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DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20240417T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20240417T213000
DTSTAMP:20240410T121547Z
CREATED:20240319T134947Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240410T121547Z
UID:14368-1713382200-1713389400@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:Live @ImprovLab: Susanna Hood Trio and Sarah Belle Reid
DESCRIPTION:Please join us on Wednesday\, April 17 at 7:30 PM (ET) for the series premier of Live @ImprovLab\, featuring the Susanna Hood Trio and Sarah Belle Reid in an inspiring double bill. This performance will take place in person at ImprovLab\, MCKN 108 at the University of Guelph.  \nTickets are $15 or PWYC and available online through IICSI’s Eventbrite page. While tickets will be made available at the door\, attendees are encouraged to reserve tickets ahead of time. \nThe double bill will be preceded by a panel discussion moderated by Marie Zimmerman in which the artists will contextualize the work they will be presenting\, and share insights about the role that improvisation plays in what they do. \nMORE ABOUT THE EVENT:\nIICSI’s new Live @ImprovLab concert and performance series serves to showcase touring artists working in a variety of improvisatory idioms. Curated by IICSI Director Dr. Ajay Heble (Founder and former Artistic Director of the Guelph Jazz Festival and 2023 Killam Prize winner)\, the new series\, says Heble\, “aims to celebrate live improvised performances and to spotlight our beautiful new venue.”  \nTiohtià:ke/Mooniyang/Montreal-based bandleader and vocalist-dancer\, Susanna Hood\, along with the superb Tkaronto/Toronto-based musicians\, Tania Gill (piano) and Kayla Milmine (soprano saxophone) bring poet Judith Malina and composer Steve Lacy’s 1995 “Packet” suite to life through sound and movement. These audacious new arrangements blur the lines between what is heard and what is seen. Heart-felt\, yet unsentimental\, these eight songs hold no punches as they bring voice to a woman’s later life\, grappling with imperfection\, sexism\, paradox\, grit\, beauty\, regret\, invisibility\, death\, and love. \nIn Sarah Belle Reid’s improvisations and compositions\, musical notation is often experimental and graphical—an invitation to explore a new sonic universe. This spirit for exploration has led her to collaborate with musicians and artists of all genres\, including experimental electronic musician David Rosenboom\, thereminist Carolina Eyck\, and baroque-pop artist Julia Holter. Reid recorded trumpet and electronics on Holter’s 2019 record Aviary\, and recently wrapped up an extensive tour throughout North America\, Europe\, and Australia as a member of her band. Reid’s own compositions have been premiered and performed by a number of renowned musicians\, most recently pianist Vicki Ray and trumpeter Nate Wooley. In 2017 her composition “Flux” for amplified percussion quartet won the Grammy-nominated Los Angeles Percussion Quartet’s Next Wave Composer Initiative. \nMORE ABOUT THE PERFORMERS:\nSusanna Hood has devoted her career to synthesizing voice and movement\, creating intimate\, sensual and dynamic performances both in dance-theatre and improvised music contexts. Founder of her interdisciplinary performance company hum dansoundart (2000-2013) her work has been marked by significant collaborations with musical artists Nilan Perera (She’s Gone Away\, Shudder)\, John Oswald (Spinvolver)\, and Scott Thomson (The Rent – Musique de Steve Lacy\, The Muted Note – songs and dances setting the poetry of P.K. Page).  \nRecent creations (Music Is\, 2016\, and Impossibly Happy\, 2019) have been driven by her own musical compositions arranging voices\, instruments and movement. Other collaborations of note include Tortues Vapeur\, a duo with Montreal turntablist\, Martin Tétreault\, mixing turntables\, electronics\, synthesizers\, vocals and objects. (DAME’s Mikroclimat label\, 2019); a duo with Belgian bassist\, Peter Jacquemyn; and performances with the French trio Rrève Sélavy (Frédéric BBriet\, double bass; Nicolas Pointard\, drums; and Christophe Rocher\, clarinettes). Unpacked\, the first project with her trio with Toronto/Tkaronto musicians Tania Gill (piano) and Kayla Milmine (soprano saxophone)\, is a new arrangement and interpretation of the Packet suite by late American poet\, Judith Malina and late American jazz composer\, Steve Lacy. unPacked will be released as a recording in early 2024 on Quebec’s DAME label. Awards include the 1998 K.M. Hunter Emerging Artists Award in Dance\, 2006 Dora Mavor Moore Award for Outstanding Performance in Dance\, and the 2008 Canada Council Victor Martin Lynch-Staunton Award for Outstanding Achievement in the field of Dance. For more information\, please follow this link to Susanna’s website. \nKayla Milmine loves the new and under-explored sonic possibilities that only the soprano saxophone can offer. Her unique approach has the edginess and brashness of Anthony Braxton and Roscoe Mitchell yet also a warmth and thoughtfulness reminiscent of Steve Lacy. In 2019\, Milmine released a solo album called ‘Straight Horn Magick; a mixture of field recordings and solo soprano saxophone improvisations. She plays regularly in trio form with pianist Bill Gilliam and percussionist Ambrose Pottie\, and in duo form with guitarist/composer Brian Abbott in their band FASTER. In February 2019\, she was invited to record with celebrated bassist\, William Parker in a chamber-improv sextet in NY\, where she often travels to study with mentor/collaborator\, Sam Newsome. She is presently composing for her new project\, the ‘Kayla Milmine Quartet’ with aforementioned Sam Newsome\, and drummers Mark Ferber and Rachel Housle. She is co-founder of the Women From Space Festival in Toronto. \nToronto-based pianist and composer Tania Gill has spent over twenty years cultivating a singular but polymorphous musical approach. She has developed a distinctive improvisational language in jazz and improvised music\, playing in ensembles such as the Brodie West Quintet\, Chris Banks Trio\, The Titillators\, See Through Trio and Rebecca Hennessy’s Makeshift Island. Her own group\, the Tania Gill Quartet\, comprises leading Canadian musicians Lina Allemano (trumpet)\, Rob Clutton (bass)\, and Nico Dann (drums). Their acclaimed disc Bolger Station (2010\, Barnyard Records)\, was nominated for best debut album in the Village Voice jazz critics’ poll and was included among the Globe and Mail’s top ten albums of the year. The follow-up\, Disappearing Curiosities\, launched in 2022 and was included on best-of-2022 lists in the Wire. Gill’s unconventional versatility keeps her engaged in an eclectic array of styles. She was a member of Deep Dark United and the Flying Bulgar Klezmer Band\, and is a regular collaborator to vocalist Fides Krucker\, and singer-songwriter Kyp Harness. She has also shared the stage with Steve Reich\, Man Forever\, Gord Downie\, Mary Margaret O’Hara\, the Weather Station\, Margaret Atwood\, and Charles Spearin’s Happiness Project\, and she has performed with dancers including Peggy Baker\, Andrea Nann\, Heidi Strauss and Laurence Lemieux. Tania is a supportive and dedicated educator and currently teaches at Humber College and the University of Toronto. Fore more information\, please follow this link to Tania’s website. \nSarah Belle Reid is a performer-composer who plays trumpet\, modular synthesizer\, and an ever-growing collection of handcrafted electronic instruments. Her unique musical voice explores the intersections between contemporary classical music\, experimental and interactive electronics\, visual arts\, noise music\, and improvisation. Often praised for her ability to transport audience members through vivid sonic adventures\, Reid’s sonic palette has been described as ranging from “graceful” and “danceable” all the way to “silk-falling-through-space\,” and “pit-full-of-centipedes” (San Francisco Classical Voice). \nReid holds a Doctorate of Musical Arts from California Institute of the Arts\, with a research focus on the development of new electronic instruments and musical notation systems as interfaces for exploring temporal perception and co-creation. Her debut album for trumpet and interactive electronics\, “Underneath and Sonder\,” was released on pfMENTUM in October\, 2019. In March 2024 she released a tape-music inspired electroacoustic record titled “MASS”\, featuring trumpet\, voice\, electronics\, and amplified objects\, on Aurora Central Records. \nIn addition to her performance and compositional work\, Reid runs an online music education company dedicated to teaching sound synthesis and electroacoustic composition to professional and hobbyist musicians. She has mentored thousands of musicians from around the world in her online programs\, and is a frequent guest lecturer at notable institutions in the US and Canada including Stanford University\, University of Victoria\, California Institute of the Arts\, New York University (NYU)\, among others. For more information\, please follow this link to Sarah’s website.
