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DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20240927T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20240927T123000
DTSTAMP:20240927T115135Z
CREATED:20240917T235606Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240927T115135Z
UID:14945-1727434800-1727440200@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:Thinking Spaces: Jimmy Weinstein and Lilly Santon\, "Building a Safe Creativity Environment"
DESCRIPTION:Please join us on Friday\, September 27 at 11:00 AM (ET) for Thinking Spaces: “Building a Safe Creativity Environment” with Jimmy Weinstein and Lilly Santon\, a featured event in the Ontario Culture Days calendar! \n\nThis presentation will take place in person at ImprovLab\, MCKN 108 at the University of Guelph\, as well as online via IICSI’s new Twitch Stream. As always\, our Thinking Spaces events are free! \nTo attend the talk in-person or online\, RSVP via our Google Forms. \n\nMore about this talk:\nJimmy Weinstein and Lilly Santon founded Travelling School in 2002 in Padova\, Italy with the mission to teach jazz and improvisation as applied to general education. Many different projects grew out of this initiative. Drawing on their life in music and in association with other musicians\, they create workshops at jazz festivals\, music schools and regular schools.Over the course of twenty-two years since the founding of Travelling School\, Jimmy Weinstein and Lilly Santon have developed a highly effective methodology for introducing concepts taken from jazz improvisation. These concepts can be applied to general and special education situations and dynamics. Today\, their introduction to these creative and educational concepts takes the shape of their workshop: Building a Safe Creativity Environment. \n\nSome of the points that will be outlined in this workshop could be: \n1. Inclusion with the self: Self inclusion exercises (most evident when one feels embarrassed). \n2. High Energy Encouragement: Positive high energy received in the moment of improvisation as a teacher. Real ability to improvise a class\, and how to develop this. \n3. Inclusion of conflict and disruption: Using disruption as catalyst for the improvising teacher applied in real life class dynamics. \n4. The Concert Game: The game of the 30 second concert presented as a game for kids. \n5. Listening to jazz pieces and transposing the emotion into a solo or interactive performance/concert. \nMore about the Speakers:\nJimmy Weinstein / drums\, piano\, guitar\, composer \nBorn in Chicago\, Jimmy moved with his family to California and Spain. A Berklee College of Music alumnus ’89 and leader of a consortium of New York based ensembles\, Jimmy has been on the move for over 25 years\, touring the US\, Europe and Japan.  Major associations include recordings and tours with virtuoso improvisers\, Ahmed Abdullah\, Chris Cheek\, Ben Monder\, Satoko Fujii\, Alex Harding\, Jeff Parker\, Oscar Noriega\, Natsuki Tamura\, Frank Carlberg\, Elie Massias\, Dan Fox\, Sten Hostfalt\, Masa Kamaguchi and Matt Renzi.  As a sideman he has worked supporting Sheila Jordan\, Noah Preminger\, Rachel Gould\, Greg Burk\, Marcello Tonolo and Reggie Veal.  \nIn collaboration with Abdullah\, Harding and Kamaguchi he founded the adventurous and highly acclaimed melodic quartet NAM\, whose album Song of Time was voted among the top 25 all time live performances by critic Kevin Whitehead. As a leader\, his discography contains albums released by Fresh Sound\, Clean Feed\, Accurate\, CIMP\, El Gallo Rojo and Gunther Schuller’s GM Recordings.  Among Weinstein’s current projects\, is a quartet featuring the pianist extraordinaire Satoko Fujii\, in addition to trumpeter Natsuki Tamura and vocalist Lilly Santon . As a teacher\, Weinstein’s experience has brought forth TRAVELING SCHOOL PLAYJAZZ\, an organization dedicated to conducting jazz workshops where he often performs with his students.  Jimmy’s new quintet features Chris Cheek\, Ben Monder\, Tom Beckham and Dave Ambrosio\, all musicians who he has worked with over the past 25 years\, coming together to perform Jimmy’s new compositions on his latest album “Sobrinos”.  \nTraveling School Playjazz has been organizing the yearly jazz workshop at the acclaimed Mallorca Jazz Sa Pobla Festival since 2006.  Over the years Jimmy has coordinated workshops with leading artists including Lee Konitz\, Sheila Jordan\, Chris Cheek\, Dennis Irwin\, Matt Garrison\, Noah Preminger\, Dan Fox\, Toni Miranda\, Pedro Cortejosa\, Perico Sambeat\, Marco Mezquida\, Paolo Porta and Carlo Cattano.  \nLilly / Liliana Santon / vocalist \nLilly Santon trained as an architect before venturing into the world of jazz and energy therapy. After spending her formative years in Brazil\, she attended middle and high school in Padua\, Italy and received her degree in architecture from the University of Venice. \nLilly lived in New York and Munich between 1980 and 2003 where she worked as an architect and studied jazz with the likes of Barry Harris\, Sheila Jordan\, Mark Murphy and Jay Clayton. During the 80’s in New York she performed with Don Cherry’s Collective Ensemble alongside Jim Pepper\, Bob Moses\, Dennis Charles and Clarence “C” Sharpe. While deepening her musical studies\, she trained in bio-energetic therapy\, which has been integrated into her teaching methods in private classes and workshops. In 2003\, she moved to Italy and Spain\, and co-founded the Cultural Association Traveling School. Lilly performs regularly with Satoko Fujii\, Jimmy Weinstein Quintet\, and different formations of the Traveling School Band. \nProjects include Sten Hosfalt’s Microtonal Ensemble Dimensional States; vocal duet improvisations with renowned composer Constance Cooper; 2014 appereances in NYC recording sessions with Jimmy Weinstein Quintet\, Noah Preminger. New collaborations 2016/2017 include Johnny Lapio’s Porta Palace featuring Satoko Fukjii\, Giancarlo Schiaffini and Natsuki Tamura.  Story Told By Sound a multi-media project with Elie Massias and Jimmy Weinstein. \nTo attend the talk in-person or online\, RSVP via our Google Forms.
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/thinking-spaces-jimmy-weinstein-and-lilly-santon-building-a-safe-creativity-environment/
LOCATION:ImprovLab\, MacKinnon Room 108\, 87 Trent Lane\, University of Guelph\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1G 1Y4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:IICSI events,Thinking Spaces
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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: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: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: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: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: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
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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: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
END:VEVENT
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: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:20231002T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20231002T153000
DTSTAMP:20230925T180948Z
CREATED:20230925T170558Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230925T180948Z
UID:13720-1696255200-1696260600@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:Thinking Spaces: Karamjeet Dhillon\, "The Body as Knowledge Incubator: Creativity\, Improvisation & Embodiment"
DESCRIPTION:Thinking Spaces\, “The Body as Knowledge Incubator: Creativity\, Improvisation & Embodiment” is presented by Dr. Karamjeet Dhillon\, RISE-R project manager at the Centre for School Mental Health at Western University and independent scholar\, and takes place Monday\, October 2 at 2pm 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 Dr. Karamjeet Dhillon. Join us on Monday October 2 2023\, 2:00PM-3:30PM to listen to this award-winning scholar discuss and share ideas about embodied ways of sensing\, knowing and being in the world. This talk takes place in-person in ImprovLab\, University of Guelph. Registration is required to attend. Sign up now! \nMore about the speaker:\nDr. Dhillon keenly documents the nature of lived experience through sensory ethnography and post-intentionality phenomenology. Her arts-based approaches include visual research within the framework of physical activity. Moreover\, her philosophical practices are identified at the intersections of inclusive inquiry through methodologies and pedagogies. She locates her work at the juncture of qualitative investigations\, theoretical frameworks and applied research. She is passionate about researching real-world settings and working with underserved populations such as immigrants and refugees\, 2SLGBTQIA+\, global indigenous cultures and neuro-diverse populations. Dr. Dhillon has over a decade of experience in program evaluation\, organizational change management\, community curriculum programming and project development. She has actively supported local organizations to receive substantial grants to accomplish their important work.
