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Goodbye Blue Sky

With loose ends tied and bearings gathered, please enjoy this last post to the Identities in Action blog!

The 2011 Blue Sky Project officially ended last weekend with the Final Exhibition.
We hope everyone was able to attend one or some of our performances, and would like to thank those who did. If you missed us, don't worry - we've uploaded photos, and hope to potentially share video documentation.

It's been an amazing summer, and we are incredibly proud of what everyone has accomplished! The BlahBlahs go their separate ways, but our experience at Blue Sky leaves no one empty-handed. Everyone achieved some level of personal growth through the course of the Project - by developing movement, exploring our roles in social media, examining our forms of outer expression, and being more observant of our interactions. We laughed, learned, made new friends and met a lot of talent.



We wish everyone the best and thank you for your hard work!


read the words of our Youth Participants


see photos from the Final Exhibition / Performance at our Flickr.com gallery



watch videos of some of our group's collaborations / projects
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Final Performance / Exhibition!

 
it's time...

This week, we invite everyone to join us and view our performances at the summer 2011 Blue Sky Project Final Exhibition

The culmination of everyone's work these past 8 weeks, this Exhibition will feature the art of each Blue Sky group, made collaboratively by their respective Resident Artist, Student Artist, and of course - Youth Participants.

We're excited to show the Dayton community what its creative youth are capable of! Especially when working side-by-side professional artists of different mediums, and in an egalitarian setting where people of different ages and expertise can develop a project together.


INFORMATION


Wednesday – Saturday
August 3 – 6

8 N. Main Street, Dayton, OH
Across from Courthouse Square, next to PNC Bank


  Wednesday: PREVIEW PARTY, 6:00 – 9:00 PM
($20 admission - Appetizers & Cash Bar) TICKETS

  Thursday: OPENING NIGHT, 5:00 – 9:00 PM

  Friday: FIRST FRIDAY ART HOP, 5:00 – 10:00 PM

  Saturday: FAMILY & FRIENDS CELEBRATION, 6:00 – 9:00 PM 
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Group of the Week, Open Studios & more!

THANK YOU to everyone who came out this week to see our Group of the Week presentation on Thursday and the Blue Sky Open Studio on Saturday!

We hope you enjoyed the preview of what's to come at our Final Performance/Exhibition, in addition to the side-material and general overview of how the project's been coming along and what we BlahBlahs do day-in & day-out.

For those who couldn't make it, no worries.
The Final Performance/Exhibition is just 2 weeks away! Crazy.

We've been diligently planning and practicing, working on our sound and video, having fun, staying loose, and preparing the Exhibition space (an undertaking everyone at Blue Sky has been cooperating wonderfully to complete - Resident Artists, Student Artists, and Youth Participants alike).

If you haven't done so yet, check out our Flickr.com gallery to see new photos.
Including new vignettes:


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PacSun @ Dayton Mall

Yesterday (June 29th), we field-tested a variation of our Gesture Study.
The exercise involves observing and mimicking body language, considering how we intentionally and involuntarily behave and present ourselves, and what different factors may influence these movements.

With a big THANK YOU to the Dayton Mall and Sarah from PacSun, the Youth Participants (plus Carolyn Ruck, Student Artist a.k.a Resident Artist's Assistant to Blue Sky Project Resident Artist Marin Abell), were able to pose as live mannequins in PacSun's storefront window display. Fully geared in merchandise, our group surprised and confused Mall-goers - posing, dancing, mimicking their actions and observing their reactions.


video coming soon
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National Social Media Day

This being very relevant to the subject matter of our group's project, we thought you should know: Today (June 30th) is National Social Media Day!

Created by Mashable.com (see event page), it is a day recognizing the ways in which Social Media has changed our lives. How do you use or view Social Media? How do you interact with or communicate through it? Do you prefer some sites or mediums more than others?


Look for our Social Media Survey coming soon!
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Bucket Brigade

Shared by Blue Sky Project Resident Artist Kaz McCue, documentation of a Bucket Brigade collaboration between his group and ours.

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Snapshot Vignette

Our "snapshot vignette" exercise relates to these definitions:

  1. A short impressionistic scene that focuses on one moment or gives a trenchant impression about a character, an idea, or a setting and sometimes an object.
    see Vignette (literature)
  2. Collect information by presenting hypothetical situations and asking participants a set of questions to reveal their perceptions and values.
    see Vignette (psychology) 

The objective is to tell a story through a limited number of photographs (around 3-4 shots), capturing expressive body language and use of space, framing, environment, props, etc. 



a MUCH more elaborate example
 
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Viewpoints

Viewpoints is an improvisational practice that supports another vocabulary for movement on the stage, beginning with pedestrian movement and growing from there. It is VERY helpful in creating a sense of "ensemble" or group-team-togetherness.