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/live-improvlab-susanna-hood-trio-and-sarah-belle-reid/
LOCATION:ImprovLab\, MacKinnon Room 108\, 87 Trent Lane\, University of Guelph\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1G 1Y4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:IICSI events,Live @ImprovLab
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/IICSI_LiveSeries_17April24—social.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20240412T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20240412T153000
DTSTAMP:20240411T180619Z
CREATED:20240402T171806Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240411T180619Z
UID:14406-1712912400-1712935800@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:IICSI Research Studio Session\, Featuring Dr. Rashida K. Braggs' "Amber in the City of Light"
DESCRIPTION:Please join us on Friday\, April 12 at 9:00 AM (ET) for IICSI’s “Research Studio Session\, Featuring a Keynote Presentation by Dr. Rashida K. Braggs: Amber in the City of Light”  \nThe morning will begin with Dr. Braggs’ keynote\, followed by presentations of student work through the rest of the day. \nThis event will take place in person at ImprovLab\, MCKN 108 at the University of Guelph. The keynote presentation by Dr. Braggs will be streamed online via Zoom\, the student portion will be in person only.\n \nTo attend the Keynote Portion of our day of research\, please RSVP via our Google Forms. The studio session and keynote presentation are free and open to all!  \nMore About the Research Studio Session:\nThe idea is to encourage grad students in the IMPR program and students/researchers working as research assistants with IICSI to present short (3-5 minute) descriptions of their improvisation-related research or work at an end-of-semester gathering of other students\, as well as IICSI team members\, staff\, and invited guests. \nInspired\, in part\, by the “Three-Minute Thesis” competition for grad students\, we hope that participants will respond to the challenge to present their work and its wider impact and implications in plain language in five minutes or less.\n \nKicking off the Research Studio Session will be a keynote presentation by Dr. Rashida K. Braggs (Africana Studies\, Williams College\, USA)\, entitled “Amber in the City of Light” which will begin around 9:00 AM (ET). Dr. Braggs’ presentation will be streamed online via Zoom. \nMore About The Keynote Presentation:\nDr. Rashida K. Braggs will screen and discuss Amber in the City of Light\, a solo multimedia performance that shares and re-envisions the experiences of Black African diasporic women jazz artists who have migrated to Paris\, France. Culling original interviews\, field notes and archival research\, Dr. Rashida K. Braggs enacts multiple narratives through an embodied performance that merges original song\, dance\, poetry and theatre. \nMore About The Presenter:\n\nDr. Rashida K. Braggs is a scholar-performer who acts\, dances\, sings\, composes music and performs spoken word. Jacob’s Pillow\, Williams College Museum of Art\, the Tapir Art Gallery and the United Solo Theatre Festival have featured her performances. She is also a Professor of Africana Studies at Williams College (Williamstown\, Massachusetts)\, a Fulbright Global Scholar\, and a co-recipient of a National Endowment of the Humanities Fellowship. The author of Jazz Diasporas: Race\, Music and Migration in Post-World War II Paris\, Rashida has also published in such journals as the Nottingham French Studies\, the Journal of Popular Music Studies and The Black Scholar. \n\nSchedule of Events:\n9:00 KEYNOTE: Rashida K Braggs (Africana Studies\, Williams College\, USA)\, “Amber in the City of Light” \n10:00 – 10:30 BREAK \n10:30 Nick Fraser\, “Smooth Operations: Composing Music for (Free?) Improvisers” \n10:45 Rachelle Myrie\, “‘The Spirit of the Thing’: Music\, Improvisation\, and Human Flourishing in African\, Caribbean\, and Black Communities” \n11:00 Taylor Graham (School of English and Theatre Studies\, University of Guelph)\, “The Blyth Festival Theatre and the Imagined Community of Rural Canada” \n11:15 Matthew Endahl\, “Holding Space for/in Ensemble Creativity” \n11:30 Kathryn Cobbler\, “Growing Intimate Conversations: Examining the Performer-Composer Connection of Music Improvisation” \n11:45 Jordan Zalis (Ethnomusicology\, Memorial University of Newfoundland)\, “Clouds of Probability: Improvisation as Effectuality in Spectacular Sports Theatre” \n12:00 noon – 1:00 lunch \n1:00 Aimée Dawn Robinson\, “Full Circle” \n1:15 Michael Bergmann\, Improvnetics: Post-anthropocentric performance and improvisational modes for human-AI play\, or: What we talk about when we talk about Intersentient empathy” \n1:30 Mike Hansen\, “When Does Noise Become A Sound?: Redefining Through Participatory Sound Art Practices” \n1:45 Sofia Boz (Pedagogical\, Educational and Instructional Sciences\, University of Padua\, Italy)\, “Jazz’n School” \n2:00 Bob Wiseman\, “The Black Box” \n2:15 Brent Rowan\, “Critical Hardware\, Software\, and Infrastructure Considerations for Telematic Musicking” \n2:30 annais linares\, “Arts-Based Kin Making: Co-creative Multispecies Accompaniment” \n 
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/iicsi-research-studio-session-2-0-featuring-dr-rashida-k-braggs-amber-in-the-city-of-light/
LOCATION:ImprovLab\, MacKinnon Room 108\, 87 Trent Lane\, University of Guelph\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1G 1Y4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:IICSI events
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/IICSI-Research-Studio-Session.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20240406T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20240406T153000
DTSTAMP:20240319T145055Z
CREATED:20240319T145055Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240319T145055Z
UID:14380-1712412000-1712417400@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:Pop Up Concerts @ ImprovLab - VoI. III: AJAY\, EMMA\, KATHRYN and jashen
DESCRIPTION:Please join us Saturday\, April 6th\, at 2:00 PM for the third in a series of small-scale\, largely acoustic Pop Up Concerts @ ImprovLab. \nVol. III:\nAJAY\, EMMA\, KATHRYN\,  and jashen \n(piano\, electric guitar\, loop pedal viola\, and trumpet) \nSubsequent ‘Pop Up Concerts’ will take place the first Saturday of each month\, @ ImprovLab (108 MacKinnon Building\, University of Guelph Campus)—the best sounding room in Guelph! \nAs always\, entry is free and our Pop Up series will remain low-key.
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/pop-up-concerts-improvlab-voi-iii-ajay-emma-kathryn-and-jashen/
LOCATION:ImprovLab\, MacKinnon Room 108\, 87 Trent Lane\, University of Guelph\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1G 1Y4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:IICSI events,Pop Up Concerts @ ImprovLab
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/Pop-Up-Series-Vol-III-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20240405T103000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20240405T120000
DTSTAMP:20250415T185939Z
CREATED:20240403T120838Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250415T185939Z
UID:14412-1712313000-1712318400@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:Thinking Spaces: IICSI Postdoctoral Researchers\, "Same Place\, Same Time\, Different Stories: Creative Interpolations"
DESCRIPTION:Please join us on Friday\, April 5\, at 1p:30 AM (ET) for Thinking Spaces: “Same Place\, Same Time\, Different Stories: Creative Interpolations” with IICSI Postdoctoral Researchers\, Rebecca Barnstaple\, Shelby Bohn\, and jashen edwards.  \n\nThis presentation will take place in person at ImprovLab\, MCKN 108 at the University of Guelph\, as well as online via Zoom. As always\, our Thinking Spaces events are free! \n\nMore about this talk:\nIn this improvisational play session\, current IICSI postdoctoral students (Rebecca Barnstaple\, Shelby Bohn\, and jashen edwards) will demonstrate and discuss ways their research intersects to inform new ways of sensing\, knowing\, and being. Weaving a tapestry of dance\, science\, and music\, our presentation will elucidate how multisensory perceptions may be formed and (re)formed via multidisciplinary approaches to creative arts. \nMore about the speakers:\nRebecca Barnstaple (PhD Dance Studies; Graduate Program in Neuroscience 2020\, York University) is the Manager of Community Initiatives\, Research and Innovation at Centre Communautaire Chigamik Community Health Centre\, Midland\, Ontario\, and an IICSI Postdoctoral Fellow\, University of Guelph. A graduate of the National Centre for Dance Therapy at Les Grands Ballets Canadiens (2015)\, she provides education and training in dance therapy and associated research globally. She has been involved in the development and delivery of improvisational arts and health initiatives in the United States (IMPROVment\, Wake Forest University) and Canada (SingWell\, Toronto Metropolitan University; Piece of Mind\, McGill; Dance for Health\, Nova Scotia) and serves in a leadership capacity for professional organizations including the Dance Movement Therapy Association of Canada (Accreditation and Certification Committee)\, the American Dance Therapy Association (Research and Practice Committee)\, and the International Association of Dance Medicine Science (International Benchmarking Standards Task Force\, Dance for Health Committee). Rebecca directs the Research to Practice Lab for ZOE School of Dance Movement Therapy in Basel\, Switzerland. \nDr. Shelby Bohn\, a post-doctoral researcher at #UofG and lead artist behind College Royal’s 100th-anniversary mural\, aims to bridge the gap between two disciplines that don’t often communicate with each other.\n \njashen edwards‘ research centers around students’ sonic lifeworlds – sound currents streaming at home\, school\, on the streets and cyberspace –examining how sonic encounters may be a conduit and catalyst for creative critical consciousness. Drawing upon the fields of archaeoacoustics\, sound studies\, and sensuous scholarship\, his work seeks to draw connections between music education and social justice arts education through the phenomenon of sound. He has worked in PK-12 schools\, colleges and universities\, juvenile detention centers and homeless shelters in San Francisco\, Oakland\, Chicago\, Berlin\, Deutschland and London\, ON. jashen has published and presented his research internationally and is co-founder of Sound\, Meaning\, Education (SME). Presently\, jashen is a in post-doctoral fellow at the International Institute for Critical Studies in Improvisation (IICSI). He has earned a Ph.D. in music education from Western University\, an MA in music education from Northwestern and a BA in music (composition) from the University of California\, Berkeley. \n\n\nTo attend the talk in-person or online\, RSVP via our Google Forms.
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/thinking-spaces-iicsi-postdocs/
LOCATION:ImprovLab\, MacKinnon Room 108\, 87 Trent Lane\, University of Guelph\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1G 1Y4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:IICSI events,Thinking Spaces
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/Thinking-Spaces-postdocs.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20240404T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20240404T150000
DTSTAMP:20240212T141427Z
CREATED:20240212T135727Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240212T141427Z
UID:13994-1712235600-1712242800@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:ImprovLab Open House Sessions\, April 4
DESCRIPTION:Please join us for a schedule of Thursday afternoon (1–3 pm ET) ImprovLab Open House Sessions! The sessions will take place in person at ImprovLab\, MCKN 108 at the University of Guelph. Bring any instrument and be ready to improvise! \n\nThe full schedule is as follows: \nFebruary 8th (Electronic Music Session); immediately following Thinking Spaces: Colin Harrington \nFebruary 29th \nMarch 7th \nMarch 21st \nApril 4th \nApril 18th \nMay 2nd \nHope to see you there!
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/improvlab-open-house-sessions-april-4/
LOCATION:ImprovLab\, MacKinnon Room 108\, 87 Trent Lane\, University of Guelph\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1G 1Y4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:IICSI events,ImprovLab Open House Sessions
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/02/IICSI_OpenHouse_W242.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20240403T133000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20240403T150000
DTSTAMP:20240319T151108Z
CREATED:20240319T151108Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240319T151108Z
UID:14342-1712151000-1712156400@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:Campus Friends and IICSI present: "Sounds Like Us" - Final Performance
DESCRIPTION:Please join us on Wednesday\, April 3 at 1:30 PM (ET) for “Sounds Like Us” a Final Concert Performance by Campus Friends and IICSI.  \nThis performance will take place in person at ImprovLab\, MCKN 108 at the University of Guelph. This special concert event is free and open to all! \nMORE ABOUT THIS EVENT:\n“Let’s make it up as we go along!” \n“Sounds Like Us”—presented by the International Institute for Critical Studies in Improvisation (IICSI) and the Campus Friends (CF) program—brings professional musicians into collaboration with community members of varying developmental and physical needs through a series of fun and playful improvisation-based workshops.  \nThis event celebrates a semester of music and community making with a final public concert!\n \nMORE ABOUT THE PERFORMERS:\nCampus Friends is an initiative that offers post-secondary experiences on the University of Guelph campus to adults with varying developmental and physical needs. \nA partnership between Community Living Guelph Wellington and U of G’s Experiential Learning Hub\, this program has run on campus since 2016. Twelve participants take part each year\, along with more than 20 mentors. \nTypically\, students attend Campus Friends one day per week during the year for up to three years. They take part in activities including academic and learning opportunities\, volunteering\, athletics and special events. \n“Sounds Like Us” draws upon IICSI’s 12+ years of co-running “Play Who You Are” workshops with KidsAbility that have offered all participants—from new musicians to the very experienced; from music afficionados and scholars to first-time listeners—revelations about the links between music and community-making\, improvisation and individual/community well-being\, sound and self-expression.