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/thinking-spaces-karamjeet-dhillon-the-body-as-knowledge-incubator-creativity-improvisation-embodiment/
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/2023/09/Thinking-Spaces_Karamjeet-Dhillon.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20230918T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20230918T120000
DTSTAMP:20230914T130824Z
CREATED:20230914T130824Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230914T130824Z
UID:13650-1695031200-1695038400@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:Thinking Spaces: François Houle & Benoît Delbecq\, "POISE"
DESCRIPTION:Thinking Spaces\, “POISE” is presented by François Houle & Benoît Delbecq\, and takes place Monday\, September 18 at 10am ET. The talk includes a presentation followed by a guided Q&A and conversation period.  \nFor our second Thinking Spaces session\, we are excited to welcome Clarinetist François Houle and Parisian pianist and composer\, Benoît Delbecq. Join us on Monday 18 September 2023\, 10:00AM-11:30AM in the Improv Lab to listen to these two critically acclaimed improvisers discuss and share their unique approach to musical improvisation. \nThis talk takes place in-person in ImprovLab\, University of Guelph. Registration is required to attend. Sign up now! \nMore about this talk:\nAs the music unfolds\, composition and improvisation seem to flow together into a dream-like continuum where jazz and new music meet. To reach this place\, Delbecq and Houle have worked for years extending the techniques of their instruments and creating their own language of musical gestures for purposes of spontaneous musical composition. Delbecq’s contemplative piano “fabrics” draw on Cage\, Ligeti\, and African timbres and polyrhythms\, and are characterized by unexpected juxtapositions and patternings. Houle’s approach has been inspired by Evan Parker and clarinetist William O. Smith’s multi-layered sonic explorations\, and combines a thoroughgoing reinvention of the clarinet’s expressive possibilities with an exceptional melodic lyricism. The duo’s rapport results in a highly ordered yet intuitive discourse\, echoes and undercurrents of other music continually opening up new directions \nMore about the speakers:\nClarinetist François Houle has followed a musical path few others have travelled. He is a true innovator and pioneer of the instrument\, opening sonic vistas in the most imaginative ways possible. François has released CDs on several labels and has toured internationally. He has been listed on multiple occasions by Downbeat magazine as a “Talent Deserving Wider Recognition” and was hailed as a “Rising Star” in Downbeat’s Critics’ and Readers’ Polls. He is “a spectacularly versatile clarinetist who appears to have no limitations stylistically or sonically” (Mark Swed\, LA Times). \nBenoît Delbecq is a multi-awarded Parisian pianist and composer\, a trendsetter who persists in developing his ideas in a very rhythmic and multi-layered approach\, bringing the soul of jazz to John Cage’s prepared piano. Delbecq may prepare just a few strings with wood sticks\, then sit at the piano transforming the instrument into a percussion-and-piano ensemble.
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/thinking-spaces-houle-delbecq/
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/2023/09/Thinking-Spaces-Francois-and-Benoit-2023.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20230913T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20230913T180000
DTSTAMP:20230912T132931Z
CREATED:20230905T161747Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230912T132931Z
UID:13641-1694620800-1694628000@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:Thinking Spaces: Sophie Brown\, "Improvisation\, Pedagogy and Pre-Texts"
DESCRIPTION:Thinking Spaces\, “Improvisation\, Pedagogy and Pre-Texts” is presented by Sophie Brown\, and takes place Wednesday\, September 13 at 4pm ET. The talk includes a presentation followed by a guided Q&A and conversation period.  \nSophie will provide an interactive overview of Pre-Texts\, a creative teaching protocol integrating civics\, literacy\, and innovation. Based on her recently published co-authored chapter\, “Counter-Melodies and Creativity: Filling the Gaps in a Rural Colorado School\,” Sophie will reflect on the improvisatory nature of Pre-Texts and how the application of this approach can close the gap between the idealism and practicality of a creative\, collaborative\, and co-owned classroom experience.  \nJoining us for this session of Thinking Spaces is Sophie’s external respondent\, the renowned scholar\, Dr. Georgina Barton. \nThis talk will be a hybrid event\, taking place in-person in ImprovLab\, University of Guelph\, and virtually\, via Zoom (a Zoom link will be emailed to all virtual attendees on the morning of the event). Registration is required to attend in person and via Zoom. Sign up now! \nMore about this talk:\nSophie’s talk is based on her recently published chapter about Pre-Texts\, and offers an overview of the method for integrating civics\, innovation\, and literacy in the classroom. It draws on the experience of Lindsay Bobyak and Sophie Brown in using Pre-Texts with elementary students as part of Creative Roots Collective\, which provides educational opportunities in rural Colorado. Sophie will outline tangible strategies for elementary teachers and educators which can improve literacy and oracy outcomes for students and bridge the gap between the idealism and practicality of a creative\, collaborative\, and co-owned classroom experience. The presentation includes vignettes of the arts-based protocol in action and breaks down the component Pre-Texts activities. Finally\, Sophie will look at positive changes in student behaviour and provide guidance for integrating Pre-Texts into the classroom. \nMore about the speaker:\nSophie Brown is a PhD student in Critical Studies in Improvisation with a collaborative specialization in International Development Studies. In partnership with the British-Academy funded Education\, Peace\, and Politics research network\, she is conducting research on higher education pedagogy at Koya University in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq. In addition to graduate studies at the University of Guelph\, Sophie is part of the 2023 MBA Cohort at the Global Leaders Institute for Arts Innovation. The program focuses on social entrepreneurship\, cultural management\, sustainable impact\, and community development. This is the first executive MBA in Arts innovation in the world\, and Sophie is a part of the first graduating cohort.
