Education and Community Programs

Walker Art Center

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by Morgan Wylie at 5:11 pm 2005-12-27
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Got a ticket to see the hugely popular 2005 British Advertising Awards, and I was given one warning from a veteran attendee: Watch out, the old ladies mean business and they will push you around.

I chose a seat near the back.

There was a lot of clever work on display, but some of my favorite ads came from the public service ads sector, including topics like illegal minicabs, anti-tobacco, teen road safety, and child abuse. I was really impressed with these striking messages. Definitely worth checking out.

 
 
by Morgan Wylie at 1:07 pm 2005-12-22
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The unstoppable Program Services department of the Walker Art Center proudly presents: Sick Bay 2005.

(It may seem like all we do here is party, but let me assure you: our fun and work at the Walker Art Center requires a precise balance in order to be most efficient.)


Herr Doktor is grieved to see such desperate patients filing in.

Pick your poison.
First stop: the Pharmacy so patients can get dosed properly.


Music calms the crazier among us.


ECPers left to right: Sarah (Public Programs), Susan (School Programs), Megan (Community Programs), and Nick (Public Programs)


Cured! Giselle (PR/Marketing) and Destiny (a Film/Video kid)

 
 
by Morgan Wylie at 5:04 pm 2005-12-20
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Education & Community Programs kicked up their heels and did the holidays right over at Bryant Lake Bowl with beer and bowling. Not to mention, some of the best brownies ever baked - a BLB specialty. A good mix of the skilled and the pathetic bowlers: there were timid approaches, a couple lofted balls, some cursing, a few serious and dedicated souls that would not be distracted by their goofier co-workers, and an amazing backwards-between-the-legs shot that ended in a strike. No joke.

Susan and Reggie raise a glass.
Susan and Reggie start right in with the drinks!

Witt has his eye on the ball.
Witt readies his “#1!” fingers as the ball heads down the lane.

Faster than a speeding bullet.
Superhuman, top bowler of the night, Lara, bowls so fast the camera can’t catch it.

Let it never be said that ECP can’t properly down a beer or embarrass themselves at a bowling alley.

 
 
by Reggie Prim at 4:18 pm 2005-12-16
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(Here’s a nice tidbit from Today’s ArtsJournal newsletter courtesy of the BBC)

“A computer has been used to decipher the enigmatic smile of Leonardo da Vinci’s Mona Lisa, concluding that she was mainly happy.
The painting was analysed by a University of Amsterdam computer using “emotion recognition” software.

It concluded that the subject was 83% happy, 9% disgusted, 6% fearful and 2% angry, New Scientist magazine was told. ”

 
 
by Morgan Wylie at 12:54 pm 2005-12-14
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I brought a lot of geek love to the Regis Dialogue last night with Ang Lee and James Schamus. Geek. Love.

Ang was so cute! So funny! So inspiring! James seemed to be his perfect professional complement.

Ang Lee on the Set of Brokeback Mountain
Photo: Kimberley French, 2005, Focus Features

Lee told of his initial attempts to be an actor, studying at a US school where he had trouble with the language. As a result, his only really significant role was as a mime. A mime! (This is totally a shout out to my boss who has a strange programmatic phobia with mimes.)

Another co-worker asked a great question about the prominent role that food often plays in his films, and he responded that early on he was fueled by the experience of cooking for his children while his wife was away at work. He also talked about the portrayal of human desires on film, such as eating, sex, etc. “[In today’s films] we see the sex, but not enough food.” Awesome!

Schamus provided a great counter to Lee’s softspoken explanations - tossing in anecdotes and one-liners - and the audience was totally in to it. I can just imagine Lee on the set of Sense & Sensibility, shying away from those powerhouses of British acting. Schamus also talked about the move from producing to writing, and how he likes to underwrite scripts for Lee so there is room to breathe, create, and fill in the gaps. Lee readily agreed, stating that most of the scripts sent to him are “built like battleships.”

Overall a fantastic evening with plenty of insight into Chinese and American filmmaking. I am SO over Brad and Angelina. Ang and James are Hollywood’s cutest couple!

 
 
by Morgan Wylie at 11:16 am 2005-12-12
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I was at the Walker yesterday for a matinee performance of Between the Fire and Ice (Mjollnir II), presented by Joe Chvala (pronounced like koala!) and the Flying Foot Forum with special guest Ruth MacKenzie. Try to imagine a forward slash through the “O” in Mjollnir.

The work pulls from Nordic and Teutonic myth to explore the way our modern world collides with those ancient mythologies. I don’t think that I actually got most of it. I could recognize a few key players, like the gods Odin and Loki. I liked the idea of life beginning between the two extremes of the world: the world of ice, Niflheim, and the world of fire, Muspellheim. I think I would need some Cliff Notes to get any deeper with this.

I loved the dance/fight choreography between the two rival queens, Kriemhild and Brunhild, in the world of ice. It was so gorgeous, and Ruth MacKenzie provided a stunning vocal background. Ruth was accompanied by two other vocalists, and the three of them looked like the Muses, Furies, or the Fates - depending on the scene.

Muspellheim was full of sharp choreography and percussive work. The battle of Ragnarok was really menacing. My first thought was that it would be the perfect set for a Nine Inch Nails show circa Pretty Hate Machine and Broken.

Happiness in Slavery.

Disclaimer I should have put at the beginning of the post: I know very little about performing arts, and the Performing Arts department will probably be embarrassed by me and this post. But only if they find it.