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/campus-friends-and-iicsi-present-sounds-like-us-final-performance/
LOCATION:ImprovLab\, MacKinnon Room 108\, 87 Trent Lane\, University of Guelph\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1G 1Y4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:IICSI events
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/IICSI_SoundsLikeUs_24—social.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20240327T133000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20240327T150000
DTSTAMP:20240228T142508Z
CREATED:20240228T135219Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240228T142508Z
UID:14214-1711546200-1711551600@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:Thinking Spaces: adam patrick bell "Admiration and Imitation: Toward a Disability-Led Model for Music Education"
DESCRIPTION:Please join us on Wednesday\, March 27 at 1:30 PM (ET) for Thinking Spaces: “Admiration and Imitation: Toward a Disability-Led Model for Music Education” with adam patrick bell.  \n\nThis presentation will take place in person at ImprovLab\, MCKN 108 at the University of Guelph\, as well as online via Zoom. As always\, our Thinking Spaces events are free! \n\nMore about this talk:\nIn this presentation\, adam will discuss the disability-led model of Drake Music Lab\, a UK-based organization that brands itself as “leaders in music\, disability\, and technology\,” its influence on his community-based collaborative research projects in Canada\, and the implications of this approach for the profession of music education \nMore about the speaker:\nadam patrick bell is Canada Research Chair of Music\, Inclusion\, and Accessibility and an associate professor of music education at Western University\, Canada. He is the author of Dawn of the DAW (Oxford\, 2018)\, and editor of the Music Technology Cookbook (2020). adam is the editor of Canadian Music Educator and serves on the editorial boards of International Journal of Music Education\, Journal of Music\, Technology & Education\, Journal of Popular Music Education\, and Visions of Research in Music Education. Currently\, adam is the principal investigator of three studies funded by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada that focus on disability and music education \n\n\nTo attend the talk in-person or online\, RSVP via our Google Forms.
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/thinking-spaces-adam-patrick-bell-admiration-and-imitation-toward-a-disability-led-model-for-music-education/
LOCATION:ImprovLab\, MacKinnon Room 108\, 87 Trent Lane\, University of Guelph\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1G 1Y4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:IICSI events,Thinking Spaces
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/02/Thinking-Spaces-adam-patrcik-bell.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20240322T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20240322T160000
DTSTAMP:20240318T153329Z
CREATED:20240227T141434Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240318T153329Z
UID:14204-1711116000-1711123200@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:Balance (Detroit): Improvised Music Masterclass at ImprovLab
DESCRIPTION:Please join us on Friday\, March 22 at 2:00 PM (ET) for a Masterclass with the boundary-pushing jazz duo\, Balance. This presentation will take place in person at ImprovLab\, MCKN 108 at the University of Guelph\, as well as online via Zoom. As always\, our Thinking Spaces events are free! As always\, our Masterclass events are free!  \nThe duo will also be performing a ticketed concert at Silence\, at 8:00PM (ET)\, that same night.\n \n\nMore about this Masterclass:\nBalance\, the dynamic duo of saxophonist Marcus Elliot and pianist Michael Malis\, renowned for their boundary-pushing jazz\, are set to share their creative process in a masterclass setting. With a fusion of composed and improvised music\, and drawing from their extensive experience as bandleaders and sidemen\, they promise insights into crafting captivating compositions and heartfelt performances. \nMore about the Artists:\nBalance is a collaborative duo between saxophonist Marcus Elliot and pianist Michael Malis. Called “two of Detroit’s most important young jazz musicians” by the Detroit Free Press\, Elliot and Malis’ “intuitive improvisations” stand on the threshold of composed and improvised music\, creating intimate portraits of musical expression that deal in the language of subtlety.  \nCheck out Balance and give them a listen via https://balance.bandcamp.com/ \nTo attend the talk in-person or online\, RSVP via our Google Forms. \n 
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/balance-masterclass-at-improvlab/
LOCATION:ImprovLab\, MacKinnon Room 108\, 87 Trent Lane\, University of Guelph\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1G 1Y4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:IICSI events
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/02/IICSI_Balance_W24—Social.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20240321T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20240321T150000
DTSTAMP:20240212T141337Z
CREATED:20240205T160321Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240212T141337Z
UID:13987-1711026000-1711033200@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:ImprovLab Open House Sessions\, March 21
DESCRIPTION:Please join us for a schedule of Thursday afternoon (1–3 pm ET) ImprovLab Open House Sessions! The sessions will take place in person at ImprovLab\, MCKN 108 at the University of Guelph. Bring any instrument and be ready to improvise! \n\nThe full schedule is as follows: \nFebruary 8th (Electronic Music Session); immediately following Thinking Spaces: Colin Harrington \nFebruary 29th \nMarch 7th \nMarch 21st \nApril 4th \nApril 18th \nMay 2nd \nHope to see you there! \n  \n  \n 
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/improvlab-open-house-sessions-march-21/
LOCATION:ImprovLab\, MacKinnon Room 108\, 87 Trent Lane\, University of Guelph\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1G 1Y4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:ImprovLab Open House Sessions
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/02/IICSI_OpenHouse_W242.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20240313T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20240313T150000
DTSTAMP:20240304T145509Z
CREATED:20240227T144837Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240304T145509Z
UID:14206-1710334800-1710342000@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:Thinking Spaces: Dreams Come True "Improvisation and Radical Accessibility"
DESCRIPTION:Please join us on Wednesday\, March 13 at 1:00 PM (ET) for Thinking Spaces: “Improvisation and Radical Accessibility” with Dreams Come True Music Studio.  \n\nThis presentation will take place in person at ImprovLab\, MCKN 108 at the University of Guelph\, as well as online via Zoom. As always\, our Thinking Spaces events are free! \n\nMore about this talk:\nThe International Institute for Critical Studies in Improvisation (IICSI) is pleased to host an extended Thinking Spaces event focusing on ‘radical accessibility’ (Rice & Besse\, 2020) within arts education. In this moderated discussion/mini-performance\, we are joined by special guests\, Dr. Caroline Blumer (Western University) and Allison O’Connor (Dreams Come True Music\nStudio\, Founder). They will share ways they have merged radical accessibility and improvisational practices in creating and sustaining inclusive musical theater spaces in Brazil and London\, ON Canada. This two-hour special event will feature a mini-performance by members of London\, Ontario’s very own\, Dreams Come True Music Studio (DCT). Come enjoy a live performance by the “dreamers”as they are affectionately called\, and also insightful conversation with the DCT team\, families and caregivers. \nMore about the speakers:\nAllison O’Connor holds a Bachelor Of Music Honours Music Education and Bachelor Of Education from Western University and has been an elementary school vocal and instrumental music teacher since 1988. She has taught for the North York Board of Education and Thames Valley District School Board conducting choirs\, bands\, and school musicals. Allison is founder and artistic director of Dreams Come True Music Studio (DCT)\, a studio focusing on people of all ages and abilities. DCT holds summer\, fall\, and winter music programs\, where “dreamers” learn\, improvise\, and rehearse in preparation for musicals and concerts. Allison and the DCT musicians have received numerous accolades and notable recognition from the community\, including The London Free Press and CTV news for their commitment to inclusion and making a difference through music. \n\nDr. Caroline Blumer holds a Ph.D in Music Education from Western University as well as a Bachelor in Popular Music & Jazz degree and a Master in Music Education degree\, both from the State University of Campinas\, Brazil. As a soloist\, she has performed in “Los Conciertos de Navidad” in Havana and Matanzas (Cuba) accompanied by Brasília Jazz Symphonic. Caroline taught voice in her private studio for 10 years. She was instructor for the “Popular Singing” and “Singing for Actors” courses at Carlos Gomes Conservatory (Campinas). She was Musical Director and Vocal Coach in\nimportant Brazilian musical theater productions such as “Malandro’s Opera”\, “The Lion King”\, “Man of La Mancha”\, “Notre Dame of Paris” and others. Alongside her work as a jazz singer and musician\, she is a researcher and teacher interested in inclusive musical contexts where people with intellectual disabilities experience music-making. Caroline has worked with individuals with disabilities and individuals on the Autistic Spectrum within inclusive musical theatre programs and schools in Brazil. In Canada\, she is engaged as a volunteer and researcher with two inclusive musical programs at L’Arche Community and Dreams Come True Music Studio in London\, ON. \nGet up each day and sing your song. \n\nThese words are near and dear to my heart not only because they were composed by our friend Ken Fleet\, but also because Dreams Come True Music Studio aspires for everyone of all ages and all abilities to be able to get up each day and sing their song. \nThe Dreams Come True Music Studio creates opportunities for people of all ages and abilities to participate in high quality productions and to transform their lives through music. The studio celebrates diversity\, inclusion\, acceptance\, and all abilities. \nIt was April 2018 while walking my dog Max\, that I was chatting with my sister Heather on the phone about my dream to find a music program which was truly inclusive for all; one in which my son Cameron could be successful. He has been surrounded by music all his life and knowing the importance of music in life\, I wanted Cameron to experience success with music. We found our love of sport through Special Olympics but we were missing the music piece. Because of his intellectual disability and FASD\, Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder\, he learns differently. But he learns. The goal was for Cameron to experience music and feel confident. Those of you who have been involved in music programs must relish the memories of your rehearsals\, your concerts\, your shows and your friendships made through music. I want that for everyone. \nDuring that walk with Max\, my sister said\, “Stop looking for the program. Create it. You are a music teacher specialist and have been advocating for inclusion since you and Cameron became family.” \nSo began the adventure. We offer Summer\, Fall and Winter programs all culminating in amazing Showcase Concerts. Rehearsals are spent together singing\, moving\, experiencing music and making friendships. We don’t try harder\, we try differently. We are a family. We are not a special needs music group. We are not a kids choir. We are a fantastic\, dedicated and energetic Musical Theatre group! I am so proud of every one of my musicians. It is a privilege to work with our families\, musicians\, caregivers\, local agencies and spectacular volunteers who make our dreams come true. They teach me so much and I am grateful. \nOur musicians: Wow! They are capable and we believe in them. We thank them for pushing themselves personally and musically. They make a difference. \nPlease visit our website\, Facebook\, Twitter and Instagram to learn about our DCT Family and our upcoming programs. \nI want to thank my son\, Cameron for believing in the power of Music. He provided the experiences for me to help to make this happen. Being removed from programs\, being told to look elsewhere\, motivated me to show others what he CAN do. The journey can be lonely but now with our Dreams Come True Family\, we are not alone. We believe. \nWe thank you for believing. This experience will be forever in our hearts.\n#inclusion #abilitiesfirst #singyoursong \n\nTo attend the talk in-person or online\, RSVP via our Google Forms.
