Tuesday, August 11, 2015

Welcome to Lubbock!

Downloadable Conference Program


Welcome to the 2015 TASA Arts Practice Research conference in Lubbock, TX!

Steering Committee,
Carol Flueckiger, Chris Smith, Bill Gelber and Nicole Wesley

Conference Committee: Michelle Kraft, Lubbock Christian University, Gary Johnson, Texas Tech University, Ghi Fremaux, Texas Tech University, Andreas Peralta, Texas Tech University, Future Akins, Texas Tech University, Ed Check, Texas Tech University, Yasaman Moussavi, Texas Tech University, Ashley Busby, Texas Tech University

Conference Sponsors: Texas Association Schools of Art, TTU College of Visual and Performing Arts, Vernacular Music Center

Monday, August 3, 2015

Message from TASA President


Message from the TASA President Carol Fairlie
Thank you for joining the TASA Annual Conference hosted by Texas Tech in Lubbock. The world we teach in is rapidly changing, the challenges and obstacles we face are many. Whether it is the issue of constricted core curriculum, limitations on adjunct instructors or the changing concepts in teaching of core components, TASA conferences provide a meeting place to discuss, share and solve issues. A special panel on Creative Arts Core Component Area and Studio Art Courses will be held on Friday morning, Oct. 2nd.
Also, this years conference “Arts Practice Research: Scholarship, Pedagogy, and the Creative Process”, broadens the spectrum by involving multi-disciplinary concepts shared by the Visual and Performing arts.   “Arts Practice Research,” is a fast-growing topic within university curricula, both here in North America and abroad, with the fundamental conviction that both the creation and the analysis of an arts object (physical or processual) can be constituent elements of the scholarly mission, uniting the creator and the critic as “practitioner”. How does this work into your academic practices?

We are here to share ideas and we want hear your voice and your issues.    

Key Note Speaker Nick Cave

Key Note Speaker - Nick Cave
Nick Cave (born 1959‪[1] in Fulton, Missouri, USA) is an American fabric sculptordancer, and performance artist. He is best known for his Soundsuits: wearable fabric sculptures that are bright, whimsical, and other-worldly. He also trained as a dancer with Alvin Ailey.‪[2] He resides in Chicago and is director of the graduate fashion program at School of the Art Institute of Chicago.


Texas Tech Sponsored Lecture

Texas Tech Sponsored Lecture - Philip Monaghan

Philip Monaghan (born September 27, 1954) is a visual artist and branding executive living in New York City. He is noted for his visual collaborations with poets. Part of the 1980s East Village fashion and art scene, Monaghan was friendly with artists including Andy Warhol.‪[1] Concurrently, Monaghan worked as an art director and branding expert for various retail companies. In 2007, he dedicated himself to a fine arts practice.‪[2]

Sunday, August 2, 2015

Juror 1 Foot Square Show


Juror 1 Foot Square Exhibition
Charles Adams, Founding Director, CASP
Mr. Adams has successfully managed a professional fine arts gallery for over thirty years in Lubbock, Texas. Mr. Adams graduated with an art history degree from NYU. He also owned and operated a successful gallery in NYC for ten years before returning to Lubbock in 1980. He has an ongoing relationship with visual and performing artists not only in West Texas but across the United States. He has served as advisor and board member to many cultural organizations in the region. As Studio Project Director, Adams provides his expertise in the oversight of the development and management of the project. Mr. Adams is the director of development, implementation and management of a marketing plan, liaison to the general public, the artists, and cultural organization for the Studio Project. He oversees the development and sustainability of an artist in residency program and other artist-­based events and activities presented on the campus.

Paul Hanna Lecture

Paul Hanna Award
Giving Voice to the Female Hero
Felice House, MFA, MS, Texas A&M University
Abstract
In order for women to be recognized as heroic, women heroes have to be remembered. This talk will explore how female heroes are placed in a visual narrative of heroes. Contextualizing their lives provides a framework to understand the hero in relation to gender.
Bio
As an artist, House explores the tension between heroic archetypes and gender. Her most recent series of large-scale paintings, RE•WESTERN, places contemporary women into heroic roles played by movie icons such as John Wayne. By flipping the gender, and retaining the same visual signifiers, the series conveys female heroes and speaks to women’s access to power.

