News
Bridging worlds by Design
Sony, Samsung Design Europe and the British Film Institute are among the top organisations joining forces with Kingston University to create Digital Media Kingston, a unique initiative which aims to fill the digital skills gap by breaking down the barriers between the arts and sciences.

"We need to move away from the idea that arts people are 'creatives' and scientists are 'techies'," Karen Cham, development co-ordinator for Digital Media Kingston, said. "Both fields are highly creative and are increasingly working together in the digital age – an animator and a programmer designing a computer game, for example. But at present most students in the arts and sciences across the globe don’t collaborate on projects until they meet in the world of work. This is a serious skills gap which has been identified by industry and that's where Kingston University is spearheading change. Digital Media Kingston, with its cross-faculty initiative, is unique."
This pioneering approach means that from September, postgraduate students on computer game, user experience design and 3-D imaging courses developed under the initiative will work together across up to four Faculties at Kingston and can graduate with either an MA or MSc.
Alex McDowell - the production designer on films such as Fight Club, The Terminal and Minority Report and a visiting artist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) – has also joined the industry panel of experts at Digital Media Kingston, along with other industry experts including Sarah Lemarié, Infrastructure Manager & Academic Liaison at Sony Computer Entertainment Europe Limited, and Shelley Page, Head of International Outreach for Dreamworks.
Alex, Shelley and Sarah have been closely involved in developing the Digital Media Kingston courses, helping to ensure that students are equipped with the skills they will need in the workplace.
"In order to work effectively our staff need a very deep understanding and appreciation of many cross-discipline skills," Sarah Lemarié said. "In games development it is imperative that team members are able to discuss issues using the context and language of their colleagues, no matter whether their focus is technical, creative or artistic. By bringing these disciplines together in Digital Media Kingston, the University is ensuring their students will have exactly the right mindset, experience and skills that they need to perform in the creative media industries."
Digital Media Kingston was showcased at the prestigious FMX/09 international conference in Stuttgart during May and will ultimately bring together researchers from within the sciences and arts in addition to offering new cross-faculty courses in computer game development and special effects. It also acts as a portal to over 20 existing postgraduate courses in four faculties, covering subjects as diverse as software engineering; art and space; film-making; popular music; web development; informatics; and screen design for film and TV.
The University is eager to involve local firms and Sunrise Software of Chessington, Surrey, has also joined the panel. "We are very keen to encourage new local talent in our field, and we were impressed by how proactive Digital Media Kingston is in involving industry in their graduate programme. We fully intend this to be the first step in an enormously fruitful relationship between us," Tom Weston, Chairman of Sunrise Software, said.
From September, Digital Media Kingston will offer six postgraduate courses of its own, including Games Development and 3-D Computer Generated Imagery. This should be followed in 2010 by a course on special effects. "We’re offering what industry is telling us that it needs," Ms Cham said. "Our students will be fully equipped to play a major part in the digital age, which underpins everything in the 21st century."


