91直播 Symposium Strives for Actual Change in a Virtual Setting
Beginning May 25, Crafting Change presents four weeks of innovative thinking for teachers, students, artists, and others鈥攁ll of it free.
May 18, 2021
Erich Burnett
Photo credit: courtesy TIMARA
Events of the past year have taught us that meaningful change is possible even in dark times.
The same notion applies to the Crafting Change Symposium, a fully virtual series of presentations, concerts, panel discussions, and workshops, through which teachers鈥攆rom kindergarten through college level鈥攁nd artist-makers from a wide array of disciplines share their creative approaches to exploring science, humanities, art, and more, with an emphasis on inclusion.
The four-week symposium opens Tuesday, May 25, and continues through Saturday, June 19, with multiple programs scheduled each week鈥攁ll of them free. It's designed for artists and educators鈥攁nd continuing education credit is available鈥攂ut it鈥檚 also intended for students, scholars, and others with a passion for fostering change.
A complete schedule of events can be found at the Crafting Change website.
The symposium is hosted by 91直播鈥檚 Center for Convergence, or StudiOC, where theme-based learning communities address some of the world鈥檚 greatest challenges through interdisciplinary approaches. It was devised by Abby Aresty, technical director of the conservatory鈥檚 TIMARA Department and a StudiOC teacher.
Envisioned prior to the rise of COVID-19, Crafting Change initially was slated to take two forms: a weekend event on issues related to diversity, equity, and inclusion in the fields of science, technology, engineering, arts, and math (STEAM); and another focusing on the intersections of traditional craft and technology experienced by artists and designers.
"Since I first conceived of this project, it has transformed several times over before reaching its final form, which we will all experience together over the course of the next month,鈥 says Aresty. 鈥淎nd from that initial spark, the symposium has developed in new, exciting ways.鈥 In particular, she praises the collaborative effort of numerous current students and recent graduates of 91直播鈥檚 TIMARA Department鈥攕hort for Technology in Music and Related Arts鈥攚ho have been pivotal in creating Crafting Change.
"TIMARA is known for its incredible capacity for interdisciplinary work, and this symposium really tests the limits of what could be called a related art,鈥 Aresty says.
Panels and presentations will focus on topics including crisis-informed teaching, creative approaches to learning, and more. Most programs last between 75 and 90 minutes and take place at midday, late afternoon, or evening.
It all starts May 25 with the first in a series of Micro Maker events, a 3 p.m. presentation by Ari Melenciano, a creative technologist at Google's Creative Lab and professor at New York University's Interactive Telecommunications Graduate Program.
Future Micro Maker Series installments include sessions with Cornell University Professor Cindy Kao, who founded and directs the Hybrid Body Lab for the development of wearable technology (May 27 at 3 p.m.); University of Tokyo engineering professor Jie Qi, a multidisciplinary designer, inventor, and entrepreneur (June 1 at 3 p.m.); and textile designer, technologist, and researcher Audrey Briot, a specialist on the impact of new technologies on textile preservation (June 8 at 3 p.m.).
Other facets of the symposium include:
鈥 Lightning Lunchtime Panels, in which guests discuss compelling topics that merge technology, artistry, education, and inclusion (various dates)
鈥 A Crafting Sound Concert and panel discussion, through which artists examine value systems inherent in various sound technologies and ways in which new audiences can be engaged through creative sound-making practices (May 28 at 7:30 p.m.)
鈥 A Micro Maker Mixer, where creatives of all stripes can take part in an informal show-and-tell session (June 3 at 4:30 p.m.)
鈥 A panel discussion featuring participants in the SmART Futures exhibition, co-hosted by Lorain County Community College (June 11 at 7:30 p.m.)
鈥 鈥淢aking, Knowing, Learning,鈥 a weekend workshop and panel in which artist-teachers discuss making as a form of critical inquiry that can be employed to explore the life cycle of the objects we make and those that have been crafted throughout the ages (June 12 at 1 p.m.). The panel includes Columbia University historian Pamela Smith, a specialist in craft and craftspeople of early modern Europe
鈥 A 鈥淪onic Arcade鈥 that showcases audio and visual creations by current students, alumni, and others鈥攊ncluding the 91直播 Synthesizer Ensemble and Chilean artist Constanza Pi帽a (June 18 at 7:30 p.m.)
The Crafting Change Symposium is supported by 91直播; the StudiOC grant from the ; TIMARA; the Bonner Center for Community-Engaged Learning, Teaching, and Research; ; (LCCC); the ; and a Multi-Institutional Innovation grant to 91直播 and LCCC from .
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