Tribute to Paul Hanna
There will be a tribute to Paul Hanna during the conference banquet by colleagues who knew him personally through his work with TASA and service as Professor and Associate Chairperson at Texas Tech University.  Paul D. Hanna, age 84, passed away July 2, 2015 in Lubbock.  He was born on July 27, 1930, in Alice, Texas, to Paul D. Hanna, Sr. and Nina Foster Hanna.

Saturday, April 25, 2015

Schedule & Presenters

Arts Practice Research Conference
scholarship, pedagogy, and the creative process
co - hosted by TASA & Texas Tech CVPA
October 1 - 3, 2015


Updated 9-12-2015

Date & Time
 TASA Event
 APR Event

Location
T Oct. 1

1-5p
TASA Board Meeting

SOA Conference Room
6-8p
Reception & Registration
Reception & Registration

Texas Tech Museum




F Oct. 2



8:00a



8:30-9a
Registration
Registration
SUB
Senate Room
Lubbock Room

THECB art field of study revision and studio core curriculum update
APR 0X (Panel A): 9:30-11a

Wandering as a Creative Research Practice--Chair: Bowman; Respondent: Justin Trudeau (University of North Texas)

9-9:30a
Richard Lubben, South Texas College
PANELIST 1: Sarah K. Jackson (Southern University of New Orleans) & Lindsay Greer (Southern Illinois University-Carbondale): The Wandering Chronotope as a Performance of Memory and Remembering

Mark Greenwalt, College of the Mainland

9:30-10a
Carol Fairlie, Sol Ross
PANELIST 2: Bonnie McDonald (Louisiana State University) & Ruth Laurion Bowman (Louisiana State University): ’Botanizing on the Asphalt’: Wandering as Generative Interruption

Valerie Powell, Sam Houston State University

10-10:30a
Gary Johnson, Texas Tech
Andreas Peralta, Texas Tech
PANELIST 3: Brian Rusted (University of Calgary): Evoking the Visual: Walking, Performance, Trench and Circle

Carol Flueckiger, Texas Tech


Creating Arts Infrastructure/Developing Artist Research
APR 0X: 10:30a-12p: Sound, Movement, Cognition

10:30-11a
David Lindsay, Texas Tech
PAPER: Cliodhna Donnellan (University of Limerick) and Shannon Burns (University of Limerick): “Arts Practice Research as Method in the Investigation of a Traditional Musician’s Perceived Performance Limitations


11-11:30a
Monika Proffitt, Starry Night Residency, Truth or Consequences, NM
PAPER: Andrew Lawrence King (Guildhall School of Music and Drama): Text, Rhythm, Action! New Priorities in Historically Informed Performance


11:30-12p
Hans Molzberger, Hilmsen Summer Residency Program, Hilmsen, Germany
PAPER: Caitlin Grann (University of New Mexico) and Carolina Arellans (Texas Tech): Where Trees Do not Exist

12-12:30p
Lunch
Lunch
SUB Matador Room




12:30-1p
TASA Business Meeting







Keynote
Keynote
SUB Ballroom
1-1:30p
Nick Cave
Nick Cave

1:30-2p
Nick Cave
Nick Cave






Texas Tech Sponsored Lecture
Texas Tech Sponsored Lecture

2-2:30p
Philip Monaghan and David Trinidad in conversation with Kristi Humphrey, Texas Tech
Philip Monaghan and David Trinidad in conversation with Kristi Humphrey, Texas Tech

2:30-3p
Philip Monaghan and David Trinidad in conversation with Kristi Humphrey, Texas Tech
Philip Monaghan and David Trinidad in conversation with Kristi Humphrey, Texas Tech