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/thinking-spaces-sophie-brown-improvisation-pedagogy-and-pre-texts/
LOCATION:ImprovLab\, MacKinnon Room 108\, 87 Trent Lane\, University of Guelph\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1G 1Y4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:IICSI events,Thinking Spaces
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20230329T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20230329T153000
DTSTAMP:20230322T190205Z
CREATED:20230314T170950Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230322T190205Z
UID:13346-1680098400-1680103800@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:Thinking Spaces: Marsha Hinds Myrie\, "Improvisation\, Plantation Societies and Difficult Conversations"
DESCRIPTION:Thinking Spaces\, “Improvisation\, Plantation Societies and Difficult Conversations” is presented by Marsha Hinds Myrie\, and takes place Wednesday\, March 29 at 2pm ET. The talk includes a presentation followed by a guided Q&A and conversation period.  \nMarsha will present a brief overview of literature about the plantation society and the presentation of social injustice as a remnant of plantation and post coloniality.  She will be joined virtually by Barbadian film producer\, Russell Watson\, to discuss the question of using art as an advocacy tool. The presentation will conclude with a closer analysis of the activist theatre run by the National Organization of Women for its successes and possibilities.  \nThis talk takes place in-person in MacKinnon room 103\, University of Guelph. Registration is required to attend. Sign up now! \nMore about the talk:\nThe stated purpose of the International Institute for Critical Studies in Improvisation is “…to create positive social change through the confluence of improvisational arts\, innovative scholarship\, and collaborative action.” The purpose of this talk is to invite partnership and mutual sharing in Critical Studies in Improvisation to imagine uses and expansion in plantation societies.  Using art to confront complicated social issues is a long accepted and well received practice in plantation societies. Drumming\, calypso\, reggae music and parodies have been used by populations where other forms of expression such as newspapers and even social media are heavily policed to control dissent or calls for justice.  \nIn 2018\, just before the global COVID pandemic the National Organization of Women of Barbados reactivated the connection between women’s social justice organizing and art – specifically theatre.  The practice of using theatre to focus and engage women themselves and the general public has been in vogue since the 1970s when the Women’s collective\, Sistren was formed in Jamaica.  By putting Critical Studies in Improvisation in conversation with the Caribbean women’s organizing strategies I hope to encourage both groups to continue to think about the importance of their work specifically for modern day plantation societies.    \nMore about the speaker:\nMarsha Hinds Myrie’s life and work are an embodiment of dualities and intersections. She is a Barbadian/Canadian citizen with an ancestral\, cultural and intellectual home in Africa. Her career unfolds\, sometimes spectacularly and sometimes confusingly at the intersections of activism and education with research being a forced endeavour to maintain the grace of the academy. \nHinds Myrie is President’s Gender Equity Committee postdoctoral fellow with a focus on women’s leadership at the University of Guelph and the immediate past president of the National Organization of Women of Barbados. She spent 22 years developing an advocacy model to address the issues of underprivileged groups of women in Barbados and the Commonwealth Caribbean. The major focus of the work is to develop and encourage the use of victim defined services for women and girls affected by various types of gender-based violence while at the same time removing the burden of eradicating violence from women and victims by forcing a stronger lobby in policy spaces. \nThe philosophical mooring for Marsha’s interaction with equity work come partly out of her PhD research which focused on the ways in which political and cultural experiences shaped the development and creation of intellectual spaces and intellectual thought in Commonwealth Caribbean tertiary institutions. The epistemological valleys that create disciplines in the Western academy are still immensely uncomfortable for Hinds Myrie but if forced she would classify her work as womanism\, Black Studies\, philosophy as praxis and intellectual history. \nMarsha is mother to four biological children\, godmother to one amazing godbaby and aunty to scores others.
