Imaginary: Lida Winfield, Ellen Smith Ahern, Maree ReMalia, Matthew Evan Taylor and Joseph Hall. Mixing
dance/theater, storytelling, lighting design and original audio scores, IMAGINARY, is a quirky, innovative yet socially poignant work that explores perception in relationship to the imagination. Photo Credit: Jonathan Hsu.
“Trifles make the sum of life.” -Charles Dickens, David Copperfield
And so they do – those small moments that go unnoticed, day in and day out, make up the timeline on which we spend our entire lives. We are often blind to so much of our existence, whiling away time spent in between – in between adventures or important days – these throw away minutes that we often don’t realize are terribly precious. They are the pieces of life. A quiet dinner table, the ride to the grocery store, checking the mailbox, these so-called insignificant things are what occupies our
time. They are what makes our days and nights, our memories, and in the end, our time on earth.
Lida Winfield spoke to us for a second time. In 2018, we discussed Winfield’s choreography and her role as an educator among other things. When the pandemic began, she was teaching at Middlebury College. She calls it an amazing moment of events. At the time, Winfield was in the process of creating a five person collaborative
piece with other artists in residence where she was. As they were getting ready to open, Winfield got word that her father had been hospitalized with presumptive COVID. By the time she returned to campus she discovered that it had been shut down and her collaborators had to leave. Shortly after, her father died from COVID-19 after spending several weeks in ICU. This experience drove home that while this is a global event, affecting everyone on a different level, it is also an extremely personal
one. To hear how Winfield carried on after this heartbreaking turn of events – and how it gave her perspective on the difficulties of online teaching and why this safety measure is so critical – and to hear about her work and how to access it online, listen to the complete interview.
Goran Denić lives near Belgrade where he spoke to us while the pandemic rolled on. He had just completed an interview for German media before speaking to us. Denić helps run movable artist residencies; the home from where he spoke to us had housed dozens of artists over the years. The residency is intended to allow artists to travel
and work around the region. The initiative is jointly funded by a number of organizations with the aim of artistic collaboration. The program running where Denić is based is a mixed media residency with themes like Taboos in Transition, Hospitality vs. Hostility and Museum of Corruption, the most recent work begun. This last,
Museum of Corruption, began as an initiative with the idea that once corruption is placed in the museum, it becomes a museum object and loses its power to corrupt. Departments in the Museum of Corruption, which is entirely online at the moment, include Corruption of Time, Corruption of Language, Corruption of Personality and more. To hear more about this project and other works, listen to the complete interview.
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New Conversations with Fatos Ustek
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Weekly Grants &
Resources for Artists
Every week you will find updated resources here to apply for grants, find residencies and
more.
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There is a chill in the air in some parts of the world – while in others the skies burn and temperatures soar. During this year like no other, it is imperative that artists continue on their steady path, seeking...
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Opportunity abounds. Like a full harvest waiting to be picked, if you work hard to cultivate your list of opportunities it will yield up enough to keep you busy all year long. Make no mistake, this takes hard work...
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Autumn creeps ever closer, that time of year when things wind down from the heat of summer but when artists should be gearing up for their next chapter. Right now there are many grant cycles happening...
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Successful artists don’t give up. They don’t let the word no get in their way. To build an art career, one must expect and accept that there will be plenty of bumps in the road, plenty of opportunities that just weren’t...
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These are positive and / or negative reviews of galleries, art fairs, consultants, writers, online pay to play offers,
residencies and more – all written by artists so that other artists can beware of situations where institutions treat artists badly, or that end up costing the artist money or are outright scams.
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