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Ayrton sponsors Women in Lighting project
Ayrton is a new sponsor for Women in Lighting, the international support and networking project for women in both architectural and entertainment lighting. Ayrton’s primary aim is to raise awareness of, and expand, this global network across the entertainment lighting industry.
Launched in 2019 on International Women’s Day by Light Collective, Women in Lighting (WIL) is a digital forum where women can inspire, support and encourage the next generation of female lighting designers. It provides a platform on which women designers can share their passions and achievements and celebrate their work. Its worldwide programme of events and activities is augmented by a series of online interviews where women share their career paths and goals with other members.
In two short years the project has grown rapidly and is now represented in over seventy countries by its network of “ambassadors”, women who act as a point of contact for those seeking to discover more about WIL, join the supportive community and benefit from the many online activities which are tailored to the different needs within each country.
Until now WIL has focused largely on women working in architectural lighting, but the new collaboration with Ayrton brings a new engagement with the entertainment lighting industry, and an opportunity to raise awareness and expand the network into a different market.
“Our intention is to build bridges between different lighting industries as well as redress the balance of the heavy bias towards male lighting designers”, says Sharon Stammers, co-founder with Martin Lupton of Light Collective and Women in Lighting. “However, Women in Lighting is not only about gender equity. It’s also about inclusivity and how this is beneficial to an industry as a whole. Ayrton is perfectly placed with its great knowledge of and connections within the entertainment industry and is the ideal partner to help us spread the awareness of WIL and how it can help people.”
To mark the start of this new collaboration between Ayrton and WIL, an online workshop will be held on 14 September 2021 from 13:00-15:00 BST. Registrations can be made via this link: https://hopin.com/events/women-in-lighting-moving-lights. Ayrton is also sponsoring three new interviews from international stage and television lighting designers which will be launched alongside the workshop. The interviews will appear as Project interviews on the WIL website.
New interviews sponsored by Ayrton include: Anne Militello (United States), Founder of Vortex Lighting in Los Angeles and Head of Lighting Programs at the California Institute of the Arts, who received the OBIE Award for Sustained Excellence, the Paul Waterbury Award of Distinction from the IESNA, an IALD Award of Merit and Themed Lighting Designer of the Year from Lighting Dimensions International, among others; Emi Yatabe (Japan), a Senior Lighting Designer at Nippon Television Network Corporation in Tokyo with a background in Electronic Engineering; Mildred M. Moyo (Zimbabwe), a.k.a Lighting Bae, a Stage Lighting Designer from Bulawayo who launched Phenomenal Lighting, the only stage lighting company owned by a female in Zimbabwe, and started a series of masterclasses for young people who are aspiring to be lighting designers in Zimbabwe, particularly girls (these sessions became digital in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic and hosted a number of renowned lighting designers from across the globe).
“We are very excited to team up with Women in Lighting to support the empowerment of women everywhere and, with its global network of ambassadors, where and how they most need it”, says Ayrton’s Linnea Ljunkmark. “Ayrton is very keen to expand this support across the entertainment industry to allow women in lighting greater recognition and the confidence to work in their chosen field with pride.”
“Ayrton is an international company with a high percentage of women in our team”, Ljunkmark continues. “We know from our contact with our customers how much of a contribution women lighting designers - and in all roles - make to our industry and want to encourage other women to become involved, express their creativity and use WIL to discover the many different facets of lighting available to them.”
The Women in Lighting project is open to all women working in stage, concert, television, events or any other areas of entertainment lighting across the world - all of whom are invited to become part of the project. There are a number of ways to get involved: check out some of the interviews, sign up for the regular WIL newsletter or submit your own interview via the WIL website.
(Photos: Ayrton/Women in Lighting)
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