Archive for the ‘Vine events’ Category

Vine videos are now free range

THE DISCUSSION

Up ’til now, speaker videos from the last three-day Vine conference have been locked away, Rapunzel-style, hidden behind by passwords known only to attendees of the event.

Enough, we say!

If they can Free Willy (four times, including a remake, for crying out loud) then who are we to keep such edifying talks all to ourselves?

Presentations from The Vine conference in San Diego are now unlocked and can be viewed in their entirety here, or by clicking the header in the right-hand column labeled, appropriately enough, Videos.

There you’ll find filmmaker Ric Burns‘ riveting story of New York’s recovery from near financial collapse (the ’70s version, that is, eerily relevant to the meltdown that was playing out right before our eyes)… Charles Leadbeater‘s deep and thoughtful perspective on boulders, pebbles and the power of collaborative creation… the spirited, funny and insightful performance poetry of Rives… the profoundly moving improvisational pieces performed—for the first time ever together—by musicians Michael Jones and Stephanie Winters… and more. (All of the talks are posted, except for the one we no longer speak of. If you were there, you know what I mean.)

One thing to note, the volume runs a little high on these. Adjust your speakers accordingly.

Hope you, and others, enjoy the resource.

Do It Ourselves

THE DISCUSSION

The New York Times Magazine features an article that’s perhaps serendipitous—in that it’s a perfect lead-in to next week’s Vine salon—or perhaps simply indicative of how prominent the food-as-community movement is becoming.

Christine Muhlke set out to write a column about farming and food artisans. Along the way, she discovered that it’s really a story about community.

In interview after interview, food producers and enthusiasts inevitably described their passion, their craft and their livelihood in relationship to the larger network around them. As one farmers’ market baker tells her, “People hand me money all day and tell me they love what we do, so it’s not really work at that point, it’s my social life.”

But this is not just the rarefied territory of university towns, foodie blogs and Michael Pollan book clubs. What’s most exciting and consequential, in my opinion, is the potential for farming and food to help repair and restore broken neighborhoods.

Muhlke writes:

The strongest example of a food community I’ve seen was in Detroit, where a vibrant farming scene has sprung up literally from the ashes. In a neighborhood that is a true food desert — there are no national chain grocery stores within city limits; more than 90 percent of food providers are places like convenience and liquor stores — I watched young men and old women socialize while picking collard greens in abandoned lots brought back to life by the Urban Farming organization. There was no fence, no supervision, no charge. Some of these people — neighbors — haven’t spoken to each other since the 1967 riots, the Urban Farming organizer Michael Travis told me as we watched.

“The new food movement is still labeled as Do It Yourself,” she observes, “but it’s really Do It Ourselves.”

NB: The Vine, in collaboration with Hart Howerton, will host a salon on innovative ways of integrating new development with existing agriculture (enhancing the value of both) on October 28th in Fairfield, CA. A limited number of seats are still available. Details are here.

Business Reinvention Boot Camp

THE DISCUSSION

On September 16th in San Mateo, The Vine will spend a day with wildly creative people—in a wildly creative environment—for a Business Reinvention Boot Camp.

As of today, just 10 seats remain available. Register here quickly before they’re gone.

SEEING WHAT’S NEXT: A BUSINESS REINVENTION BOOT CAMP
Thursday • September 16, 2010 • San Mateo, CA
Workshop 9:00am – 5:00pm, Reception 5:00–7:00pm
Fee: $395, includes program materials, lunch and reception

Designed and hosted by Jump Associates—advisers to world class companies like Nike, Target, GE and Harley-Davidson—this interactive workshop will help you apply hybrid strategy to rethink the challenges facing your business, break free of entrenched silos and barriers, and see new opportunities sooner (and more clearly) than others.

As you might expect from The Vine, place is integral to the experience. Recognized by the Wall Street Journal as one of the best workplaces in America, the “JumpSpace” is a dynamic, flexible, interactive environment—a living laboratory for creative, inspired and soulful work.

The Jumpsters put it this way: “Despite all of the wonderful progress that we’ve made in the past two million years, humans remain very much physical beings. We’re strongly affected by our surroundings. A great environment can lift us up, make us better at what we do, and inspire great thoughts. A lousy place can leave us depressed, tired and dull individuals, dying to go home.” (We couldn’t have said it better ourselves.)

Hope to see you there.

Fall 2010 Salon Series

THE DISCUSSION

We’re excited to announce the next two offerings in The Vine’s ongoing salon series (with more in the works for Spring ’11). Attendance at both will be limited to 50 participants. Registration is here.