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/thinking-spaces-dreams-come-true-improvisation-and-radical-accessibility/
LOCATION:ImprovLab\, MacKinnon Room 108\, 87 Trent Lane\, University of Guelph\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1G 1Y4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:IICSI events,Thinking Spaces
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/02/Thinking-Spaces-Dreams-Come-True.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20240307T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20240307T150000
DTSTAMP:20240212T141254Z
CREATED:20240205T155816Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240212T141254Z
UID:13983-1709816400-1709823600@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:ImprovLab Open House Sessions\, March 7
DESCRIPTION:Please join us for a schedule of Thursday afternoon (1–3 pm ET) ImprovLab Open House Sessions! The sessions will take place in person at ImprovLab\, MCKN 108 at the University of Guelph. Bring any instrument and be ready to improvise! \n\nThe full schedule is as follows: \nFebruary 8th (Electronic Music Session); immediately following Thinking Spaces: Colin Harrington \nFebruary 29th \nMarch 7th \nMarch 21st \nApril 4th \nApril 18th \nMay 2nd \nHope to see you there! \n  \n  \n 
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/improvlab-open-house-sessions-march-7/
LOCATION:ImprovLab\, MacKinnon Room 108\, 87 Trent Lane\, University of Guelph\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1G 1Y4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:IICSI events,ImprovLab Open House Sessions
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/02/IICSI_OpenHouse_W242.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20240302T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20240302T153000
DTSTAMP:20240221T231045Z
CREATED:20240221T201428Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240221T231045Z
UID:14140-1709388000-1709393400@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:Pop Up Concerts @ ImprovLab - VoI. II: AJAY\, BEN\, and annais
DESCRIPTION:Please join us Saturday\, March 2nd\, at 2:00 PM for the second in a series of small-scale\, largely acoustic Pop Up Concerts @ ImprovLab. \nVol. II:\nAJAY\, BEN\,  and annais \n(piano\, bass\, and voice) \nSubsequent ‘Pop Up Concerts’ will take place the first Saturday of each month\, @ ImprovLab (108 MacKinnon Building\, University of Guelph Campus)—the best sounding room in Guelph! \nAs always\, entry is free and our Pop Up series will remain low-key.
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/pop-up-concerts-improvlab-voi-ii-ajay-ben-and-annais/
LOCATION:ImprovLab\, MacKinnon Room 108\, 87 Trent Lane\, University of Guelph\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1G 1Y4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:IICSI events,Pop Up Concerts @ ImprovLab
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/02/Pop-Up-Series-vol-2-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20240301T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20240301T150000
DTSTAMP:20240222T195627Z
CREATED:20240222T193833Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240222T195627Z
UID:14128-1709298000-1709305200@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:Thinking Spaces: MT Space "Multicultural Theatre Space: Intercultural Theatre Creation"
DESCRIPTION:Please join us on Friday\, March 1 at 1:00 PM (ET) for Thinking Spaces: “Multicultural Theatre Space: Intercultural Theatre Creation” with MT Space.  \n\nThis presentation will take place in person at ImprovLab\, MCKN 108 at the University of Guelph\, as well as online via Zoom. As always\, our Thinking Spaces events are free! \n\nMore about this talk:\nMT Space presents a demonstration of the intercultural theatre creation methodology established by Majdi Bou-Matar\, and engages others in the conversations around devised processes\, ancestry\, and culture clash. This workshop / talk will feature four actors: Nada Abusaleh\, Ahmad Meree\, Brad Cook\, and Jewels Krauss. \nMore about the speaker:\nMT Space (Multicultural Theatre Space) was founded in 2004 by Lebanese-Canadian Majdi Bou-Matar\, who was a trained director\, actor\, and dancer. After receiving the same criticism over and over\, hearing that his accent was too thick or that he “didn’t look the part”\, Majdi decided to create a company that would become a platform for all artists that felt marginalized\, racialized\, and displaced. This is how MT Space was born. \nMT Space has grown from being a company that produces one show every year to an organization that brings culturally and socially relevant work from across the country and around the world to our community of Kitchener-Waterloo. We have challenged the preconceptions of theatre to create\, produce\, and present work that is accessible and affordable to low-income families while creating a space for Indigenous\, immigrant\, refugee\, and marginalized voices to be heard. \nMT Space challenges the definition of theatre to include all disciplines such as dance\, music\, multimedia\, and circus performing arts. As such\, MT Space is becoming a presenter of artists and arts organizations across many disciplines. \n\n\nTo attend the talk in-person or online\, RSVP via our Google Forms.
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/thinking-spaces-mt-space-multicultural-theatre-space-intercultural-theatre-creation/
LOCATION:ImprovLab\, MacKinnon Room 108\, 87 Trent Lane\, University of Guelph\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1G 1Y4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:IICSI events,Thinking Spaces
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/02/Thinking-Spaces-MT-Space.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20240229T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20240229T150000
DTSTAMP:20240212T140954Z
CREATED:20240205T155648Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240212T140954Z
UID:13981-1709211600-1709218800@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:ImprovLab Open House Sessions\, February 29
DESCRIPTION:Please join us for a schedule of Thursday afternoon (1–3 pm ET) ImprovLab Open House Sessions! The sessions will take place in person at ImprovLab\, MCKN 108 at the University of Guelph. Bring any instrument and be ready to improvise! \n\nThe full schedule is as follows: \nFebruary 8th (Electronic Music Session); immediately following Thinking Spaces: Colin Harrington \nFebruary 29th \nMarch 7th \nMarch 21st \nApril 4th \nApril 18th \nMay 2nd \nHope to see you there! \n  \n  \n 
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/improvlab-open-house-sessions-feb-29/
LOCATION:ImprovLab\, MacKinnon Room 108\, 87 Trent Lane\, University of Guelph\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1G 1Y4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:ImprovLab Open House Sessions
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/02/IICSI_OpenHouse_W242.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20240228T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20240228T160000
DTSTAMP:20240221T162341Z
CREATED:20240220T154358Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240221T162341Z
UID:14123-1709128800-1709136000@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:Thinking Spaces: Zahra Habib "Lunar Rotations: Eternal Eleutheria
DESCRIPTION:Please join us on Wednesday\, February 28 at 2:00 PM (ET) for Thinking Spaces: “Eternal Eleutheria” with Zahra Habib.  \n\nThis presentation will take place in person at ImprovLab\, MCKN 108 at the University of Guelph\, as well as online via Zoom. As always\, our Thinking Spaces events are free! \n\nMore about this talk:\nZahra takes you on the cosmic experience that is Lunar Rotations\, blending musical selections with narrative overtones that connect the sounds with the theme of arriving at an eternally internal freedom: Eleutheria. \nMore about the speaker:\nAny creation from Zahra Habib is an experience. Zahra is an award-winning DJ\, producer\, radio host\, and multi-faceted creator. Her Lunar Rotations radio show and live experience is a performance of cathartic\, creative force\, and has rocked dance floors in London\, Toronto\, and New York. She has produced countless radio and podcast programs\, and is known for her ability to inspire deep understanding and transformative ideas in her interviews\, viewable on LunarRotations.TV. An advocate an expressive\, creative life for all\, she is a Board Member of TD Sunfest World Music Festival\, the JUNOs Hip-Hop and Rap Advisory committee\, and among many other distinctions\, the owner of Shakti Creative Media Garden.Keep up with Zahra via zahrahabib.ca\, and Instagram: @Zahra.Shakti @Lunar.Rotations \n\n\nTo attend the talk in-person or online\, RSVP via our Google Forms.
