The conference is beneficial for professionals who work with all different kinds of lighting, including for theatre, houses of worship, broadcast, dance, academic institutions, architecture, live events, and more.
This summer's CUE conference will be the third end-user event that ETC has held. Attendees to previous CUEs have been able to apply what they've learned to their everyday work. "The 2013 ETC conference gave me the skills I needed to come back to my theatre and successfully train our current board operator, who had no previous ETC Eos-family knowledge," says Kearston Dillard-Scott, a lighting supervisor at the Virginia Opera Association. "I was also able to gain more knowledge about maintaining systems and used that knowledge to help other venues maintain their consoles and equipment."
Matt Hazard, the lighting studio manager for the Department of Theatre at the Ohio State University, who attended both CUE 2011 and CUE 2013, had the same experience: "I learned about trends in specifying gear for installations and newly constructed spaces. One of the sessions specifically addressed hybrid theatres, the expanding use of LEDs and the diminishing need for dimmers. This has been very relevant in one of my technical classes, where we are examining an actual renovation plan for a branch campus."
The hands-on classes and real life education taught at CUE gives attendees the time to fully grasp new concepts and to 'create' designs using what they learned. "The time set aside to work on a console and have ETC engineers at my side guiding me through steps and concepts was very valuable and has resulted in more efficient designing and cueing. The CUE conference certainly helped expand my knowledge base," says Aaron Bahmer, technical director at Goshen Community Theatre in Torrington, Wyoming.
The 'understand' part of CUE can come about from attendees networking with other lighting professionals, both from their industry and outside of it. ETC encourages attendees to share their own experiences and swap ideas. "It was great for me - being from a small venue - to see what the 'big players' in the industry can do with upper-level tools," explains Bahmer.
And ETC ensures that CUE is a one-of-a-kind 'experience', with attendees leaving with valuable tips and tools relevant to their work. "I think most important to me at the 2013 conference was the fact that ETC wasn't running just a sales conference - they weren't promoting the benefits of LEDs in order to make me buy," concludes Bahmer. "Instead, they were talking about transitional and layered use of LEDs - information I could take home and make decisions about."
(Jim Evans)