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/thinking-spaces-marsha-hinds-improvisation-plantation-societies-and-difficult-conversations/
LOCATION:online
CATEGORIES:IICSI events,Thinking Spaces
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20230315T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20230315T160000
DTSTAMP:20230309T162330Z
CREATED:20230309T162100Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230309T162330Z
UID:13333-1678888800-1678896000@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:Thinking Spaces: Rebecca Barnstaple\, "Fidelity for the Irreplicable: Improvisation in Dance and Health Research"
DESCRIPTION:Our next Thinking Spaces session\, “Fidelity for the Irreplicable: Improvisation in Dance and Health Research” is presented by Rebecca Barnstaple\, and takes place Wednesday\, March 15 at 2pm ET. The talk includes a movement demonstration and takes place in-person in our brand new ImprovLab. \nRegister through our google form to attend! \nMore about the talk:\nImprovisation is a core element of some interventions in the emerging fields of dance for health and dance therapy\, which have shown potential to slow progress or diminish symptoms of neurodegenerative diseases such as Parkinson’s and Alheimer’s. IMPROVment® is a dance-based improvisational movement practice for brain-body health developed at Wake Forest University. It has been used in several research studies\, including a recently completed RCT (2017 – 2020) and a just-launched 5-year RCT investigating dose and frequency effects of dance interventions for adults with subjective memory loss. This talk explores how tools related to improvisation can be adapted to a research-ready scientific protocol while preserving their integrity and magic – includes a demonstration. \nMore about the speaker:\nRebecca Barnstaple is the Manager of Community Programs and Engagement at Chigamik Community Health Centre in Midland\, Ontario\, a tri-cultural agency offering a range of services from Traditional Healing and social prescribing to mental health and primary care. Rebecca recently completed a PhD and Postdoctoral Fellowship at York University investigating the neurobiological effects of dance in health and disease and is adjunct faculty in the dance department. A graduate of the National Centre for Dance Therapy at Les Grands Ballets Canadiens in Montreal (NCDT 2015)\, she offers dance-therapy based programs for people with Parkinson’s\, Alzheimer’s\, and Chronic Pain\, and provides education and training in dance therapy and dance interventions for the NCDT\, Dance for Health Nova Scotia\, and IMPROVment (Wake Forest University\, North Carolina). \nRebecca co-chairs the Certification and Accreditation committee of the Dance Movement Therapy Association of Canada (DMTAC) and serves on the Research and Practice committee of the American Dance Therapy Association (ADTA)\, the Research Group of the NCDT\, and the Dance for Health committee of the International Association of Dance Medicine Science (IADMS). 
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/thinking-spaces-rebecca-barnstaple-fidelity-for-the-irreplicable-improvisation-in-dance-and-health-research/
LOCATION:ImprovLab\, MacKinnon Room 108\, 87 Trent Lane\, University of Guelph\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1G 1Y4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:IICSI events,Thinking Spaces
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20230306T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20230306T143000
DTSTAMP:20230227T184004Z
CREATED:20230210T204806Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230227T184004Z
UID:13258-1678107600-1678113000@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:Thinking Spaces: Rashida K. Braggs\, "Black Women Who Move Jazz Methodologies"
DESCRIPTION:Thinking Spaces\, the Improvisation Reading Group and Speaker Series\, considers the ways in which improvisation can provide us with new ways of thinking and acting. The group is open to all—community members\, faculty\, and students—and presents several in-person and online events per semester. \nOur next session\, “Black Women Who Move Jazz Methodologies”\, is presented by scholar Dr. Rashida K. Braggs. The talk takes place Monday\, March 6 from 1-2:30 pm in-person at MacKinnon 103\, University of Guelph\, and online via Zoom. Sign up through our registration form to attend in-person or online. A Zoom link will be sent to participants email address the day before the event. \nMore About this Talk:\nHow do you make a book move? Move to depart and return to the diverse homes of Black African diasporic women… move in the word-sound-mood tones of the jazz they perform… move readers to resonate and sense their experiences beyond static pages of academic prose. \nIn this presentation\, Rashida K. Braggs discusses her methodological moves that mix dance ethnography\, songwriting\, and playwriting in her book-performance in progress on the migrations of black women jazz performers to Paris\, France. Braggs guides us through an early chapter where she weaves her material and embodied research on the Malagasy-Senegalese singer MFA Kera and Beninese singer Angelique Kidjo as they first migrate to Paris in 1969 and 1983 respectively.  \nMore About the Speaker:\nRashida K. Braggs is Associate Professor in Africana Studies and a faculty affiliate in Comparative Literature at Williams College. Her book Jazz Diasporas: Race\, Music and Migration in Post-World War II Paris investigates the migratory experiences of African American jazz musicians in 1946-1963 Paris. In her current manuscript and accompanying performance project “Move Jazz\, Black Woman Move\,” she explores how and why black women jazz performers of African descent migrate to and from Paris from 1969-2019. \nRashida K. Braggs is also a scholar-performer who acts\, dances\, sings\, composes music and performs spoken word. Trained in Performance Studies\, Communications\, Theater Studies\, and English\, she consistently weaves performance through her pedagogy and scholarship. Jacob’s Pillow\, the Williams College Museum of Art\, the Tapir gallery and the United Solo Theatre Festival have featured her performances. 