The 9 Viewpoints are:

Space
  • Architecture (movements/pathways based on the space/environment and any objects or elements in it)
  • Spatial Relationship (distance from someone in the ensemble)
  • Topography (landscape, floor pattern, design, etc)
Shape
  • Shape (lines, curves, angles, etc formed by the contour of the body)
  • Gesture (behavioral and expressive)
Time
  • Tempo (fast or slow)
  • Duration (how long a movement or action lasts before it ends or changes)
  • Kinesthetic Response (impulse reaction to something or someone outside the body)
  • Repetition (internal - repeating one's own movements , external - repeating the movements of another
 


Viewpoints on Wikipedia

Viewpoints Facebook Page 

The Viewpoints Book: A Practical Guide to Viewpoints and Composition


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Thought of You


This was shared by Student Artist Tami Liss.

An animated short by Ryan Woodward that includes figurative works, 2d animation, EFX animation, and modern dance.
See the original and more at conteanimated.com
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UPDayton

www.updayton.com Young Creatives Initiative
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Liz Lerman's Critical Response Process



  • Do you want to have better conversations about art?
  • Are you in a position to critique someone else’s work?
  • Are you seeking a way to get useful feedback on your own work?
  • Have you felt dissatisfied or alienated by your past experiences with critique?
  • Are you an artist, administrator, teacher, parent, partner, or person-in-general seeking better ways to have a dialogue?

Liz Lerman’s Critical Response Process is a widely-recognized method that nurtures the development of artistic works-in-progress through a four-step, facilitated dialogue between artists, peers, and audiences.

About the Critical Response Process
Developed almost 15 years ago, the Process has been embraced by artmakers, educators, and administrators at theater companies, dance departments, orchestras, museums and more. The Process has deepened dialogue between artists and audiences; it has enhanced learning between teachers and students. By extension it has proven valuable for all kinds of creative endeavors, work situations, and collaborative relationships, from kindergartens to corporations.
Liz Lerman Dance Exchange is pleased to offer a variety of formats for learning, facilitation, and consultation in the Critical Response Process.

“In wide use for over 15 years, the Critical Response Process was developed by Liz Lerman, choreographer and founder of Liz Lerman Dance Exchange. Long a leader in the arts field, Liz is the recipient of numerous honors, including a 2002  Macarthur “Genius Grant” Fellowship. The Process is rooted in Liz’s in-the-trenches experience as an artist, teacher, leader, collaborator, and colleague. About its origins, Liz writes:
“I was well-established as an artist before I finally acknowledged how uncomfortable I was about most aspects of criticism. Feedback sessions often seemed brutal and not very helpful. Responding in a ‘mature’ way to criticism meant quietly taking it, since to respond at all was somehow deemed either defensive or a violation of an unspoken boundary. In backstage conversations after performances, I had trouble getting what I needed and trouble knowing what other artists wanted.
“It was clear that as a field, we needed to expose the previously unspoken values in criticism. We needed to find a way to have a dialogue about work that could strengthen the artist’s own ability to solve the problems inherent in creative endeavors.
“I began evolving the Critical Response Process based on a few discoveries: The more I made public my own questions about my work, the more willing I was to hear other people’s reactions to it. If I could just talk – and listen to myself – in a mutually-invested conversation, I would hear new information and unexpected ways out of artistic dilemmas. And when giving feedback, by gently pursuing the right questions with students and colleagues, I found could raise all of my concerns and, amazingly, encounter no defensive resistance.”


A Roadmap for Meaningful Dialogue
Building on these discoveries, Liz Lerman formulated a four-step method for facilitated group feedback which - unlike some models of critique - affords the artist an active role in the dialogue.
The process engages participants in 3 roles:
  1. The artist offers a work-in-progress for review and feels prepared to question that work in a dialogue with other people.
  2. The responders, committed to the artist’s intent to make excellent work, offer reactions to the work in a dialogue with the artist. 
  3. The facilitator initiates each step, keeps the process on track, and works to help the artist and responders use the Process to frame useful questions and responses.
The Critical Response Process takes place after a presentation of artistic work. Work can be short or long, large or small, and at any stage in its development. The facilitator then leads the artist and responders through 4 steps:
  1. Statements of Meaning: Responders state what was meaningful, evocative, interesting, exciting, striking in the work they have just witnessed.
  2. Artist as Questioner: The artist asks questions about the work. After each question, the responders answer. Responders may express opinions if they are in direct response to the question asked and do not contain suggestions for changes.
  3. Neutral Questions: Responders ask neutral questions about the work. The artist responds. Questions are neutral when they do not have an opinion couched in them. For example, if you are discussing the lighting of a scene, “Why was it so dark?” is not a neutral question. “What ideas guided your choices about lighting?” is.
  4. Opinion Time: Responders state opinions, subject to permission from the artist. The usual form is “I have an opinion about ______, would you like to hear it?” The artist has the option to decline opinions for any reason.

    Learning Formats
    The Critical Response Process is both simple in its outlines and richly nuanced in its applications and outcomes. To help users get the most out of this methodology, Liz Lerman Dance Exchange offers a range of resources reflecting years of best practice as the source institution of Critical Response.