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SEPTEMBER SALON: SEEING WHAT’S NEXT
Dev Patnaik, Jump Associates
Thursday • September 16, 2010 • San Mateo, CA
Workshop 9:00am – 5:00pm, Reception 5:00–7:00pm
Fee: $395, includes program materials, lunch and reception

This is not a new cycle. This is a new order. And the surest way to see the new opportunities that lie ahead—and move toward them with confidence—is through empathy, creativity and execution.

Jump Associates is one of the world’s leading growth strategy firms, helping companies (Nike, Target and GE among them) navigate uncertainty, create new businesses, and reinvent existing ones. And they especially like big, ambiguous challenges—the kinds of things you don’t know how to face, but can’t afford not to. Now they’re turning their considerable brainpower to the future of housing and community.

Jump founder Dev Patnaik is the author of Wired to Care, named one of BusinessWeek’s Best Innovation and Design Books of 2009. If you saw Dev’s keynote at PCBC, you got just a taste of what we’ll cover in this much deeper—and more hands-on—dive.

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OCTOBER SALON: IS AGRICULTURE THE NEW GOLF?
Hart Howerton Planners & Architects
Thursday • October 28, 2010 • Fairfield, CA
Workshop & Tour 10:00am – 5:00pm
Reception & Farm-to-Table Dinner 5:00–8:00pm
Fee: $395, includes program materials, lunch, reception and dinner ($345 without dinner)

“Only 17 percent of people living in golf course communities play golf more than once a year. Why not grow food?”

Andrés Duany first posed that question, and now the innovative thinkers at Hart Howerton are making it happen in a remarkable project that combines new development, existing agriculture, and new models of public/private collaboration. The answer turns out to be an intriguing glimpse into a possible future of life in America.

Combining new development with existing agriculture brings promise as well as pitfalls. The team behind Solano County’s Middle Green Valley Specific Plan and its successful public/private partnership will highlight lessons learned for anyone interested in the revitalization of local agriculture—built upon complementary development models for landowners, developers, designers, land use specialists, regional agencies, and financial institutions.

A fabulous Farm-to-Table evening event showcasing many of the products of the local foodshed will conclude the day.

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The Vine 2010 Salon Series is sponsored by Target

Reflections from IDEO: Culture as community

THE DISCUSSION

The Vine held its second salon at IDEO earlier this week. In a previous post I described the collaborative process that our workshop was built upon. This time I’ll keep it topical, and I want to highlight one theme in particular that I found most resonant:

The notion of culture as community.

IDEO’s general manager Tom Kelley spoke about the significance of an organization’s verbal language vs. body language. (And it holds just as true for communities.) Your verbal language is what’s on your website, how you describe your company, and what you say you value. Your body language is how you behave, and it shows up in the way you treat customers, employees, partners and the community around you. When your verbal and body language are incongruous, people will notice—and the body language is what they’ll interpret as the “real” you.

John Foster, head of talent and organization for IDEO, paraphrased Marshall McLuhan in reminding us, “You are the message.” All of us, as individuals and as organizations, can be incubators (or inhibitors) of community through behavior. If you are the message, what message are you sending?

Systems designer Patrice Martin then observed that great organizations (or brands, or causes) attract personality with personality. This starts with being distinct and genuine, to be sure, but it goes beyond that. It also requires the willingness to polarize and the guts to declare, “We’re not scared to lose you.”

The common thread running through these messages would appear to be authenticity…and that’s certainly at the heart of it. But underlying authenticity, I believe, is alignment. It’s being clear in the what, and grounded in the why, of all that you’re trying to accomplish. Everything else flows from that.

Thank you, IDEO, for two stimulating and mind-expanding salons. Thank you James Hardie and Target for sponsoring them. And thank you to everyone who participated and brought them to life.

A new series of salons is in the works. More to come.

The Wind and Rain

THE DISCUSSION

When new ventures emerge from connections made at The Vine, we like to celebrate them.

Violinist Rebecca Jackson (top, in 2006) and actress Claytie Mason (below, in 2007) have contributed some of The Vine’s most memorable, soul-stirring moments.

Rebecca opened our hearts with not only the richness of her music, but even more so the deeply personal and moving story of her grandfather’s influence on her life. Claytie (along with Annalisa Derr and Alissa Mortenson) portrayed the poignant, at times haunting, life stories of “The Secret Ruths of Island House,” reminding us how much of our cultural wisdom and heritage is simply bottled up in retirement communities.

These two remarkable talents are now collaborating on a new project — a theatrical adaptation of the ballad “The Wind and Rain.” The official write-up is below.