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/thinking-spaces-rashida-k-braggs/
LOCATION:University of Guelph\, MacKinnon Building\, 87 Trent Ln\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1G 1Y4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:IICSI events,Thinking Spaces
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20230208T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20230208T143000
DTSTAMP:20230126T213837Z
CREATED:20221026T205305Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230126T213837Z
UID:13007-1675861200-1675866600@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:Thinking Spaces: "Improv for Scientists"
DESCRIPTION:Thinking Spaces: The Improvisation Reading Group and Speaker Series is pleased to present “Improv for Scientists”: Joanne O’Meara in conversation with Shoshanah Jacobs. This event will take place on Wednesday\, February 8 at 1pm (ET) in-person (MacKinnon building\, room 103\, University of Guelph) as well as streamed online (via Zoom). A moderated Q&A will follow the talk. If you are interested in attending in-person or online\, please register via this link: https://uoguel.ph/thinkingspacesimprovforscientists. A Zoom link will be sent to your email the day before the event. MORE ABOUT THIS TALK: Improvisational exercises have been a key element of theatre training for decades. With minor modification\, these same exercises can be used in training scientists (and future scientists) to be better communicators. I’ll discuss my use of improv with our physics majors at U of G and give some examples of the science-y twists we throw on the activities to suit our purposes. MORE ABOUT OUR SPEAKERS: Dr. Joanne O’Meara has been a professor in the Department of Physics at the University of Guelph for more than 20 years\, serving for almost 10 of those years as the Associate Chair (undergraduate). Joanne earned her PhD in Medical Physics from McMaster University and has since transitioned to a focus on Physics Education in her scholarly work. She is an award-winning educator with a deep commitment to her students.  Her most recent project involves the launch of a non-profit organization\, Royal City Science\, with the ultimate goal of building a new\, state-of-the-art\, science centre for southwestern Ontario. Dr. Shoshanah Jacobs takes a systems approach to answering questions that are relevant within the communities that they work with. It means that they spend a lot of time learning about other disciplines. Their research expertise includes eco-physiology and biomimetics (aka biomimicry) and they apply this training to help communities develop nature-inspired solutions to challenges. They have worked with the community of Guelph in identifying ways to accessibly reduce the use of single-use plastics\, and have tracked the way that personal-protective equipment (PPE) moves through and away from the waste stream to affect wildlife around the world. Dr. Jacobs started the BioM Knowledge Access Lab research group in 2012 to make science knowledge more accessible to community members and to engage the community in designing more inclusive ways of collecting information. They are an Associate Professor in the Department of Integrative Biology. Ask them why Gentoo Penguins are simply the best. 