 Tour SOA Facilities
APR 0X (Panel B): 2-3:30p
SUB
Senate Room
Or
SOA Facilities
The ways and means of praxis led research led praxis (Page)

3-3:30

PANELIST 1: Anna Hickey-Moody (Goldsmiths University of London): New materialisms and inventive methods

3:30-4

PANELIST 2: Tara Page (Goldsmiths University of London): The writing is on the walls

4-4:30

PANELIST 3: Esther Sayers (Goldsmiths University of London): Pedagogical arts praxis on the inside





5-5:30p
Reception
Reception
SOA Landmark Arts Gallery
5:30-6p
Reception
Reception

6-6:30p


Hotel
6:30-7p



7-7:30p



7:30p
One Foot Square Show: Juror: Charles Adams
One Foot Square Show: Juror: Charles Adams
LHUCA
Satellite Gallery


APR Poster Display
APR Poster Display


First Friday Event
First Friday Event


Dinner on own
Dinner on own

9:00p








S Oct. 3




8:30-9a


LHUCA
Firehouse Theatre
Helen DeVitt Jones Gallery


Painting in Transience
APR 0X: 9-10:30a: Visual processes

9-9:30a
Hannah Dean, Lubbock Christian
PAPER: Kaveh Rafie (Texas Tech): Sitting Pretty: the Photographer King and the Impact of Photography on the Construction of Gender in Iran’s Naseri Era

Scotty Hensler, Texas Tech



9:30-10a
Andrew Martin, Texas Tech
PAPER: Sharon Bainbridge (University of Leeds) and Jainine Sykes (University of Leeds): The Process Continues: the archive, the staff exhibition, practice and pedagogy


10-10:30a
Christie Blizard, University of Texas, San Antonio
PAPER: James A. W. Gutierrez (University of California, San Diego): Framing Creative Intentionality: Toward a Heuristic Music Theory Pedagogy

10:30-11a



11-11:30a
Paul Hannah Award Lecture: Felice House, Texas A&M University

Firehouse Theatre
11:30-12p
Paul Hannah Award Lecture: Felice House, Texas A&M University


12-12:30p
Bag lunch
Bag lunch
Helen DeVitt Jones Gallery
12:30-1p
Lunch
Lunch






Workshops/Open Lecture Sessions/3D Annex Tour
APR 0X: 1-2p: Vision, Movement, History
LHUCA
Firehouse Theatre
Helen DeVitt Jones Gallery
3D Annex
1-1:30p
Tour 3D Annex: WORKSHOPS
PAPER: Priya Venkat Raman (Independent scholar): Oral Repositories or Textual Traditions? Assembling the past of South Indian dance into the present history of dance

Verbal and Pictorial Narration in “Shahnameh of Shah Tahmasb Book”

Yasaman Moussavi

Open Breakout Sessions

1:30-2p

PAPER: Valerie Powell (Sam Houston State University): Fail Faster: Exploring Risk Taking in the Creative Process







APR 0X (PANEL C): 2-3:30p

Panel: Creativity and Education in Arts Practice Research: A Case Study--Chair: Helen Phelan (University of Limerick)

2-2:30p

PANELIST 1: Mattu Noone (University of Limerick): Reclaiming the Mongrel: Irish Traditional and North Indian Classical musical connections- a practice-based exploration of hybridization

2:30-3p

PANELIST 2: Kevin O’Carroll (University of Limerick): Phrased Notation: Exploring a new solution to an old problem - A performance based study creating a modified music notation system for use with Renaissance polyphony

3-3:30p

PANELIST 3: Shane Holohan (University of Limerick): Education and Creativity in Aerial Dance Performance and Training: An Arts Practice Investigation



APR 0X: 3:30-5p: Performance and Pedagogy

3:30-4p



4-4:30p

PAPER: Laura Elizabeth Sapelly (Penn State): The Sewing Circle as Metaphor and Methodology for Art Pedagogy and Scholarship