Performances will run from April 8th through May 1st (Thursday, Friday and Saturday nights) at San Francisco’s EXIT Theatre, famous for its intimate, cabaret atmosphere and cutting-edge experimental works.

Tickets can be purchased here.

Hope I might run into you at one of the shows.

THE WIND AND RAIN

Produced by EXIT Theatre as part of Divafest 2010

“There were two sisters of County Claire, Oh the wind and rain. One was dark and the other was fair. Oh the dreadful wind and rain…”

Two sisters in a small mill town on the brink of extinction, a mysterious stranger with a fiddle made of bones, a river that runs dangerously high. Based on the well known ballad The Wind and Rain, come see this age old tale about sisters, love, jealousy, revenge and the consequence of change. Created in collaboration with acclaimed physical performers Brynna Jourdan and Jenna Bean Veatch, live music and original compositions from renowned concert violinist Rebecca Jackson (Völs String Quartet, San Francisco Opera), visual delights from esteemed illustrator, painter and whimsical engineer Molly Millar (Phantom Galleries L.A.’s Emergence Enchanted, 2009 TED Conference), and award winning playwright Claytie Mason (The Secret Ruths of Island House). This tragic tale comes to life with the humor, whimsy, magic, and terror only live theatre is capable of. Produced by EXIT Theatre, cutting the edge for almost 30 years and still slicing so much tasty theatre on the fringe berry pie.

*Performed by Rebecca Jackson, Brynna Jourdan and Jenna Bean Veatch

The Vine Salon at IDEO, round two

THE DISCUSSION

Last week’s salon at IDEO was, well, pretty much everything you’d expect from a day with the world’s preeminent design firm.

One participant called it “The most stimulating, thought provoking exercise I’ve experienced in a very long time. I’m still trying to wrap my mind around all the concepts we explored.”

It was so successful, in fact, we’re doing it again.

On March 2, 2010, we’re holding a second installment of The Vine Salon at IDEO. This will be, once again, a collaborative workshop on User-Based Design Solutions created and hosted by IDEO at their Palo Alto headquarters — a rare opportunity to go inside “Imagination’s Playground,” as the Wall Street Journal has dubbed it.

Attendance will be limited to 65 people, and seats will fill up well in advance, so you’ll want to sign up early. Registration and program details can be found here.

What went down on our first visit, you ask?

Our day began with a series of short presentations — “provocations,” in IDEO-speak — by a team of designers from a variety of disciplines. By exploring examples of design-driven change through different lenses (individual, organizational, behavioral, attitudinal, among others), we got insight into IDEO’s acclaimed design thinking process, which we then applied to the afternoon’s Town Design Challenge.

Breaking into small, cross-disciplinary teams, we were first given a town profile (based on actual cities throughout the country) with details about population, geography, demographics, economic conditions, and challenges facing the area.

Next the project got human…as it always does with IDEO…and The Vine. Each team was assigned a specific user (whose profile was drawn from in-depth interviews with an actual person), and we were challenged to create solutions that would address both the needs of the town and our user’s unique circumstances. For example: a retired high school teacher with limited means but a deep desire to continue educating and shaping lives; a single mom struggling to balance the demands of work, money and time with her kids; or an aging nurse practitioner who’s committed to staying active and helping others, while at the same time coming to terms with her own physical limitations.

Considering we packed what would normally be a multiple-week prototyping process into a single afternoon, the exercise was obviously frenetic — and very taxing, I was surprised to find. And yet it was an extraordinary learning experience that, even a week later, continues to unfold for me. Three things in particular stand out.

1) Constraints can be a good thing. It’s remarkable how deadlines and competition (solutions were reviewed and voted upon by peers) will sharpen your focus.

2) Our team’s diversity of backgrounds (by design, of course) greatly enriched the process. And the two most seemingly dissimilar members, the engineer and the artist, yielded the most interesting and symbiotic results.

3) Small details matter. The solution that our team ultimately chose to put forward was drawn from a single comment in the user profile that, when we first read it, seemed idiosyncratic and irrelevant to the task at hand.

By the time we got to wine and hors d’oeuvres at the end of the day, my brain was exhausted.

I can’t wait to do it again in March.

The Vine Salon Series

THE DISCUSSION

I’m excited to let you know about a new direction for The Vine.

In a year of tight calendars and tighter budgets, we recognize that The Vine in its traditional format (three-day conference in a resort setting) isn’t a realistic undertaking. But we also believe that the principles of The Vine take on even greater importance in challenging times such as these. We’re not willing to simply take a year off, nor are we willing to substitute an online “webinar” for in-person, human collaboration.

And so, fittingly, The Vine is venturing out into the community.