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/thinking-spaces-improv-for-scientists/
LOCATION:University of Guelph\, MacKinnon Building\, 87 Trent Ln\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1G 1Y4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:IICSI events,Thinking Spaces
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20230118T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20230118T233000
DTSTAMP:20230126T211428Z
CREATED:20230112T200659Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230126T211428Z
UID:13121-1674036000-1674084600@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:Thinking Spaces: Darren O'Donnell
DESCRIPTION:Thinking Spaces: The Improvisation Reading Group and Speaker Series is pleased to present “Chance as Co-Director: Working with the Whims of Children\,” a talk by Darren O’Donnell. This event will take place on Wednesday\, January 18 at 10am (ET)\, online (via Zoom). A moderated Q&A will follow the talk. \nIf you are interested in attending\, please register via this link: https://uoguel.ph/tsdarrenodonnell. A Zoom link will be sent to your email the day before the event. \nMORE ABOUT THIS TALK: \nIn this talk\, Darren will discuss how a number of projects developed and presented through Mammalian Diving Reflex—the research-art atelier that Darren directs—were conceived through chance encounters with kids\, and then how they were shaped and how they evolved in response to the interest of the kids. \nDarren will discuss how Mammalian Diving Reflex works with young people in the long term\, accommodating the specific youth who come to us\, rather than through an audition or hiring process. There’s a good deal of chance and\, in fact\, faith in that. \nDarren will also introduce a model he uses to evaluate the various dimension of rigour in a project and\, specifically\, how social rigour relies on being very open to chance\, as opposed to physical rigour (think cirque du soleil as the ultimate in physical rigour) where chance is absolutely the enemy—in performance\, at least. \nMORE ABOUT OUR SPEAKER: \nDarren O’Donnell is an urban cultural planner\, novelist\, essayist\, playwright\, filmmaker\, performance director and the Artistic and Founding Director of Mammalian Diving Reflex. His books include: Your Secrets Sleep with Me (2004); Social Acupuncture (2006)\, which argues for an aesthetic of civic engagement; and Haircuts by Children and Other Evidence for a New Social Contract (2018)\, which proposes the cultural sector as a site to pilot a new social contract with children. His performance works include Haircuts by Children\, All the Sex I’ve Ever Had\, The Children’s Choice Awards and Teentalitarianism. His model for long-term collaboration with young people is being applied in London\, Bochum\, Milan\, and Berlin. He is interested in expanding and rethinking the role that cultural intuitions play in the world\, particularly around long-term engagement and collaborative friendships that extend into the community. \nHis institutional collaborators have included the Royal Botanic Gardens Victoria\, the Humboldt Forum\, the Tate Modern and Tate Britain\, the West Kowloon Cultural District\, the London International Festival of Theatre\, the Metropolitan Region of Rhine-Neckar\, the Schauspielhaus Bochum and the Portland Institute of Contemporary Art.
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/thinking-spaces-darren-odonnell/
LOCATION:online
CATEGORIES:IICSI events,Thinking Spaces
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20221116T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20221116T143000
DTSTAMP:20230126T211553Z
CREATED:20221026T200640Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230126T211553Z
UID:13003-1668603600-1668609000@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:Thinking Spaces: Eric Lewis
DESCRIPTION:Thinking Spaces: The Improvisation Reading Group and Speaker Series is pleased to present “Improvising the Archive: Medea Electronique’s Archive of Digital Art\,” a talk by Eric Lewis. This event will take place on Wednesday\, November 16 at 1pm (ET) in person (The IICSI House\, 9 University Avenue E.\, University of Guelph) as well as streamed online (via Zoom). A moderated Q&A will follow the talk. Please note that Eric will be joining this session online. \nIf you are interested in attending online\, please register via this link: https://uoguel.ph/thinkingspacesericlewis. A Zoom link will be sent to your email the day before the event. \nMORE ABOUT THIS TALK: \nEric will discuss assorted ways the digital domain opens up archives for more improvisatory ways of interacting with their contents\, and will describe the Medea Electronique archive\, and the thinking behind the recent project by co-authored by Eric called From Fruit to Root\, concerning this archive\, and theories concerning interactive archive and improvisational archive theory. \nMORE ABOUT OUR SPEAKER: \nEric Lewis is a professor of Philosophy at McGill University\, who specializes in the philosophy of improvisatory arts. He is also the President of AIM (Arts in the Margins)\, the Director of LUC (Laboratory of Urban Culture)\, and sits on the managment committee of IICSI. He is a member of Medea Electronique\, and an active improvisor on brass and electronics.
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/thinking-spaces-eric-lewis/
LOCATION:The IICSI House – 9 University Ave\, 9 University Ave E\, Guelph\, Ontario\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Thinking Spaces
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