Pulp: The Beat is the Law – A film about the band Pulp's rise to mid-90's Britpop glory out of Margaret Thatcher's turbulent 80's

The Beat is the Law trailer – Public Screening

December 2nd, 2008

Sheffield Vision multimedia exibition/screenings:

Celebrating 30 years of Jarvis and Electronic Pop.

December 5th and 6th 2008 – 8.45 and 6.30pm respectively

Showroom Cinema Sheffield

- The Beat Is The Law trailer, the whole of Made In Sheffield, and Nick’s World of Synthesizers short.

- Phil and Martin’s Artwork and Made In Sheffield poster on display to buy (3 week display at Showroom from 29th Nov).

- Sheffield music Photogallery projection and Sheffield music to tap your feet to.

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Warp and Phil Wolstenholme – Millstone

November 14th, 2008

For one of the film’s pieces of artwork on sale in the shop, we asked Phil Wolstenholme, the mind behind some of the most classic Warp album designs, to come up with a little piece of computer art reflective of his time represented in the film. We never expected him to come up with such an amazingly intricate and personal piece of art!

Originally a Fine Art graduate of Sheffield Hallam University, Phil Wolstenholme has worked at

the coalface of inventive computer art for nearly 20 years, and has inhabited a variety of strange but CGI-rich environments during that time.

Often working in conjunction with Designers Republic, Phil produced some of the most enduring sleeve images of the electronic/techno phenomenon from the early-to-mid 90’s. In his cover images for musical artists such as 808 State, The Orb, and Cabaret Voltaire, and for clients such as Warp Records, Designers Republic, Sony Japan and Strictly Rhythm, his unique style and pioneering use of 3D imagery helped define the look of a whole new musical genre.

Cover images of the time include such classics as:

‘The Extended Pleasures of Dance EP’ by 808 State

‘Yeah You’ by The Step on Warp Records

‘This is Strictly Rhythm’ and ‘Tracks ‘92′ on Strictly Rhythm Records

‘UFOrb’ by The Orb

‘Groovy Laidback and Nasty’ and ‘Colours’ by Cabaret Voltaire

‘Pioneers of the Hypnotic Groove’, compilation series on Warp Records

‘(Artificial Intelligence)’ and ‘(Artificial Intelligence II)’ on Warp Records

‘A Different Drum’ by The Shamen

‘The Professional School of Techno’ on Sony Music (Japan)

‘Pulseman’ on Frogman Records (Japan)

In 1993, together with CG artists David Slade and Jess Scott-Hunter, he produced a still talked-about (and still influential) video release that set Warp’s finest electronic musical artists against ambitious CGI, in a suite of plot-based animation sequences. On a miniscule production budget, ‘Motion’ exceeded all expectations, and launched at the ICA in London, was a huge success.

Alongside this were projects such as a collaboration with the British composer Gavin Bryars, producing 3D animation for projection during live orchestral performances of ‘Sinking of the Titanic’, 1995.

Since these heady days, Phil has continued to produce commercial CG images, is a panoramic landscape photographer, and has also worked extensively within the software industry, designing, developing and demonstrating new 3D software packages and literature. Phil recently exhibited a new body of work at a former monastery in Provence, France.

He has also launched a publishing company, Heavy Everywhere®, producing digital fractal imagery for fabric, interior design and other product lines. The first fashion release is a range of luxury swimwear on a new label in January 2009.

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Designers Republic and Nick Bax: concept design

September 5th, 2008

Nick Bax’s Human studios provided essential support with the project getting off the ground and the sponsorship event. We used part of their initial design for the first phase website.
early Human design for sponsor event

“I was born in Huddersfield but moved to Rotherham when I was 9. I always thought of it as a satellite of Sheffield if you like. I grew up in Rotherham and then I left Rotherham asap – you wanted to get away. When I started to come up to Sheffield on a regular basis whan I was 13/14 with my friends, it was like going to New York for the day.

I was too young for punk, I was about 6 when punk happened. The first thing I was into was Ska or Madness. But bands like Cabaret Voltaire I guess were my first contact. I had heard things about them and would read about them in the paper locally, but my first contact was when they appeared on things like the Max Headroom show. At the time on Tv there weren’t many Music shows so anything that was on that was music related we would watch religiously, things like The Tube to the Chart Show. I remember seeing them on Max Headroom with the Sensoria video and that was incredible.”

Nick moved to London to work before coming back up North to Sheffield in 1990 when the Sheffield Bleep movement was taking over from the Madchester sound. He joined Ian Anderson’s Designers Republic and later became a director of the company. His most well-known designs are the Pulp albums including His n Hers and Different Class, but he also designed album covers for Warp artist Aphex Twin and for various Britpop bands including Supergrass.

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