Staged in various cities throughout the region, Vine Salons will be smaller, shorter, more frequent, and more accessible gatherings — while still providing the rich content and meaningful exchanges you’ve come to expect from our three-day conferences.

THE VINE SALON at IDEO

The first of these salons — Tuesday, November 17 — will be a workshop on User-Based Design Solutions created and hosted by IDEO.

Held at IDEO’s headquarters in Palo Alto, this is a rare opportunity to go inside the world’s most celebrated design firm and participate in a collaborative, rapid-prototyping, “design thinking” process as it’s brought to bear on the mission of The Vine: that is, to discover new ways of creating vital, human-centered, sustainable communities.

The workshop, led by IDEO’s Smart Space practice, will run from 11am to 5pm. After that we’ll enjoy a wine and hors d’oeuvre reception from 5-7pm, with selections from IDEO’s on-site winery.

Attendance will be limited to 75 people. More info, including how to register, is available here.

Other salons are in the works — likely locations include San Francisco, Los Angeles, Orange County and Denver, for starters. We’ll post more details as they come together.

The Vine Salon Series is generously supported by Target Corp., for which we are indebted to our friend (and past Vine speaker) Nate Garvis.

Data + Art event on April 9th

THE DISCUSSION

Following up on this previous post, I’m pleased to announce that we’ve arranged a private event at the Data + Art exhibit at the Pasadena Museum of California Art.

On Thursday, April 9, from 4:30–6:00pm, Dan Goods will lead a discussion and Q&A session about the ideas behind this extraordinary project.

You’re invited to attend, and you’re encouraged to bring colleagues as well.

If you ever feel overwhelmed by the volume and velocity of Too Much Information (and who doesn’t?), you’ll find this to be a profound and eye-opening experience. The artists describe it as a “curiosity shop” encompassing weird science, animation, images and music.

Three things to note:

1. There will be a $7 fee, which is payable at the door.
2. Here’s where you’ll find info about directions and parking.
3. Advance sign-ups are not required, but if you’re going, drop me an email indicating who and how many. It’s helpful to know.

We hope to see you there.

Data + Art

THE DISCUSSION

If you’re in the Los Angeles area, or will be visiting between now and April 12, here’s an enriching experience you’ll want to check out.

Dan Goods and David Delgado—designers and educators at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, and Vine alumni, I might add—have curated a fascinating exhibit at the Pasadena Museum of California Art titled Data + Art: Science and Art in the Age of Information.

The exhibit, which is on display through April 12, explores the hidden stories revealed in data through emerging forms of data expression. The artists describe it this way: “This exhibition challenges viewer’s assumptions by exploring the beauty inherent in data and asks them to see complexity in a new light. These interpretations of data will empower the average person to see the invisible, hear the inaudible and understand the impossibly complex.” (Does that mean they’ve unraveled the makeup of CDOs?)

See reviews in the Los Angeles Times and Boston Globe.

If you’re interested in viewing the exhibit, here’s info about directions, parking and museum hours.

If you’d like to take it a step further and attend a discussion/Q&A led by the artists, send me an email. With enough responses, we may be able to arrange a private event.

Hope you’re able to experience it.

Nourishing Hugs and Hot Love

THE DISCUSSION

One of our exercises on the first day of The Vine involved:

Questions à contemplation à words on paper à random groupings à mashups of words to form sentences describing “What this community might become.”

Considering the haphazardness of the process, the outputs are remarkably lucid. (If you’re reading this and you weren’t there…well, you kinda had to be there.)

Here’s what you came up with:

Less Divisive Opinions Lead to Connection and an Answer of Hope

Listen! It’s a Warm Place that Communicates Inspiration Connection Awareness with Energy and Grittiness

Hot Engagement [Pause] Suburban Humanity (Empathy) Warm Personality Listening with Sincerity and Wine (Laughter) A-ha!

Special Inscrutable Listening and Laughter Can Reinvent Comfortable Gordo Wisdom

This Community Inspires Listening Enthusiasm Creativity Laughter Collaboration Vacation Wanderlust

Organic Happiness comes from Connection and Listening with Positivity and Silence

Innovate … Look for a Swell Connection Hearing Empathy for Intriguing Hugs

Love (Peace) Listening with a Spirit of Passion and Perspective to Create Cohesion Inspiration Innovation: Soul (Sensitivity)

Calming Insight Sparks Evolution and Reinvention bringing Joy Fun and Trees

Learning with Expansive Substance! Thoughtful Communication Refreshing Faith + Action = Love

And my personal favorite:

Reflect and be Creative in Prioritizing Nourishing Hugs and Hot Love