Documentation of the Studio



Quick documentary

by instructor : August 12th, 2008

This is a quickly assembled piece about the studio, showing some work from students, and some interview snippets. 

 



Our final event

by instructor : August 6th, 2008

A few shots of the event on Friday night, July 25th.  We were sharing the venue with Mike Rozell’s glass art exhibition.  Students mixed live on the building outside (after dark) and their work was on display inside the house.  Their 2-surface installations were playing in the stairwell all night.

 



Review

by instructor : July 23rd, 2008

So we had a few visitors, a handfull of local luminaries, come and review some of the studio work today.  Here are a few pictures of a two-surface installation, some TV and some over-the-shoulder presentations.

 



Last Day of Studio

by instructor : July 23rd, 2008

Yes, it was our last day.  It doesn’t seem possible, but two weeks have ripped by.  Today all the students had a chance to show their work to a small outside audience, see their reactions and then to hear some objective feedback.  Everybody did a great job and it was pretty fun.  I think the visitors were impressed - they should be; the students rocked it.

 

This whole studio has been pretty amazing in terms of how fast the students got hold of some very sophisticated technical tools and just started making evocative art with them.  I was/am surprised by the progress and by how much the studio was able to do in such a short time.

Now we just have the Friday event.  Anyone reading this:  please come to  our event.  The students’ work will be on display, installed in the Westcott House.  Most of the graduates will be present to talk about their work and the studio.  For details check the Westcott house home page: www.westcotthouse.org.

Thanks to the house, to all the sponsors, the amazing staff Eric, Sonya, Tom for support, Jenny for adding so much in the way of art and creative sensibility and especially Marta, who did pretty much everything.  This has been great.

Much more content about the studio will be posted here in the coming days.

 



Painting and sketching the house

by instructor : July 22nd, 2008

The students spent parts of two days, guided by Jenny Montgomery, sketching and painting various aspects of the house and grounds.  Jenny emphasized the observation of light and shadow.  There was some discussion of capturing time, as the light was observed to change swiftly as the sun moved overhead.  The efforts to quickly observe and capture gesture and simple details was helpful and I think spilled over into the videography and photography as the studio continued.

 



Visitors from Miami University

by instructor : July 21st, 2008

I just wanted to put up a few words about last week, and a few pictures.  We had a visit from John Reynolds from the Architecture department at Miami University and three of his new graduate students.  They guided the studio through a day of exploring the dynamics of the design within the Westcott House.  It was a pretty different take on the place from the kind of digital media gathering we have been doing.  The students created some pretty incredible sketches, collages and 3-D sculptures based on their exploration.  

Thanks so much to John and his team.

Some pics of the studio at work, followed by the three collages.  The collages were made by cutting up pictures of details of the house and grounds, then pasting and drawing with various media.

 

 



Visit from Peter Stafford Wilson

by instructor : July 15th, 2008

On Monday morning we had a visit from the conductor of the Springfield Symphony Orchestra. Peter Stafford Wilson spoke to the students about his musical choices for the upcoming Westcott House Centennial celebration. We were treated to an explanation of the process and reasoning behind the kind of creative decisions that a conductor makes, and listened to Michael Torke’s “Adjustable Wrench” with accompanying analysis/commentary by Peter.

This was a great chance for students to get inside the head if a working creative professional. We thank Peter for letting us have a glimpse of that process.

Students who had some experience reading music followed along over the conductor’s shoulder as we listened:

more about Peter Stafford Wilson here
more about the Springfield Symphony Orchestra here