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/thinking-spaces-zahra-habib-lunar-rotations-eternal-eleutheria/
LOCATION:ImprovLab\, MacKinnon Room 108\, 87 Trent Lane\, University of Guelph\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1G 1Y4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:IICSI events,Thinking Spaces
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/02/Thinking-Spaces-Zahra-Habib.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20240208T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20240208T150000
DTSTAMP:20240212T140825Z
CREATED:20240205T155250Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240212T140825Z
UID:13977-1707397200-1707404400@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:ImprovLab Open House Sessions\, February 8
DESCRIPTION:Please join us for a schedule of Thursday afternoon (1–3 pm ET) ImprovLab Open House Sessions! The sessions will take place in person at ImprovLab\, MCKN 108 at the University of Guelph. Bring any instrument and be ready to improvise! \n\nThe full schedule is as follows: \nFebruary 8th (Electronic Music Session); immediately following Thinking Spaces: Colin Harrington \nFebruary 29th \nMarch 7th \nMarch 21st \nApril 4th \nApril 18th \nMay 2nd \nHope to see you there! \n  \n  \n 
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/improvlab-open-house-sessions/
LOCATION:ImprovLab\, MacKinnon Room 108\, 87 Trent Lane\, University of Guelph\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1G 1Y4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:ImprovLab Open House Sessions
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/02/IICSI_OpenHouse_W242.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20240208T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20240208T130000
DTSTAMP:20240221T162515Z
CREATED:20240201T174516Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240221T162515Z
UID:13971-1707393600-1707397200@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:Thinking Spaces: Colin Harrington "Improvisation in Sequencer-based Electronic Dance Music"
DESCRIPTION:Please join us on Thursday\, February 8 at 12:00 PM for Thinking Spaces: “Improvisation in Sequencer-based Electronic Dance Music” with Colin Harrington.  \n\nThis presentation will take place in person at ImprovLab\, MCKN 108 at the University of Guelph\, as well as online via Zoom. As always\, our Thinking Spaces events are free! \n\nMore about this talk:\nThe culture and technology of Electronic Music has seen tremendous developments over the last decade. Thanks to the increased availability\, affordability and accessibility of equipment\, the artform’s popularity has exploded worldwide. One booming area is that of “Sequencer-based Improvisation”\, which entails the synchronizing of one or more instruments together via a “Master Clock”\, then using sequencers\, sound design\, audio mixers\, and effects\, to spontaneously compose fluid and spontaneous music in real-time. \nAlthough many different styles of music can be explored within this medium\, it is most popularly expressed within the stylistic framework and motivations inherent in Electronic Dance Music\, a genre with a rich cultural and technological history\, as well as a unique reciprocal relationship with the audience. \nWe will discuss a brief history of the technology and the cultural history of electronic dance music\, and how specific pieces of equipment changed the genre. As well as how all these factors spawned a unique type of improvisation\, and why it differs from other improvisational artforms.  \nThe presentation will be followed by an open studio session\, workshopping a wide selection of synchronized electronic instruments. \nMore about the speaker:\nColin Harrington is a Guelph based multimedia artist\, A/V technician\, and multidisciplinary musician. He performs in a “live hardware” electronic project called MOONBEAN\, who has toured Canada and Europe playing semi-improvised dance music. He also produces and directs music videos\, and works for IICSI as a technician in their ImprovLab at University of Guelph. \n\n\nTo attend the talk in-person or online\, RSVP via our Google Forms.
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/thinking-spaces-colin-harrington/
LOCATION:ImprovLab\, MacKinnon Room 108\, 87 Trent Lane\, University of Guelph\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1G 1Y4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:IICSI events,Thinking Spaces
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/02/Thinking-Spaces-Colin-Harrington.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20240203T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20240203T153000
DTSTAMP:20240201T182248Z
CREATED:20240201T182248Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240201T182248Z
UID:13974-1706968800-1706974200@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:Pop Up Concerts @ ImprovLab - vol. I: AJAY and REZA
DESCRIPTION:Please join us Saturday\, February 3rd\, at 2:00 PM for the first in a series of small-scale\, largely acoustic Pop Up Concerts @ ImprovLab. \nVol. I:\nAJAY and REZA\n(piano) (tar\, voice) \nFollowing this first iteration\, subsequent concerts will take place the first Saturday of each month\, inside ImprovLab (108 MacKinnon Building\, University of Guelph Campus)—the best sounding room in Guelph! \nAs always\, entry is free and our “Pop Up Concerts” will remain low-key.
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/events-pop-up-concert-series-volume-1/
LOCATION:ImprovLab\, MacKinnon Room 108\, 87 Trent Lane\, University of Guelph\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1G 1Y4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:IICSI events
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/02/Pop-Up-Series-Vol-1.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20231206T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20231206T153000
DTSTAMP:20231129T020800Z
CREATED:20231128T235133Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231129T020800Z
UID:13916-1701871200-1701876600@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:Thinking Spaces: Zane Zalis\, "Head in the Clouds - Feet on the Ground | Improvising and Creating: A Way of Becoming and Being"
DESCRIPTION:Please join us on Wednesday\, December 6 at 2:00 PM for Thinking Spaces: “Head in the Clouds – Feet on the Ground | Improvising and Creating: A Way of Becoming and Being” with Zane Zalis.  \n\nThis presentation will take place in person at ImprovLab\, MCKN 108 at the University of Guelph\, as well as online via Zoom. As always\, our Thinking Spaces events are free! \n\nMore about this talk:\nWith decades of experience as an improvising musician\, composer\, lyricist\, performer\, educator\, and more\, Dr. Zane Zalis will share stories/experiences\, insights\, lessons\, practices\, and ideas that have informed and shaped his artistic and pedagogical journey. The entangled texture of his work\, weaving emotion\, feeling\, reason\, thinking\, motivation and skill development as central to human understanding of self and others\, renders the arts and values creativity/improvisation as indispensable to broad and deep human development. \nMore about the speaker:\nDr. Zane Zalis is a composer/lyricist/writer/producer/educator\, having received the PhD Dissertation Award (CSSE ARTS SIG\, Canada)\, Prime Minister’s Award for Teaching Excellence\, Queen Elizabeth II Diamond and Gold Medals\, Lieutenant Governor’s Medal for the Advancement of Inter-Religious Understanding\, Opus Klassik (Germany-six nominations)\, Canon of Culture Prize 2017 (Lodz\, Poland)\, Canada Council for the Arts grant- composer/lyricist/librettist\, and an invitation to become a composer-member of the prestigious BMI Musical Theatre Workshops\, New York. His compositions have been performed in New York (Lincoln Center)\, Toronto (Roy Thomson Hall)\, Lodz (Grand Theatre)\, Scotland\, Mexico\, Stuttgart/Wuppertal/Leverkusen (Germany)\, Murau (Artistic Director of the International Music Festival\, Austria)\, and Winnipeg (Winnipeg Symphony Orchestra\, CBC – Jazz Orch.\, Queen Elizabeth II gala concert\, et al). His oratorio\, I Believe\, has been recorded by the Winnipeg Symphony Orchestra and the Bayer Philharmoniker (Ars Produktion-Germany). He has also worked in the commercial music field; radio\, television\, music theatre\, and music production.  He has taught at secondary and post-secondary levels\, having founded and created innovative programs and methods that address creative/skill development\, performance\, and pedagogy. \n\n\nTo attend the talk in-person or online\, RSVP via our Google Forms.
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/thinking-spaces-zane-zalis-improvising-and-creating/
LOCATION:ImprovLab\, MacKinnon Room 108\, 87 Trent Lane\, University of Guelph\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1G 1Y4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:IICSI events,Thinking Spaces
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/Thinking-Spaces-Zane-Zalis.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20231130T200000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20231130T210000
DTSTAMP:20231114T162003Z
CREATED:20231114T162003Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231114T162003Z
UID:13868-1701374400-1701378000@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:Dans les arbres In Concert
DESCRIPTION:Following their free workshop earlier that day\, Dans les arbres will be performing a free concert at 8 PM on Thursday\, November 30\, in the ImprovLab! As with the workshop\, this event is free and open to all. \nDans les arbres is an improvising ensemble comprising French clarinetist Xavier Charles alongside three Norwegians: pianist Christian Wallumrød\, guitarist Ivar Grydeland\, and percussionist Ingar Zach. \nThe group’s idiosyncratic inhabitants form unusual combinations of airy\, wooden\, metallic sounds\, prepared strings\, and tampered drumheads. Their world of sounds and fine sense of communication lead to collective playing and spontaneous group-composing said to be in a “class of its own.” Their music moves gently but steadily ahead on broad planes of sound. The dynamic textural scenery evolves as Dans les arbres harnesses its wealth of unorthodox extended techniques. \nSince the recording of their first album in 2006\, Dans les arbres has performed more than 150 concerts around the globe. The group’s releases Dans Les Arbres (ECM 2008)\, Canopée (ECM 2012)\, Phosphorescence (HUBRO 2017)\, and Volatil (SOFA 2019) have received praise from reviewers and audiences alike. In 2019\, Dans les arbres started releasing music from special projects on the group’s Bandcamp profile. Dans les arbres was nominated for the prestigious Nordic Music Prize in 2015. Dans les arbres has performed with guest musicians such as Yumiko Tanaka\, Otomo Yoshihide\, Jim O’Rourke\, the Norwegian duo Vilde & Inga\, and The Norwegian Wind Ensemble. Together with singers and the Oslo Sinfonietta\, the group performed the piece About Nature by Henrik Hellstenius at the Oslo Opera House in 2015. \nPlease RSVP here to reserve your concert ticket!
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/dans-les-arbres-in-concert/
LOCATION:ImprovLab\, MacKinnon Room 108\, 87 Trent Lane\, University of Guelph\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1G 1Y4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:IICSI events
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/Dans-les-arbres_live1_Copyright_Eve_Lagger-LO-768x507-2.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20231130T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20231130T153000
DTSTAMP:20231114T162056Z
CREATED:20231114T162056Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231114T162056Z
UID:13856-1701352800-1701358200@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:Dans les arbres Workshop
DESCRIPTION:IICSI is pleased to present a workshop by Dans les arbres! Please join us at the ImprovLab at 2 PM on Thursday\, November 30th for this free event\, open to all! \nDans les arbres is an improvising ensemble comprising French clarinetist Xavier Charles alongside three Norwegians: pianist Christian Wallumrød\, guitarist Ivar Grydeland\, and percussionist Ingar Zach. One of the main focuses for Dans les arbres has been to develop an “ensemble sound.” In this workshop\, Dans les arbres will demonstrate their methods and invite participants to join in improvising together in a large ensemble–an extended Dans les arbres. Bring your instruments! \nThe workshop will be followed by a free concert by Dans les arbres at 8 PM. \nPlease RSVP here to reserve your slot! \n 
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/dans-les-arbres-workshop/
LOCATION:ImprovLab\, MacKinnon Room 108\, 87 Trent Lane\, University of Guelph\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1G 1Y4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:IICSI events
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/2019-11-23-Dans-les-arbres-photos-Remi-Angeli-021-768x432-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20231125T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20231125T170000
DTSTAMP:20231120T165615Z
CREATED:20231116T160456Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231120T165615Z
UID:13897-1700924400-1700931600@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:Jamming the Classroom: Book Launch & Concert
DESCRIPTION:-IICSI is pleased to present a book launch & concert by Ajay Heble & Jesse Stewart! Please join us at the ImprovLab at 3 PM on Saturday\, November 25th for this free event\, open to all!  Please RSVP here to confirm your attendance. \nBooks will be on hand for purchase! \nFor those who cannot make it in person\, the concert will be live-streamed on IICSI’s official Twitch stream! \n— \nAbout the book: \nJamming the Classroom: Musical Improvisation and Pedagogical Practice \nDrawing on a mix of collaborative autoethnography\, secondary literature\, interviews with leading improvisers\, and personal anecdotal material\, Jamming the Classroom discusses the pedagogy of musical improvisation as a vehicle for teaching\, learning\, and enacting social justice. Heble and Stewart write that to “jam the classroom” is to argue for a renewed understanding of improvisation as both a musical and a social practice; to activate the knowledge and resources associated with improvisational practices in an expression of noncompliance with dominant orders of knowledge production; and to recognize in the musical practices of aggrieved communities something far from the reaches of conventional forms of institutionalized power\, yet something equally powerful\, urgent\, and expansive. With this definition of jamming the classroom in mind\, Heble and Stewart argue that even as improvisation gains recognition within mainstream institutions (including classrooms in universities)\, it needs to be understood as a critique of dominant institutionalized assumptions and epistemic orders. Suggesting a closer consideration of why musical improvisation has been largely expunged from dominant models of pedagogical inquiry in both classrooms and communities\, this book asks what it means to theorize the pedagogy of improvised music in relation to public programs of action\, debate\, and critical practice. \nAbout the authors: \nAjay Heble is Professor of English and Director of the International Institute for Critical Studies in Improvisation at the University of Guelph. In 2023 he was awarded the Killam Prize in the Humanities.  \nJesse Stewart is Associate Professor of Music at the School for Studies in Art and Culture at Carleton University. He is also the founder of We Are All Musicians\, an organization dedicated to fostering inclusive music making.
