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SESSION 17:
lost is found

 

SATURDAY, 28 May 2022

Time Zones for Students (2020)
Time Zones for Students (2021)
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16:00 - 17:00 UTC

The Open Window Series (Public)
A Talk
with Tia Halliday

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17:15 - 20:00 UTC


SUNDAY, 29 May 2022

Time Zones for Students (2020)
Time Zones for Students (2021)
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13:45 - 14:45 UTC

TT all student Meeting

**tt All student meeting Rescheduled for June 5

15:00 - 20:00 UTC


Descriptions

Lost is Found: Defining New Positionalities in Creative Research
A workshop with Tia Halliday

A step inside, away, behind or on top yields new viewpoints. What does this new stance (a new lens, surface, or gesture) feel like? What strikes you about the view from here? In coming to terms with this new perspective, a re-orientation emerges; Here, the use of new language, discourse, methods, and questions reveals insight that may have never been uncovered without this experience.

Taking subtle cues from Queer Phenomenology (Ahmed), this comprehensive workshop will ask participants to engage in a process of letting go of pre-inscribed orientations to and within their work, to frame new questions. Participants will engage in a series of rigorous exercises (both personally and collaboratively), in addition to one-on-one dialogue with the Tia Halliday to develop fruitful strategies for defining new positionalities, questions, and vocabularies for their creative research.

The workshop will require participants to read a short excerpt of a required text, conduct a short pre-workshop assignment and engage in workshop activities.

Tia Halliday’s Bio | Site

Syllabus




The Open Window Series

A talk
with Tia Halliday:
The Kinesthetic Pictorial

In this presentation, artist Tia Halliday will be discussing her current work in dance-based performance, photography, drawing and painting. Stemming from a kinesthetic inquiry into the nature, experience and history of painting and drawing, Tia asks questions that challenge common orientations to two-dimensional art. Such questions include the sensorial and bodily dimensions of images and what it would be like to step inside the skin of a painting.
Tia Halliday’s Bio | Site

Register for the Public talk

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