4:30-5p

PAPER: Arthur J. Sabatini (Arizona State University): Interdisciplinary Arts, Theory, and Pedagogy from the Avant-Garde and Experimental Art Traditions

5-5:30p



5:30-6p



6-8p
Banquet
Banquet
LHUCA
Ice House
TASA recognition and Awards
TASA recognition and Awards

6:30-7p



7-7:30p



7:30-8p







8-8:30p
Research as Performance Evening – Curated by Heather Warren Crow
Research as Performance Evening, curated by Heather Warren-Crow
LHUCA Firehouse Theatre
8:30-9p



9-9:30p



9:30-10p



10-10:30p




Bus back to hotel
Bus back to hotel

Su Oct. 4



9a-1p
Post Conference Board Meeting

Overton Hotel







TASA Presenters

Friday October 2, Lubbock Room, SUB, Texas Tech University
9:00 – 10:30
Issues and Updates on Curriculum and Faculty Salary

The panel discussion will cover several important topics relating to curriculum and faculty salaries.  Issues include the planned THECB art field of study revision and how it may affect community college and university programs/transfer, creative arts core curriculum updates, MFA salaries at the community college, compensation of lab/studio hours at the community college and the THECB scheduled deletion of 13 ACGM courses for spring 2017.

Carol Fairlie is current President of TASA, and Program head of Art at Sul Ross State University. She maintains an active studio practice and shows her paintings nationally.
Carol Flueckiger coordinates the Foundations Program at Texas Tech University and her artwork has been integrated into architecture, choreography, theatre and national park venues. 
Mark Greenwalt Mark Greenwalt is a TASA Board Member and Professor of Art at College of the Mainland
Richard Lubben is a TASA Board Member, CAA Education Committee Member, Fulbright Scholar and serves as the Art Department Chair at South Texas College.
Valerie Powell is the VP of Regional Programming of FATE, the Foundations Coordinator of the WASH Program at Sam Houston State University and maintains an active national & international studio practice.
Gary Johnson Gary Johnson PhD is Assistant Professor of visual studies at Texas Tech University. His current research deals with perceptions and identities involving pre service teachers. 
Andrés Peralta attended the University of North Texas where he earned a Ph.D. in Art Education, and his research centers on identity construction, visual culture, and issues of race, ethnicity, sexuality, and gender.

Friday October 2, Lubbock Room, SUB, Texas Tech University
10:30 – 12:00
Creating Arts Infrastructure/Developing Artist Research
Our session will feature a panel of artists who have developed infrastructure for the making, exhibiting, or understanding of art. Artist-developed infrastructure is often the result of those who have sought for new environments and communities in which to make and exhibit artwork. These efforts support expansive ideas about an individual artist’s own work, as well as broader solutions to developments within the field. We will discuss how these efforts have influenced the artist's own practice and their art communities and how artist-led infrastructure differs from projects instigated by patrons or corporations.

David Lindsay is an artist and professor at Texas Tech University; he is also the developer of the Popwalk phone app for artists.
Hans Molzberger is an artist living in Houston and teaching at Houston Baptist University, he is the director of the Hilmsen 1 residency in Hilmsen, Germany.
Monika Proffit is an artist and the director of the Starry Night Artist Residency and Exposure Program and in Truth or Consequences, New Mexico.

Friday, October 2, School of Art Building
3:30 – 5:30
Tour Art Facilities
Facilities in the School of Art will be open for viewing.  See what is happening with Communication Design, Visual Studies, Art History, Painting, Photo and Printmaking.  Faculty and students will be on hand to show classrooms and student works.  

Saturday October 3, Helen DeVitt Jones Studio Gallery
9:00 – 11:00
Painting in Transience
Schwabsky writes: “…’painterliness’ has a different value today than it did in the past (…) allowing the paint to linger in the condition in which things are still unsettled, metamorphic, in transition” (About Painting, 2011).  Though Schwabsky refers more to th e connections between abstraction and image-based painting, the artists in this panel discuss “unsettled painting” as a means to push to its boundary, determining at what point these remain paintings an when they transition into something else entirely, offering a spectrum form exclusive object-makers to those that are more clearly linked to performance, video, and installation. 

