TEDxAlbertopolis: A Tale of Two Cultures
YOU GUYS. I got to go to my first TEDx event today in Royal Albert Hall! The event had twelve speakers and several exhibits/performances/experiments throughout the building over the course of five hours. We were asked to move seats during each interval to meet new people, and I made a new friend who just began studying dance in Greenwich! The event centered around the intersections of the arts and sciences and was split into three sections: Seeing things differently, Making things happen, and Shaking things up. Speakers included Sally Davies (the current and first-ever female Chief Medical Officer of Britain), John Halpern (a cryptic crossword puzzle creator), Jess Thom (a woman who creatively embraces her severe Tourette's Syndrome), and Ryan Francois (a choreographer on Strictly Come Dancing), among many other scientists, musicians, historians, and designers. HOW FREAKING COOL?!
Some of the exhibits during the interval:
Musical Jello
"Race for the Higgs-Boson"
Entomological exhibit from the Natural History Museum collection
I won't try to share with you secondhand the ideas I heard earlier today because (1) I could not do them justice, (2) they will all be on TED.com shortly, and (3) I am too darn slow to type all of it up and still get sleep before an early day tomorrow. However, I will give you a preview of Roland Lamb's talk: This man created an instrument called the Seaboard, which is like a sexy piano. Roland studied piano and wished that it could have more variety in its sound quality, so he designed a board that looks like a flat piano and has a pliable surface, whose keys respond to the quality, not just the force, of the movement of the player's fingers. First, someone played the giant, gorgeous organ of the Royal Albert Hall. Then, someone played the piano. And finally, at the end of the talk, someone played the Seaboard, and it put me in a blissful trance—What a beautiful sound! Roland describes the instrument as allowing people to "sensually express what is within and sensually experience what is without" and explains that he created it because he wanted to "infuse humanity into the digital." Wow.
Roland Lamb and three musicians (back: organ player, left: pianist, right: Seaboard player)
I could really connect to these Renaissance Men and Women, who refuse to dichotomize two very intertwined areas of study and exploration, who love creating and examining, who communicate across disciplines and look at the big picture and the meta-pictures. I'm not going to lie... I definitely pictured myself up there giving a talk someday.
I encourage everyone reading this to PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE check out TED.com if you have not already. There is something inspiring for everyone!














