because I’m standing around a group of creators doing the most important work in VR yet.

Brilliantly, Doc/Fest is going to make sure more people see this content this year, taking Alternate Realities on tour across the UK and beyond in the coming months. If you have the chance, I fully recommend getting to see it.

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Virtual truth: face to face with immersive documentaries

Experience life as a blind person, play a customs officer or swim with sea otters. A new breed of VR film-making is making viewers engage in a deeper way with the issues they confront

Sitting on a stool opposite me is Ayesha, a young American I’ve been asked to interrogate about her recent trip to Pakistan. “Did you visit any areas controlled by the Taliban?” I ask. “No, I did not,” she responds.

Ayesha is a hologram, and I’m “playing” a US customs officer in an augmented reality experience called Terminal 3. I spend 15 minutes in my fictional airport, asking her questions based on choices that appear in writing in my field of vision. My voice triggers her responses – which start off clipped and defensive but become increasingly intimate – to the point where I feel like I’d really like to hang out with her.

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Sheffield Doc/Fest Celebrates 25th Year With Alternate Realities Exhibition Tour

Sheffield Doc/Fest is celebrating its 25th anniversary in 2018, with the event starting this week. As part of the festival is the Alternate Realities Exhibition and Summit showcasing the world’s latest non-fiction interactive, augmented reality (AR) and (VR) projects. To mark the occasion Sheffield Doc/Fest has announced the first ever Alternate Realities Touring Exhibition which will head to several UK cities and then abroad.

2016 Sheffield Documentary Festival
Photo Credit David Chang

Starting yesterday, the Alternate Realities Exhibition opened at Trafalgar Warehouse in Sheffield, inviting audiences to experience VR, interactive documentary, gaming and AR across 27 projects.

As for future locations for the Alternate Realities Exhibition it will travel to London, Brighton and Bradford starting this summer. Heading to the Barbican, London (20-27 August), Lighthouse as part of Brighton Digital Festival (21-30 September) and to the National Science and Media Museum in Bradford (5-14 October), in the lead up to and during the Widescreen Weekend.

The international leg of the tour will include the Phi Centre, Montreal, Canada, from 24th August – 2nd September, and to Noviembre Electronico Festival, Buenos Aires, Argentina, from 9th – 17th November. The 2018 international tour was made possible thanks to support by British Council, following the co-presentation of a successful tour to Latin America for the first time last year.

Face to Face Project Still

“The Touring Exhibition is now such an important part of the work we do year-round and I am extremely grateful to both Arts Council England and the British Council for their continued investment,” says Dan Tucker, Curator and Executive Producer of Alternate Realities in a statement. “Bringing the Alternate Realities exhibition to the new and established audiences of major arts venues like the Barbican in London and Phi Centre in Montreal is an affirmation of Doc/Fest’s artistic selection and the way we showcase immersive and interactive non-fiction stories. To be part of city-wide cultural events in Bradford and Brighton will mean engagement with further new public audiences, ensuring the artworks are more accessible than ever before. Returning to Noviembre Electronico in Argentina is also a real delight.”

Sheffield Doc/Fest takes place between 7-12 June 2018, welcoming over 32,000 Festival goers each year. For any further updates on the tour, keep reading VRFocus.