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/jamming-the-classroom-book-launch-concert/
LOCATION:ImprovLab\, MacKinnon Room 108\, 87 Trent Lane\, University of Guelph\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1G 1Y4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:IICSI events
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/1700499184393-3b5fe01f-a465-4313-974e-97cae02604e1_1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20231124T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20231124T143000
DTSTAMP:20231115T204524Z
CREATED:20231115T195031Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231115T204524Z
UID:13891-1700830800-1700836200@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:Thinking Spaces: Dr. Darren Hamilton\, "Exploring and Experimenting with Gospel Vocal Improvisation"
DESCRIPTION:Please join us on Friday\, November 24 at 1:00 PM for Thinking Spaces: “Exploring and Experimenting with Gospel Vocal Improvisation” with Dr. Darren Hamilton.  \n\nThis presentation will take place in person at ImprovLab\, MCKN 108 at the University of Guelph\, as well as online via Zoom. As always\, our Thinking Spaces events are free! \n\nMore about this talk:\nGospel music has influenced many genres of music including\, soul\, R&B and pop. While many people appreciate and can recognize the ‘sound’ of gospel music\, there is little research that examines the characteristics and approaches of gospel vocal improvisation. This talk will provide insights into the connections between blues or jazz improvisation and gospel vocal improvisation\, while also identifying nuances that are specific to the gospel style. Come prepared to explore and ‘experiment’ with gospel vocal improvisation. You may even learn a gospel song in the process! \nMore about the speaker:\nDr. Darren Hamilton is an Assistant Professor in the Faculty of Music at the University of Toronto. His research interests lie in gospel music\, hip hop music and popular music education\, in addition to equity\, diversity and social justice in music curriculum. He is also the director of the Faculty of Music Gospel Choir\, an undergraduate course he founded at the faculty in 2019. Dr. Hamilton has over 30 years experience performing gospel music. He has served as a member of the JUNO Award-winning Toronto Mass Choir and the JUNO-nominated Youth Outreach Mass Choir. Dr. Darren Hamilton was the recipient of the 2022 JUNO Award for MusiCounts Teacher of the Year. \n\n\nTo attend the talk in-person or online\, RSVP via our Google Forms.
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/thinking-spaces-darren-hamilton-gospel-vocal-improvisation/
LOCATION:ImprovLab\, MacKinnon Room 108\, 87 Trent Lane\, University of Guelph\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1G 1Y4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:IICSI events,Thinking Spaces
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/Thinking-Spaces-Darren-Hamilton-1.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20231122T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20231122T113000
DTSTAMP:20250130T185224Z
CREATED:20231121T011656Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250130T185224Z
UID:13909-1700647200-1700652600@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:Thinking Spaces: Joe Sorbara\, "Attending to the Social Space of The Music: Self-Expression as a Site of Pedagogy | Questioning the ways that I teach creative music making"
DESCRIPTION:Please join us on Wednesday\, November 22 at 10:00 AM for Thinking Spaces: “Attending to the Social Space of The Music: Self-Expression as a Site of Pedagogy | Questioning the ways that I teach creative music making” with Joe Sorbara.  \n\nThis presentation will take place in person at ImprovLab\, MCKN 108 at the University of Guelph\, as well as online via Zoom. As always\, our Thinking Spaces events are free! \n\nMore about this talk:\nJoe Sorbara recently contributed a chapter to The Improviser’s Classroom: Pedagogies for Cocreative Worldmaking\, edited by Daniel Fischlin and Mark Lomanno for Temple University Press. “Attending to the Social Space of The Music: Self-Expression as a Site of Pedagogy” is an exploration of the ways that Sorbara welcomes students into the world of creative music. In preparation for this phase of their work\, which will be to study the ways that other improvisers conceive of the music\, talk about the music\, share the music with others\, Sorbara invites participants in this colloquium presentation to help question\, problematise\, and otherwise unsettle some of the basic tendencies and assumptions that have arisen in the presenter’s writing. \nMore about the speaker:\nCanadian drummer and percussionist Joe Sorbara has spent decades developing a reputation as a dedicated and imaginative performer\, composer\, improviser\, collaborator\, organiser\, listener\, writer\, and educator. A consummate sonic adventurer\, Sorbara’s music draws on a vast array of influences\, most notably the African American Creative Music tradition. They have performed and recorded with Norm Adams\, Ken Aldcroft\, Anthony Braxton\, Jared Burrows\, JP Carter\, Nikita Carter\, Christine Duncan\, Paul Dutton\, François Houle\, Germaine Liu\, Joe McPhee\, Karen Ng\, Evan Parker\, William Parker\, Allen Ravenstine\, Clyde Reed\, Steve Sladkowski\, and Friendly Rich\, among many many others. \nSorbara is a long-time student of master drummer Jim Blackley. They hold an Honours Bachelor of Fine Arts in Music from York University in Toronto and a Master’s degree in English from the University of Guelph. Joe has worked extensively as a workshop facilitator and guest lecturer and has been a sessional lecturer in the School of Fine Art and Music at Guelph since 2007. They\nare currently studying toward a PhD in Critical Improvisation Studies. \n\n\nTo attend the talk in-person or online\, RSVP via our Google Forms.
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/thinking-spaces-joe-sorbara-creative-music/
LOCATION:ImprovLab\, MacKinnon Room 108\, 87 Trent Lane\, University of Guelph\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1G 1Y4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:IICSI events,Thinking Spaces
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/Thinking-Spaces-Joe-Sorbara.png
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20231110T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20231110T163000
DTSTAMP:20231106T185205Z
CREATED:20231103T152223Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231106T185205Z
UID:13828-1699628400-1699633800@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:Thinking Spaces: annais linares\, "Co-Creative Accompaniment: Improvising Re[new]ed Relationships through Arts-Based Kin Making"
DESCRIPTION:Please join us on Friday\, November 10 at 3 pm for Thinking Spaces: “Co-Creative Accompaniment: Improvising Re[new]ed Relationships through Arts-Based Kin Making” with annais linares.  \n\nThis presentation will take place in person at ImprovLab\, MCKN 108 at the University of Guelph\, as well as online via Zoom. As always\, our Thinking Spaces events are free! \n\nAbstract / Summary \nIn her colloquium presentation\, annais linares will discuss a socially-engaged art practice that brings together arts-based community making and kinning\, a verb described as ”…reconnecting our bodies\, minds\, and spirits within a world that is not merely a collection of objects but a ‘communion of subjects’…” by Gavin Van Horn\, co-editor of Kinship: Belonging in a World of Relations. \nannais describes this bridging as arts-based kin making. Her work studies improvisation and accompaniment as critical processes to ethically activate arts-based kin making in her communities\, and how those practices might lead to re[new]ed relationships between humans\, and between human and more-than-human life. She will discuss the relevance of this practice within the contexts of community health\, [species] loneliness\, and related arts-based community making projects. \nShort Bio \nannais linares is a musician and socially engaged artist who is currently in the Critical Studies in Improvisation PhD program at the University of Guelph. Her research focuses on co-creative art-making\, improvisation and collective care. \n\n\nTo attend the talk in-person or online\, RSVP via our Google Forms.
