PROFILE: It's Nice That [2017]
PROFILE: Design Indaba [2017]
Talking odd interplay with information and ephemeral tech with Tea Uglow
As technology becomes more functional, does it become less human-centric?
PROFILE: Women’s History Month [2017]
In honor of Women’s History Month, we’re celebrating the powerful, dynamic and creative women of Google. Like generations before them, these women break down barriers and defy expectations at work and in their communities. Over the course of the month, we’ll help you get to know a few of these Google women, and share a bit about who they are and why they inspire us.
In our second installment of the “She Word” series, we hear from Tea Uglow, a creative director in Sydney, Australia who is known for her love of coffee (but not tea), and for grabbing a “quick flat white and a chat.”
PROFILE: Transgender Awareness Week [2016]
This was my first Google blog post as Tea and it could not have been more fitting or been a project I was more happy to be associated with. Blog
PROFILE: Sandpit [2016]
The very very wonderful Tea Uglow leads part of Google’s Creative Labspecialising in work with cultural organisations, artists and producers, experimenting with digital technology at the boundaries of traditional cultural practice – across theatre, literature, history, cinema, music, science and the circus.
PROFILE: Semi-Permanent [2016]
It might sound like something torn from the pages of Virginia Woolf’s Orlando, but the quote above comes from Tea Uglow, the Google creative director and tech celebrity, who is sitting on the sofa at Semi Permanent’s offices in Sydney on a sunny autumn afternoon.
PROFILE: Collective Magazine [2015]
AS THE creative director for Google’s Creative Lab in Sydney, Tom Uglow has a job many of us dream of, but what really goes on behind the colourful doors of one of the most innovative companies in the world?
Here, he shares what he has learned with The Collective magazine.
I THOUGHT THE INTERNET WAS AWFUL.
PROFILE: Desktop Magazine [2015]
This article appeared in 'Desktop Magazine' in 2015
What we see today as being huge and difficult and complex simply won’t be huge and complex for the next generation. Take phones for example. They seem so ubiquitous, yet smartphones are good at distribution of information because of convenience, not design. In itself a phone does improve on what other ’things’ used to do. Before the phone came the personal computer, and before the PC, surfing the net meant mainframes. Before that we had books, cameras, maps, newspaper - the phone has aggregated all of these in digital forms mainly because it is the easiest 'device' to connect to the internet. Perhaps we should have seen that coming?
PROFILE: Write Track [2015]
Head of Google’s Creative Labs in Asia, Tea Uglow, is about as far at the cutting edge of emerging technology, art and design as it’s possible to be. This year literature and books in all their forms are the focus of his attention. We asked Tom to tell us why and what he sees the future of reading and writing to be.
PROFILE: Financial Times [2014]
PROFILE: ABC Arts [2014]
Alongside the Remix 2014 summit in Sydney, the ABC took the pulse of a few of us producing these short talking head films discussing ideas around ethics, creativity and cities of the future.
PROFILE: VICE [2014]
Ahead of the Remix conference in May 2014 - Mitch Parker at VICE wrote up a really interesting hour that we spent discussing the Lab in Sydney. He managed to distill an insightful essence of what my team does and how we self-organise down here in Sydney. It's pretty useful to have your own rhetoric read back to you sometimes.
Read the article on VICE: http://t.co/EmJ2C5wJlk
PROFILE: Imperica Magazine [2014]
This is an interview I did with Imperica Magazine in the UK about Watershed's Playable City
You can read the original article here: http://goo.gl/86wZEe
PROFILE: Out The Front [2014]
Adrian & Siobhan have posted an interview I did with Siobhan as part of their terrific Out the Front podcast series. A meandering and occasionally mumbly podcast on creativity and culture and why I choose to work on the other side of the world from all the important people.
Full transcript is here: http://outthefront.com.au/2014/tom-uglow/
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