Dean’s letter: Learning how much is possible even in the most trying of circumstances

new dean for the school of the arts, media, performance and design
Sarah Bay Cheng

Greetings from AMPD, the School of the Arts, Media, Performance & Design at York University!

Sarah Bay-Cheng
Sarah Bay-Cheng

Over the past 12 months, it’s been a bit of a whirlwind for our school as we’ve developed new phrases and coinages to respond to the continuously changing circumstances of life with the novel coronavirus SARS-CoV-2. Perhaps the famous of these covidioms is the reminder that one is “on mute.” (Something I’m still struggling with, to be honest.) Close behind it is the ubiquitous refrain of the need to pivot to the new normal. As a dedicated educator, advocate and enthusiast for our school and its students, I think about these concepts a lot. What does the recent and continuing shift mean for our school? How can we help our students to navigate, survive and thrive in this new normal? What can we do today to get ready for tomorrow?

One of the most important lessons from our experience at York has been learning how much is possible, even in the most trying of circumstances. It is also clear that we cannot simply go back to the way things were, but must continue to expect change in the future. This is a unique opportunity. Amid all of the recent and ongoing challenges, there is a growing sense of optimism that collectively, we might be able to work together not only to adapt to these changes already in motion, but also to use this unusual moment in history to create a better future.

This is why we’re excited for the role that AMPD programs will play in the new University Academic Plan (UAP) as we empower our students, faculty and staff in their communities across Canada and beyond. Our service to the UAP and its emphasis on York’s role in meeting the challenge of the United Nations Sustainability Development Goals is simple: great art for the greater good.

Art → Media → Great                                            for the Greater Good Performance → Design →

To achieve this, we build on our past success and look forward to a dynamic future in which our faculty and students create new opportunities for themselves and the world around them. As a diverse community, we focus on collaboration, connection, computation and creativity to achieve these ends.

We continue what has made York a leading university in fine arts for more than 50 years: research and teaching at the forefront of Canadian art, design and culture. Home to many of Canada’s original disciplinary programs, our Faculty combines exceptional education across our founding disciplines – such as curatorial studies, dance, film and media, jazz music and theatre – with cutting-edge research in emerging areas such as design and healthcare, digital media and sustainability, as well as multi-disciplinary projects that advance social inclusion and equity, including major partnership grants in Inuit cultural heritage, media history archives and community and performance creation across the Americas.

Over the last five years, AMPD researchers averaged $1.2 million in annual Tri-Council grants, with a 52 per cent success rate for other competitive funding sources and over $700,000 in annual commissions, arts grants and other non-council awards. Sensorium Centre for Art + Technology brought AMPD researchers to ISEA International, one of the world’s most prominent international arts and technology events. In the past year, AMPD students have earned prestigious Banting Fellowships and the Order of Ontario. Professor Freya Olafson was one of the recipients of the Sobey Art Award for 2020, and Professor Christina Petrowska Quilico received the Order of Canada in December in recognition of her lifetime achievements in advancing classical music and music education in Canada. More recently, AMPD alumni, faculty and students collaborated on the innovative series 21 Black Futures, a ground-breaking theatre collaboration between Obsidian Theatre and CBC Arts that has brought 21 new televised plays about the future of Blackness to audiences nationwide. Current undergraduate and graduate students in Theatre@York participated in 21 Black Futures as both critics and mentors.

Even amid the challenges of the pandemic, AMPD faculty are working to expand opportunities for our students, including:

  • collaborations, such as the recent work between art history students and ArtGate VR (founded by Visual Art alumnus Brendan McNaughton) to reconstruct the AGO’s Tunirrusiangit exhibition of Inuit art so that it is accessible to distanced viewers via virtual reality;
  • expanded connections between teaching and research, imagination and industry at York Studios at Cinespace, professional studios for film and media arts, including new techniques in virtual production design and interactive storytelling, among others;
  • enhanced performance facilities and studios at the Keele Campus to support digital production across disciplines and to ensure that all interested students have experience in the computational changes that are shaping the arts.