Christie Blizard, MFA (GSU), Assistant Professor, University of Texas, San Antonio and Independent Artist. Exhibitions include Women and Their Work, Austin and Lawndale Art Center, Houston, and publications such as Art in America and Blouin Artinfo.
Scotty Hensler, MFA (TTU), creates works in painting and sculpture that have been exhibited throughout the Southwest and serves as the Assistant Director for Landmark Arts Exhibition and Speaker Programs at Texas Tech University School of Art.
Andrew W. Martin, MFA (UCLA) is a studio artist, Professor of Art (Painting and
Drawing) and Associate Dean in the College of Visual and Performing Arts at Texas Tech University whose works in drawing and painting have been shown in over 100 juried and invitational exhibitions across the United States.
Hannah Celeste Dean, MFA (TTU) is a painter with exhibitions and publications
including the Rising Eyes of Texas, The Hunting Art Prize, and New American Paintings.
She currently is an adjunct instructor at Texas Tech University and Lubbock Christian
University.

Saturday October 3, 2015, 3D Art Annex
1:00 – 4:00
Tour 3D Annex: Workshops
Come join us for a Solar Powered Painting workshop to create large collaborative cyanotype murals.  We will brainstorm our image and metaphor as we use found objects (including our own bodies) to create compositions.  Work will be displayed during the conference.  Workshop takes about 30 minutes.  Carol Flueckiger coordinates the Foundations Program at Texas Tech University and her artwork has been integrated into architecture, choreography, theatre and national part venues. 

Professor of Jewelry Design and Metalsmithing, Robly A. Glover will be giving guided tours of the state of the art Jewelry Design and Metalsmithing Studio. The renovated 3D Art Annex is one of the premier Jewelry Design and Metalsmithing facilities in the Southwest. Professor Glover will tour TASA participants and present a short presentation on opportunities in the field of Jewelry Design and Metalsmithing and highlight alumni accomplishments and employment within the field. The field of Jewelry Design and Metalsmithing offers numerous opportunities for BFA and MFA graduates. Academic, industrial, commercial, and new technologies are only a few on the entrepreneurial opportunities afforded our students. 

Associate Professor of Sculpture, William Cannings will be giving a guided tour of the Sculpture Studios. The 3D Art Annex is one of the premier Sculpture facilities in the Southwest. Associate Professor Cannings will tour TASA participants and give a short presentation on the opportunities in the field of Sculpture and highlight alumni accomplishments and employment within the field. The field of Sculpture offers numerous opportunities for BFA and MFA graduates. Academic, industrial, commercial, and new technologies are only a few on the entrepreneurial opportunities afforded our students. Please join us.

The faculty in Ceramics (Juan Granados and Von Venhuizen) will be giving a guided tour of the Ceramics Facility in the 3D Art Annex.  The 3D Art Annex houses Ceramics, Jewelry/Metals, Sculpture, the Wood Shop, and 3D Foundations.  The Ceramics area boasts having one of the safest facilities in the nation, with state of the art ventilation for glaze and claybody research.  The Ceramics area also has 36 kilns of different varieties and sizes, so there is every chance available for students to fire ceramics in any type of kiln or atmosphere.  The dynamic program in Ceramics has B.F.A. and M.F.A. students that continue on to elite graduate programs, university level teaching positions, or become gallery directors, residency coordinators, and practicing studio artists. We also foster student ideas by having a healthy visiting artist program that the students get to engage with artists from all over the world.