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/13828/
LOCATION:ImprovLab\, MacKinnon Room 108\, 87 Trent Lane\, University of Guelph\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1G 1Y4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:IICSI events,Thinking Spaces
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/ThinkingSpacesannais.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20231108T200000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20231108T213000
DTSTAMP:20231108T152019Z
CREATED:20231103T180446Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231108T152019Z
UID:13835-1699473600-1699479000@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:Bread and Puppet Comes to University of Guelph
DESCRIPTION:IICSI and the School of English and Theatre Studies at the University of Guelph have teamed up to present a ONE NIGHT ONLY performance of Inflammatory Earthling Rants from the infamous\, the spectacular\, the alluring… Bread and Puppet Theater! Bread and Puppet are well known for their visually rich\, street-theater brand of performance art which revels in music\, dance\, and slapstick-filled celebratory protest. If you want to experience one of the most mind-expanding\, atypical\, and creative shows\, this is for you! \nThe show takes place at War Memorial Hall on Wednesday\, November 8 at 8:00 pm. Tickets are available on a sliding scale pricing model and start at $15 for students. \nReserve yours now: https://bit.ly/3QI57p1 \nAbout the show:\nEarthlings are now aflame and consequently need inflammatory rants\, directed against the arsonist: Western Civilization and its incompetent government. The habitual pragmatic communication jargon won’t do\, so the ranters have to resort to the original language which was tasked to employ the spells\, charms\, and incantations needed to confront the disaster in order to instigate change – with help from Kropotkin’s Mutual Aid ideology. \nAbout Bread and Puppet Theater:\nFounded in 1963 by Peter Schumann on New York City’s Lower East Side\, Bread & Puppet has been based in the North East Kingdom of Vermont since the early 1970s and is one of the oldest\, nonprofit\, self-supporting theatrical companies in the country. Well known for its visually rich\, street-theater brand of performance art\, Bread and Puppet revels in music\, dance\, and slapstick-filled celebratory protest. Believing that theater is a basic necessity like bread\, the company frequently brings its work to the streets for those who may not otherwise go to the theater. Its shows are political and spectacular\, frequently featuring puppets on stilts\, huge masks with expressive faces\, singing\, dancing\, and a richly elaborated repertoire of iconic characters. \nBread and Puppet is recognized throughout the world and has won distinction at international theater festivals in Italy\, Poland\, Colombia\, and Yugoslavia\, beginning with their break-out performances at the 1968 Nancy Festival in France. Notable awards include the Erasmus Prize of Amsterdam\, 4 Obies\, the Puppeteers of America’s President Award\, and the Vermont Governor’s Award. Bread and Puppet is constantly active\, performing at its farm in Glover\, VT\, and in local churches\, schools and parades. It regularly tours Europe\, Canada\, and the United States and has recently visited El Salvador\, Haiti\, Russia\, Greece and Korea. \n 
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/13835/
LOCATION:War Memorial Hall\, University of Guelph\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1G 1Y4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:IICSI events
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/Guelph-IG.png
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20231030T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20231030T123000
DTSTAMP:20231023T212344Z
CREATED:20231023T212044Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231023T212344Z
UID:13811-1698663600-1698669000@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:Thinking Spaces: Bob Wiseman\, "The Black Sqaure"
DESCRIPTION:Thinking Spaces\, “The Black Square” is presented by Bob Wiseman\, and takes place Monday\, October 30 at 11am ET. The talk includes a presentation followed by a guided Q&A and conversation period. \nFor our fourth Thinking Spaces session\, we are excited to welcome IMPR graduate student\, Bob Wiseman. Join us on Monday 30 October 2023\, 11:00AM-12:30PM to listen to this musician\, author and educator discuss and share ideas from his novel in process. This talk takes place in-person in the Tranzac Club\, Toronto\, Ontario (292 Brunswick Avenue) and will be streamed online. Registration is required to attend. Sign up now! \nMore about this talk:\nBob will provide excerpts of his novel in process read by Rebecca Campbell. “I am in\nengaged in two pieces of writing. The first is a work of fiction\, the second a framing document.\nThe fiction is what we will be reading on October 30th. It is about a musician studying\nimprovisation and how that alters his consciousness.” Bob is introducing it and answering\nquestions. Guest Rebecca Campbell will read the actual story instead of Bob\, “I like the sound of\nher voice more than the one in my head.” Guest John Oswald will be present and supply first\nquestions/ responses. \nMore about the speaker:\nBob Wiseman is a PhD student in Critical Studies in Improvisation. He is also a teacher at the\nUniversity of Western Ontario and Seneca Polytechnic. At Western he teaches improvisation\,\nmusic business and songwriting\, at Seneca media and censorship studies. In addition to being at\nthe University of Guelph at IICSI\, Bob is the author of the 2020 book Music Lessons\, “Each\nentry is unique and compellingly written\, but the themes throughout ― on improvisational\nmusic\, life lessons\, and conflict ― are ubiquitous.” Jack David
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/thinking-spaces-bob-wiseman-the-black-sqaure/
LOCATION:Tranzac Club\, 292 Brunswick Ave.\, Toronto\, ON\, M5S 2M7\, Canada
CATEGORIES:IICSI events,Thinking Spaces
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/Thinking-Spaces-Bob-Wiseman.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20231027T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20231027T153000
DTSTAMP:20231023T213143Z
CREATED:20230919T141326Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231023T213143Z
UID:13700-1698415200-1698420600@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:Thinking Spaces: Kim Solga\, "Women Making Shakespeare Now: Decolonizing the Creation Room"
DESCRIPTION:Thinking Spaces\, “Women Making Shakespeare Now: Decolonizing the Creation Room” is presented by Dr. Kim Solga\, and takes place Friday\, October 27 at 2pm ET. The talk includes a presentation followed by a guided Q&A and conversation period.  \nFor our third Thinking Spaces session\, we are excited to welcome Dr. Kim Solga. Join us on Friday 27 October 2023\, 2:00PM-3:30PM to listen to this critically acclaimed teacher and scholar discuss and share ideas about decolonizing the Shakespeare Industry. This talk takes place in-person in the MacKinnon Building\, Room 103\, University of Guelph. Registration is required to attend. Sign up now! \nMore about this talk:\nIn the wake of BLM\, MeToo\, the COVID-19 pandemic\, and changing audience and creator dynamics\, the Shakespeare Industry (arts organizations and academic institutions alike) has finally realized that Shakespeare wasn’t just a basic white guy; “Shakespeare” can be – indeed\, *is* – Black\, trans\, Indigenous\, gender queer\, disabled. While historians like Sawyer Kemp\, Andy Kesson\, Ayanna Thompson\, and more work to uncover the previously invisible histories of Shakespeare’s own queer and coloured worlds\, artists like Emma Frankland\, Dawn Jani Birley\, Reneltta Arluk\, Nataki Garrett\, and more are devising creation room practices that not only permit\, but *rely upon*\, the whole selves of equity-deserving artists previously excluded from Shakespearean spaces to shape the worlds of rehearsal and the plays in performance. I’ve just completed a book called Women Making Shakespeare in the 21st Century (CUP\, 2024)\, for which I interviewed more than a dozen directors\, playwrights\, actors and scholar-artists about how they approach the hot potato we call “Shakespeare” in ways that are fundamentally disruptive of the colonial norms that historically shaped Shakespearean production and reception. In this talk I’ll share some of the most inspiring of my learnings\, and I’ll also talk about the obstacles that still lie in the way of this work and how we\, scholars and artists\, might address them together. \nMore about the speaker:\nKim Solga is Professor of Theatre Studies and English Studies at Western University. She is the author of four books\, including Violence Against Women in Early Modern Performance (2009) and Theatre & Feminism (2015)\, and the editor of six more\, including the award-winning Performance and the City (2009) and Performance and the Global City (2013)\, with D.J. Hopkins and Shelley Orr. Kim is also a decorated teacher\, and she currently holds the Arts and Humanities Teaching Fellowship (2021-24) at Western’s Centre for Teaching and Learning.
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/thinking-spaces-kim-solga/
LOCATION:University of Guelph\, MacKinnon Building\, 87 Trent Ln\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1G 1Y4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:IICSI events,Thinking Spaces
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/Thinking-Spaces-Kim-Solga.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20231016T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20231016T210000
DTSTAMP:20231017T151951Z
CREATED:20231006T031610Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231017T151951Z
UID:13778-1697482800-1697490000@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:Improvising Communities: A Retrospective Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Banner Image: Interconnected Relationships Mural\, Omar G Ramirez and his students\, Mural Workforce Academy\, Boyle Heights Arts Conservatory x MALDEF\, 2023\nImprovising Communities: A Retrospective Exhibition\nThe Emergence of a New Field of Interdisciplinary Inquiry\n\nOctober 16–21\, 2023\nMassey Hall\, University of Guelph \nImprovising Communities: A Retrospective Exhibition marks the celebration of a significant milestone in the emerging field of Critical Studies in Improvisation.  \nThe founding of the International Institute for Critical Studies in Improvisation (IICSI) at the University in Guelph was facilitated by a Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) Partnership Grant\, awarded in 2012. The Partnership Grant set in motion a decade of robust research and creative outputs generated by a team of scholars\, researchers\, community partners\, and arts practitioners on a local\, national\, and international scale.  \nThis exhibition illustrates the formalization of improvisation as a field of academic inquiry over the ten+ year period of the SSHRC Partnership Grant in which the institute was named (2012 to 2022) and narrates how IICSI has evolved into a central source for the collection and dissemination of research on the social implications of improvisational practices.   \nImprovising Communities invites you to explore\, inquire\, investigate\, and play with a curated selection of sample projects generated by IICSI’s network during this extended period\, from practice-based community programming to accessible new media technologies. The exhibition encourages you to consider one of IICSI’s central research questions: can improvisation be a vehicle for positive social change?  \nThis exhibition takes places October 16–21\, 2023 in Massey Hall\, at the University of Guelph.  \nTimeline designed by Carter Pryor\, 2023 \nThe Hand You Are Dealt: Improvising the Archive\nIn late 2022\, IICSI approached Studio Oleomingus\, a partner on their new SSHRC grant “Improvising Futures\,” about creating a video game which showcases the last ten years of IICSI’s research findings. Enthusiastic and up for the task\, Studio Oleomingus and IICSI set to work to determine the format\, content\, and technical specifications of the game\, meeting monthly with an advisory committee to talk through ideas\, troubleshoot potential issues\, and narrow in on a delightful player experience. \n  \nThe Hand You Are Dealt: Improvising the Archive\, 2023\, Studio Oleomingus \nAfter almost a full year of collaboration\, what emerges is a freeform digital toy: a collection of playing cards that contain within them a variety of media\, including audio tracks\, documentaries\, short films\, photographs\, recorded performances\, artwork\, and more\, from different research and creative outputs generated by IICSI and their network over the past decade. We proudly present to you\, The Hand You Are Dealt: Improvising the Archive. \nHosted on your web browser (www.improvisingthearchive.com)\, the game is accessible to anyone with an internet connection\, and it invites players to discover the intricacies of IICSI’s diverse array of researchers\, partners\, and community organizations\, all while learning a little bit about the institute’s research and activities.