/ODL

artist talks @ MIT's OpenDocLab

wi"p" (spring '20)

gallery view (9ish min)

- set the screen of your video conference to "gallery view"
- familiarize yourself with the "on/off" functions of your audio and video feeds to the conference
- find 3 songs that you like to dance to, get them ready to play on a device (computer, laptop, etc.)
- I will assign you into group A, B, or C

- SUBSCORE FOR GROUP A:
	- 1) turn off your video feed, turn on your audio feed
	- 2) play a song you like to dance to and dance with all the energy you can muster
	- 3) at the end of the song, turn off your video feed and turn on your audio feed
	- 4) scream a frustration or a secret into your web camera
	- 5) repeat steps 1-4
	- 6) repeat steps 1-4
	
- SUBSCORE FOR GROUP B:
	- 1) turn off your audio feed, turn on your video feed feed
	- 2) scream a frustration or a secret into your web camera
	- 3) turn off your video feed and turn on your audio feed
	- 4) play a song you like to dance to and dance with all the energy you can muster
	- 5) at the end of the song, repeat steps 1-4
	- 6) repeat steps 1-4

- SUBSCORE FOR GROUP C:
	- choose/move between the subscores for groups a and b freely

co-listening (fall '19)

  • frameworks
    • my background
    • ethics of co-creation articulated in Collective Wisdom Field Study
      • singular author/authority/process can be harmful (Executive Summary, p.4)
      • "Projects emerge from a process, and evolve from within communities and with people, rather than for or about them." (Executive Summary, p.5)
    • co-listening as feminist intervention
      • against 'genius'
      • redistributed agency

works I'm thinking about

  • The Glass Concert (1967-1970)/ Annea Lockwood

  • Teach Yourself to Fly (1974)/ Pauline Oliveros

    • Any number of persons sit in a circle facing the center. Illuminate the space with dim blue light. Begin by simply observing your own breathing. Always be an observer. Gradually allow your breathing to become audible. Then gradually introduce your voice. Allow your vocal cords to vibrate in any mode which occurs naturally. Allow the intensity to increase very slowly. Continue as long as possible naturally, and until all the others are quiet, always observing your own breath cycle.
  • Southern Voices (1980-1982)/ Sorrel Hays

  • Funk Lessons (1983)/ Adrian Piper