Saturday October 3, 2015, Helen DeVitt Jones Studio Gallery
1:00 – 1:30
Verbal and pictorial narration in “Shahnameh of Shah Tahmasb book”
The Shahnameh Shah Tahmap is considered the most prominent and luxurious copy of Firdausi’s epic Shahnameh (The Book of Kings), which marks the summit of Persian manuscript painting in the 16th century. 
This presentation is an attempt to investigate the unprecedented characteristic of narration in The Shahnameh Shah Tahmap and particularly in one of the ingenious illustrations by Sultan Muhammad, “Faraydun Strikes Zahhak.” This folio illustrate a departure from the traditional convention of the integration between text and image in Persian Painting.

Yasaman Moussavi, From Tehran/Iran.  BFA in Painting 2007 from Alzahra University, MA in Art Studies from Tehran University 2009, MFA in Painting, MFA candidate in Printmaking, Texas Tech University 2016. 

Saturday October 3, 2015, Helen DeVitt Jones Studio Gallery
1:30 – 4:00
Open Break Out Session

The Helen DeVitt Jones Studio Gallery will be available for conference attendees to conduct walk in presentations or break out sessions. 




APR Presenters

Friday October 2, 2015, Lubbock Room, SUB, Texas Tech University
9:00 – 10:30
APR 0 (Panel A)
Wandering as a Creative Research Practice--Chair: Bowman; Respondent: Justin Trudeau (University of North Texas)
PANEL ABSTRACT: In this session, we focus on wandering as arts based research practice.  An overview of wandering will be provided by the chair, after which the authors will examine different concepts and applications of wandering, such as the Surrealist activation of memory through a wandering chronotope, flânerie in performance composition, and poetic non-representational place-making in visual art.   In addition to understanding wandering as a chance based encounter between people and a place(s) or space(s), the three approaches highlight the multi-temporal affect of wandering; cover practical as well as theoretical concerns; and situate their work within the politics of wandering.   
PANELIST 1:
Sarah K. Jackson (Southern University of New Orleans) & Lindsay Greer (Southern Illinois University-Carbondale):
The Wandering Chronotope as a Performance of Memory and Remembering

PANELIST 2:
Bonny McDonald (Louisiana State University) & Ruth Laurion Bowman (Louisiana State University):
’Botanizing on the Asphalt’: Wandering as Generative Interruption

PANELIST 3:
Brian Rusted (University of Calgary):
Evoking the Visual: Walking, Performance, Trench and Circle

Friday October 2, 2015, Lubbock Room, SUB, Texas Tech University
10:30 – 12:00
APR Paper Session 02
Sound, Movement, Cognition

PAPER:
Cliodhna Donnellan (University of Limerick) and Shannon Burns (University of Limerick):
“Arts Practice Research as Method in the Investigation of a Traditional Musician’s Perceived Performance Limitations

PAPER:
Andrew Lawrence King (Guildhall School of Music and Drama):
Text, Rhythm, Action! New Priorities in Historically Informed Performance

PAPER:
Caitlin Grann (Texas Tech) and Carolina Arellans (Texas Tech):
Where Trees Do not Exist

Friday October 2, 2015, Lubbock Room, SUB, Texas Tech University
3:30 – 5:30
APR 03 (Panel B)
The ways and means of praxis led research led praxis (Page)

PANEL ABSTRACT: The Centre for the Arts and Learning (CAL) at Goldsmiths, University of London is a practice research centre, where knowledge is conceived as something that is co-constructed through action- praxis, practice with theory and theory with practice.  The aims of CAL are to enable, explore and curate critical processes of socially engaged praxis that effect change for social justice through a variety of ways and means.. The intention of these three presentations is to share ways of responsive, located research that draws on arts practice, pedagogy, modes of community engagement and collaborative creative processes.
PANELIST 1:
Anna Hickey-Moody (Goldsmiths University of London):
New materialisms and inventive methods

PANELIST 2:
Tara Page (Goldsmiths University of London):
The writing is on the walls

PANELIST 3:
Esther Sayers (Goldsmiths University of London):
Pedagogical arts praxis on the inside