\n \nIICSI and Studio Oleomingus hope the game will be as fun to play as it is informative\, and hope the game leads to a wider conversation about improvisation in the exploration of digital archives and interactive art.  \nThe video game will premiere at our exhibition opening night\, on Monday\, October 16 at 7 pm at Massey Hall\, University of Guelph. \nExhibition Schedule\nMonday\, October 16\n7–9 pm | Opening Reception \nCape Spear Klang\, 2021 \nJoin IICSI for the opening reception of Improvising Communities: A Retrospective Exhibition at Massey Hall\, University of Guelph! The evening will be divided into two parts: a special premiere of our video game The Hand You are Dealt: Improvising the Archive and talk back with Studio Oleomingus creators  Dhruv Jani and Sushant Chakraborty\, and an exclusive screening of the documentary Cape Spear Klang (2021) and talk back with Directors Ellen Waterman and Diego Pani. \nAbout Cape Spear Klang: When Delf Maria Hohmann was asked to design a sonic event for the 2018 Sound Symposium—a festival of experimental music and sound in St. John’s\, Newfoundland—he set out to create a nested environment of recorded soundscapes\, improvised music\, acoustic space\, and multi-channel sound diffusion. The site-specific work would take place at the wild and majestic Cape Spear National Historic Site. Musicians would perform in WWII bunkers set into the cliffs\, and the audience\, seated outside\, would receive the resonant echo of those concrete chambers diffused through an eight-channel sound system and accompanied by the composer’s recorded soundscapes blended with the natural seascape. Weather intervened and at short notice the event was moved to a neo-gothic Anglican cathedral in town\, drastically changing both its presentation and its signification. Cape Spear Klang documents the resilience\, inventiveness\, and improvisational artistry of Newfoundland musicians. \nLight refreshments will be provided. Massey Hall is a physically accessible venue. \nPlease RSVP to attend! \nTuesday\, October 17 to Thursday\, October 19\nOpen 12–4 pm \nFriday\, October 20\nOpen 12–8 pm (extended hours for IF 2023) \nSaturday\, October 21\nOpen 10–8 pm (extended hours for IF 2023) \nPartners and Researchers (SSHRC PG 2012-2022)\nThe 2012 SSHRC Partnership Grant “International Institute for Critical Studies in Improvisation: A Partnered Research Institute”\, led to national and international partnerships with six core research sites and one foundation partner: McGill University in Montreal; University of British Columbia in Vancouver; Memorial University of Newfoundland in St. John’s; University of Regina; University of California at Santa Barbara; and Musagetes. \nIn addition to the core research sites\, the grant brought together an international team of 50+ researchers from 20 different institutions and over 3o international partners. These partnerships connected scholars of improvisation studies in unprecedented ways via affiliations ranging from grassroots level connections between our community partners\, to formalized cooperative agreements at top levels of administration and research oversight at IICSI’s partnered institutions. \nWe’d like to thank our partners and researchers for their involvement\, dedication\, and contributions to the research. Please note that partners and researchers were added and removed throughout the ten-year duration of the grant. To get a sense of the amazing team and partners involved\, please check out the relevant pages on our website.  \nAcknowledgments\nThis exhibition has been made possible by a dedicated team of individuals and an exhibition committee. A special thanks to: Ajay Heble\, Julia Busatto\, Jordan Zalis\, Dhruv Jani\, Lucy Bilson\, Simon Flint\, Rebecca Caines\, Eric Lewis\, Shawn Van Sluys\, Ryan Ahlers\, Bonnie Thomson\, Matthew Endahl\, Ben Finley\, Ann Westbere\, and Mike Hansen. \nA special thank you to our exhibition partners: \n	\n\n		University of Guelph\n\n		\n				\n						\n		\n\n		\n		\n\n			\n				\n					\n				\n			\n\n			\n				\n					\n				\n			\n\n			\n				Image				1				of				6
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/improvising-communities-a-retrospective-exhibition/
LOCATION:Massey Hall\, University of Guelph\, 478 Gordon Street\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1G 1Y4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:IICSI events
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/Untitled-100.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20231016T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20231016T210000
DTSTAMP:20231017T151951Z
CREATED:20231006T031610Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231017T151951Z
UID:13778-1697482800-1697490000@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:Improvising Communities: A Retrospective Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Banner Image: Interconnected Relationships Mural\, Omar G Ramirez and his students\, Mural Workforce Academy\, Boyle Heights Arts Conservatory x MALDEF\, 2023\nImprovising Communities: A Retrospective Exhibition\nThe Emergence of a New Field of Interdisciplinary Inquiry\n\nOctober 16–21\, 2023\nMassey Hall\, University of Guelph \nImprovising Communities: A Retrospective Exhibition marks the celebration of a significant milestone in the emerging field of Critical Studies in Improvisation.  \nThe founding of the International Institute for Critical Studies in Improvisation (IICSI) at the University in Guelph was facilitated by a Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) Partnership Grant\, awarded in 2012. The Partnership Grant set in motion a decade of robust research and creative outputs generated by a team of scholars\, researchers\, community partners\, and arts practitioners on a local\, national\, and international scale.  \nThis exhibition illustrates the formalization of improvisation as a field of academic inquiry over the ten+ year period of the SSHRC Partnership Grant in which the institute was named (2012 to 2022) and narrates how IICSI has evolved into a central source for the collection and dissemination of research on the social implications of improvisational practices.   \nImprovising Communities invites you to explore\, inquire\, investigate\, and play with a curated selection of sample projects generated by IICSI’s network during this extended period\, from practice-based community programming to accessible new media technologies. The exhibition encourages you to consider one of IICSI’s central research questions: can improvisation be a vehicle for positive social change?  \nThis exhibition takes places October 16–21\, 2023 in Massey Hall\, at the University of Guelph.  \nTimeline designed by Carter Pryor\, 2023 \nThe Hand You Are Dealt: Improvising the Archive\nIn late 2022\, IICSI approached Studio Oleomingus\, a partner on their new SSHRC grant “Improvising Futures\,” about creating a video game which showcases the last ten years of IICSI’s research findings. Enthusiastic and up for the task\, Studio Oleomingus and IICSI set to work to determine the format\, content\, and technical specifications of the game\, meeting monthly with an advisory committee to talk through ideas\, troubleshoot potential issues\, and narrow in on a delightful player experience. \n  \nThe Hand You Are Dealt: Improvising the Archive\, 2023\, Studio Oleomingus \nAfter almost a full year of collaboration\, what emerges is a freeform digital toy: a collection of playing cards that contain within them a variety of media\, including audio tracks\, documentaries\, short films\, photographs\, recorded performances\, artwork\, and more\, from different research and creative outputs generated by IICSI and their network over the past decade. We proudly present to you\, The Hand You Are Dealt: Improvising the Archive. \nHosted on your web browser (www.improvisingthearchive.com)\, the game is accessible to anyone with an internet connection\, and it invites players to discover the intricacies of IICSI’s diverse array of researchers\, partners\, and community organizations\, all while learning a little bit about the institute’s research and activities.\n \nIICSI and Studio Oleomingus hope the game will be as fun to play as it is informative\, and hope the game leads to a wider conversation about improvisation in the exploration of digital archives and interactive art.  \nThe video game will premiere at our exhibition opening night\, on Monday\, October 16 at 7 pm at Massey Hall\, University of Guelph. \nExhibition Schedule\nMonday\, October 16\n7–9 pm | Opening Reception \nCape Spear Klang\, 2021 \nJoin IICSI for the opening reception of Improvising Communities: A Retrospective Exhibition at Massey Hall\, University of Guelph! The evening will be divided into two parts: a special premiere of our video game The Hand You are Dealt: Improvising the Archive and talk back with Studio Oleomingus creators  Dhruv Jani and Sushant Chakraborty\, and an exclusive screening of the documentary Cape Spear Klang (2021) and talk back with Directors Ellen Waterman and Diego Pani. \nAbout Cape Spear Klang: When Delf Maria Hohmann was asked to design a sonic event for the 2018 Sound Symposium—a festival of experimental music and sound in St. John’s\, Newfoundland—he set out to create a nested environment of recorded soundscapes\, improvised music\, acoustic space\, and multi-channel sound diffusion. The site-specific work would take place at the wild and majestic Cape Spear National Historic Site. Musicians would perform in WWII bunkers set into the cliffs\, and the audience\, seated outside\, would receive the resonant echo of those concrete chambers diffused through an eight-channel sound system and accompanied by the composer’s recorded soundscapes blended with the natural seascape. Weather intervened and at short notice the event was moved to a neo-gothic Anglican cathedral in town\, drastically changing both its presentation and its signification. Cape Spear Klang documents the resilience\, inventiveness\, and improvisational artistry of Newfoundland musicians. \nLight refreshments will be provided. Massey Hall is a physically accessible venue. \nPlease RSVP to attend! \nTuesday\, October 17 to Thursday\, October 19\nOpen 12–4 pm \nFriday\, October 20\nOpen 12–8 pm (extended hours for IF 2023) \nSaturday\, October 21\nOpen 10–8 pm (extended hours for IF 2023) \nPartners and Researchers (SSHRC PG 2012-2022)\nThe 2012 SSHRC Partnership Grant “International Institute for Critical Studies in Improvisation: A Partnered Research Institute”\, led to national and international partnerships with six core research sites and one foundation partner: McGill University in Montreal; University of British Columbia in Vancouver; Memorial University of Newfoundland in St. John’s; University of Regina; University of California at Santa Barbara; and Musagetes. \nIn addition to the core research sites\, the grant brought together an international team of 50+ researchers from 20 different institutions and over 3o international partners. These partnerships connected scholars of improvisation studies in unprecedented ways via affiliations ranging from grassroots level connections between our community partners\, to formalized cooperative agreements at top levels of administration and research oversight at IICSI’s partnered institutions. \nWe’d like to thank our partners and researchers for their involvement\, dedication\, and contributions to the research. Please note that partners and researchers were added and removed throughout the ten-year duration of the grant. To get a sense of the amazing team and partners involved\, please check out the relevant pages on our website.  \nAcknowledgments\nThis exhibition has been made possible by a dedicated team of individuals and an exhibition committee. A special thanks to: Ajay Heble\, Julia Busatto\, Jordan Zalis\, Dhruv Jani\, Lucy Bilson\, Simon Flint\, Rebecca Caines\, Eric Lewis\, Shawn Van Sluys\, Ryan Ahlers\, Bonnie Thomson\, Matthew Endahl\, Ben Finley\, Ann Westbere\, and Mike Hansen. \nA special thank you to our exhibition partners: \n	\n\n		University of Guelph\n\n		\n				\n						\n		\n\n		\n		\n\n			\n				\n					\n				\n			\n\n			\n				\n					\n				\n			\n\n			\n				Image				1				of				6
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/improvising-communities-a-retrospective-exhibition/
LOCATION:Massey Hall\, University of Guelph\, 478 Gordon Street\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1G 1Y4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:IICSI events
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