dyad-creative.com
Perform~ance Confer~ence | Dyad Creative
http://www.dyad-creative.com/performance-conference-2
Dyad Creative is a collaboration between Théodora Lecrinier and Hannah Turner Wallis. The Studio Project →. Perform ance Confer ence. Dove Street Studios, Norwich. Presented by Hannah Turner Wallis. In association with Isabella Martin. An evening of performance work that explores the relationship between artist and audience, and questions our response to live action. Curating the audiences experience and inciting conference. CONFER to bestow to invest with. This entry was posted in projects.
dyad-creative.com
Perform~ance Confer~ence | Dyad Creative
http://www.dyad-creative.com/performance-conference
Dyad Creative is a collaboration between Théodora Lecrinier and Hannah Turner Wallis. The Studio Project →. Perform ance Confer ence. Dove Street Studios, Norwich. Presented by Hannah Turner Wallis. In association with Isabella Martin. An evening of performance work that explores the relationship between artist and audience, and questions our response to live action. Curating the audiences experience and inciting conference. CONFER to bestow to invest with. This entry was posted in projects.
cabin-time.org
Rabbit Island, Michigan | Cabin-Time
http://www.cabin-time.org/residency-archive/rabbit-island-mi
Cabin-Time is a roaming creative residency to remote places. Deer Isle Archipelago, ME. Green River, UT. Wilderness State Park, MI. Rabbit Island, MI. Bogus Lake, MN. Porcupine Mountains, MI. Rabbit Island, Michigan. Photos by Colin McCarthy. Residency program, formally established in August 2013 by Andrew Ranville and Rob Gorski. View the group photo pool. August 23 27, 2012. 47 4 28 N, 88 16 46 W. Rabbit Island, Michigan. Available from Issue Press. September 21 October 24, 2012. Grand Rapids, Michigan.
studio308ltd.co.uk
Stitched Time | Clare Smith
http://www.studio308ltd.co.uk/projects/stitched-time
8220;My mother, whose stitching is as close to perfection as is possible, must have taught me to sew but I don’t remember it. What I do remember is having to learn machine sewing at school. As girls we had to do domestic science while the boys got to do woodwork. We made smocks, I remember, which horrified my mother because she thought they looked like maternity dresses. I took one of those smocks home to finish and was asked, with clear disapproval, “is that how you’ve been taught? Frieda van de Poll.