Saturday Oct. 3, 2015, Firehouse Theater, LHUCA Campus
9:00 – 11:00
APR Paper Session:
Visual Processes

PAPER:
Kaveh Rafie (Texas Tech University):
Sitting Pretty: the Photographer King and the Impact of Photography on the Construction of Gender in Iran’s Naseri Era

PAPER:
Sharon Bainbridge (University of Leeds) and Jainine Sykes (University of Leeds):
The Process Continues: the archive, the staff exhibition, practice and pedagogy

PAPER:
James A. W. Gutierrez (University of California, San Diego):
Framing Creative Intentionality: Toward a Heuristic Music Theory Pedagogy

PAPER:
Kathryn Kelly (Texas Tech):
“On CERTAINTY – The practice of language of female visual artists’ in social positioning – I THINK” 

Saturday Oct. 3, 2015, Firehouse Theater, LHUCA Campus
1:00 – 2:00
APR Paper Session:
Vision, Movement, History

PAPER:
Priya Venkat Raman (Independent scholar):
Oral Repositories or Textual Traditions? Assembling the past of South Indian dance into the present history of dance

PAPER:
Valerie Powell (Sam Houston State University):
Fail Faster: Exploring Risk Taking in the Creative Process

Saturday Oct. 3, 2015, Firehouse Theater, LHUCA Campus
2:00 – 3:30
APR (PANEL C)
Panel: Creativity and Education in Arts Practice Research: A Case Study--Chair: Helen Phelan (University of Limerick)

PANEL ABSTRACT: In Navigating the Unknown (2006), Christopher Bannerman reminds us that artistry combines both learned “tuition” and instinctive “intuition”. Arts practice research has developed at the crossroads between artistic process and its self-reflexive analysis. This panel presents a case study of the Arts Practice PhD at the Irish World Academy of Music and Dance, University of Limerick. It outlines the genesis of the programme and draws on recent publications to situate it within the wider debate around what constitutes arts practice research. It will include three examples of current research by students on the programme.
PANELIST 1:
Mattu Noone (University of Limerick):
Reclaiming the Mongrel: Irish Traditional and North Indian Classical musical connections- a practice-based exploration of hybridization

PANELIST 2:
Kevin O’Carroll (University of Limerick):
Phrased Notation: Exploring a new solution to an old problem - A performance based study creating a modified music notation system for use with Renaissance polyphony

PANELIST 3:
Shane Holohan (University of Limerick):
Education and Creativity in Aerial Dance Performance and Training: An Arts Practice Investigation

Saturday Oct. 3, 2015, Firehouse Theater, LHUCA Campus
3:30 – 5:00
APR Paper Session:
Performance and Pedagogy

PAPER:
Erin Grogan (Texas Tech):
Digital Anxiety – Multimedia Scenography in “Fire Island”

PAPER:
Laura Elizabeth Sapelly (Penn State):
The Sewing Circle as Metaphor and Methodology for Art Pedagogy and Scholarship

PAPER:
Arthur J. Sabatini (Arizona State University):
Interdisciplinary Arts, Theory, and Pedagogy from the Avant-Garde and Experimental Art Traditions

***
Saturday Oct. 3, 2015, Firehouse Theater, LHUCA Campus
8:00 – 10:30
As performance on Saturday night: Shaking, Touching, Queering
Jess Humphrey (San Diego State University)
Leslie Seiters (San Diego State University)
Eric Geiger (University of California, San Diego)

PANEL ABSTRACT: We three dance artists/practitioners, while reflecting on and “opening out” our work together over time, arrived at three emergent acts/actions/activities that have reappeared, developed, and, over time, influenced our praxis. They are shaking, touching, and queering. They are methods, values, descriptors, and inroads to each other. This solo was created by “folding [shaking, touching, and queering] back into” the dancemaking process using questions inspired by Robin Nelson’s Practice-as-Research (PaR) model: 1. What is it? How do you do it? 2. What does it do? To you? To the world? 3. How might it change you? How might it change the world?