 
 
by Reggie Prim at 2:15 pm 2005-12-08
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Rachel McIntire and Amanda Leigh Lichtenstein: What good was any of this gorgeous theory without recognizing the way it interplays with life beyond academic borders?
Rachel McIntire and Amanda Leigh Lichtenstein: “What good was any of this gorgeous theory without recognizing the way it interplays with life beyond academic borders? ”

From the CAN Network:
Amanda Leigh Lichtenstein, a community writer and educator from Chicago, and Rachel McIntire, a muralist and multimedia artist from California, spent a year immersing themselves in theories of Arts in Education at Harvard’s Graduate School of Education. At the same time, they embarked on a collaboration with Bread Loaf writer Mary Guerrero and her mostly Latino after-school writing group at Oliver Elementary School in Lawrence, Mass to use body-mapping and poetry to explore cultural crossroads.

During the Mapping Within workshop, young artists compose an interpretive dialogue about identity through an exploration of text, performance, world maps, audio and photography.

“The idea of a map emerged as the ultimate metaphor for the journey of understanding self as influenced by fluid geographical, spiritual, political, academic, social and emotional landscapes. We decided to use maps as a central part of the art making because it was both visually and metaphorically powerful. By sharing notions of both interior and exterior maps, we hoped to express identity as organic as opposed to fixed. We also hoped that…artists would begin to notice the ways in which they construct and narrate their own stories and that identity is often in constant conversation with place and space.”

Outline of McIntire and Lichtenstein’s “Mapping Within” process:

1. Begin with Questions like: Who am I? Where do I come from? and Where am I going?
2. Connect with bodies, breath and memory through theater exercise and warm-up.
3. Explore the "shapes" of different emotions and transform those shapes in slow motion
4. Discuss memory, movement, migration and change, and identify significant personal memories.
5. “Locate” these memories in your body.
6. Participants make full-body cut outs of their bodies using butcher paper and maps that they later manipulate through collage and text.
7. Explore movement and change through creative writing.
8. Break into pairs and embellish the “body maps”. for example: visually locate text within body cut-outs.
9. While students work in pairs with their "body maps," record students reading their favorite poetic lines from the writing exercise.
10. Students take digital snapshots of one another as "portraits of the present tense."
11. Create an “exhibition” of the body maps, poetry, photos and recordings

For here for the full story

 
 
by Witt at 12:58 pm 2005-12-06
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Dia Beacon

For the last six days a friend and I have been touring the east coast visiting museums. By far the most impressive day consisted of a trip to upstate New York's Dia Beacon and Northeast Massachusetts' Mass MOCA. Both of these institutions are set in monuments to the industrial age, industrial factories. Irony can be found in the fact that at one time an assembly line dedicated to the manufacturing of cardboard boxes now houses drawing grids by Sol LeWitt and recessed 20 feet deep steel cubes by Michael Heiser.

These unusual settings for such monumental works pose interesting questions. What impact do these newly formed institutions have on rural communities? Is the art being shown at these institutions relevant to the people of Beacon and North Adams? And who benefits from them - day-trippers from New York City and Boston or the dairy farmer on the outskirts of North Adams?

 
 
by Morgan Wylie at 1:02 pm 2005-12-02
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The Cedar Rapids Museum of Art is hosting a midnight send-off tonight for American Gothic, currently on display as part of the CRMA’s major exhibition, Grant Wood at 5 Turner Alley. I saw this show when it opened in September, and it is a knock-out collection of paintings, drawings, prints, and decorative artworks completed by the Regionalist master during his years spent at the studio he dubbed “5 Turner Alley.”

Spring in the Country, 1941
Grant Wood (1891-1942). Spring in the Country, 1941. Oil on masonite. Collection of the Cedar Rapids Museum of Art.

This is an idea I love - midnight art parties!! Give the people a late-night alternative to the bar scene. Watching your friends heave around drunkenly in a bar is so tacky, anyway. Heaving around at a renowned arts institution? SO much classier, and you look so much smarter and more cultured!

Take two parts Grant Wood exhibition, blend with one part Cedar Rapids art society - shake it up! - and garnish with a mixed drink. I’m for that.

 
 
by Roger Nieboer at 10:17 am 2005-12-02
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After some initial confusion about whether or not author (and celebrity) Sarah Vowell, herself, would be in attendance at last night's gathering of The Artist's Bookshelf (she would NOT), we settled into an interesting conversation about her most recent book, ASSASSINATION VACATION, and its curious relationship to the Walker's current Warhol exhibit, all of which led to intriguing speculation about the very nature of celebrity, itself, and how we, as Americans, often seem to be simultaneously drawn and repulsed by its powers.

We all found the book to be an intriguing, and irreverently humorous journey into the heart of America's cultural fascination with violence (specifically assassinations), and our sometimes bizarre tendency to iconize and memorialize these events through plaques, historical markers, and pilgrimages.

We generally agreed that Ms. Vowell (along with McSweeny-esque writers Dave Eggers and David Sedaris) speaks for a new literary generation, (dare we demography it as Generation Y?) whose caustic and sarcastic surface more often than not belies an underlyingly soft and tender heart of emotional gold.

We wholeheartedly recommend this book to anyone with as much as a passing interest in assassinations, the Civil War, vacations, Sleater-Kinney, 19th Century sex cults, or the t-shirts worn by Timothy McVeigh.

 

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