We continue to expand opportunities for experiential education (EE) and work-integrated learning, both in the current programs at the Keele Campus and as part of our new program in Creative Technologies in development for the Markham Centre Campus.

As the last year has shown us, change is constant. Indeed, perhaps the most commonly used word in 2020 (other than “mute”) was creative. Creative teams across music, drama, film and dance have sustained our spirits during the long weeks of lockdowns and quarantines, even as they watched venues close. Artists have made us laugh in the midst of the pandemic and called for action in the face of ongoing inequities. Designers have brought their research and communication skills to plan for more sustainable and livable communities in the post-pandemic world, while the art and cultural historians are carefully tracking these events to ensure that these lessons will not be lost.

In a world that is quickly changing and in which the future of work will continue to evolve, creativity across all domains, disciplines, communities and cultures will be what empowers new generations of AMPD students to create a future in which we all can thrive.

Sarah Bay-Cheng
Dean, AMPD

C4 crew creates an exciting, interdisciplinary summer experience for students

C4 students meet up pre pandemic FEATURED image for YFile

If the Cross-Campus Capstone Classroom (C4) piqued your curiosity, but you’ve been wary of committing to a two-semester project, rejoice: C4, the summer edition, is here.

C4 is the award-winning initiative that brings students from different disciplines together to work in teams on solutions to real-life problems with a variety of partners and mentors. During the academic year, the course runs for two semesters. In 2020-21, the second year of C4, 160 students are working in 24 teams on a project they selected from among 70 possibilities.

Danielle Robinson
Danielle Robinson

“We’re growing, diversifying and trying to mix it up a bit,” said Danielle Robinson, associate professor of dance in the Faculty of Arts, Media, Performance & Design (AMPD) and one of the co-founders of C4. “The summer session will involve the entire class of 50 students working together on one project in partnership with the MaRS Discovery District. For 40 of the students, it will be an introduction to interdisciplinary teamwork. We are saving the other 10 spots for C4 alumni who will hone their management and leadership skills.”

Franz Newland

Franz Newland, associate professor in the teaching stream at the Lassonde School of Engineering and the other co-founder of C4, said, “It’s exciting to have those who have been through it before help those who have not. It changes the dynamic. We’re looking to have an impact, and we’re looking to the management group to drive the project forward.”

The C4 alumni management group acquired project management skills from their previous C4 experience. They will also receive guidance from Zemina Meghji, project manager and analyst for the Lassonde Educational Innovation Studio housed within the Lassonde School of Engineering.

“It’s important for the C4 alumni management team to be mindful of the management styles they choose,” said Meghji. “They need to know the origins of these practices; some grew out of slavery. We want to guide and coach them to be the best leaders they can be. It’s part of their development.”

Robinson is excited that the students will be working closely with MaRS. “We were looking for a partner who was innovative and invested in collaborating with students on creative problem solving,” she said.

The challenge the student team will be addressing was inspired by the pandemic. In looking at community spaces that were impacted during the pandemic, it became apparent that there are generally only two- or three-season spaces available for the public, so the task will be to explore how it is possible to set public space up to foster community connections year-round.

C4 students meet to plan their projects
C4 students meet to plan their projects (the image was taken prior to the COVID-19 pandemic)

Andrea Kalmin, a course director in the Department of Social Sciences in the Faculty of Liberal Arts & Professional Studies, will serve as the academic director for the summer C4 pilot.

“Being part of a C4 teaching team is a unique experience,” said Kalmin “It’s more about mentoring, shaping, facilitating and guiding, rather than lecturing. It will be all about creating a structure to facilitate their journey.”

That structure will take the shape of a weekly, three-hour virtual session for the entire group that will include time for a meeting and break-out sessions. The students will also gather virtually outside of class time to work on the project each week.

“In this case, because of the compressed format, we’ve chosen the project partner and the particular focus,” said Kalmin, “but there is still space for the students to make the project their own. It lends itself to a variety of interests and to interdisciplinarity. They can approach the challenge as they see fit.”

The C4 team will check in with students at “pivotal points” in the project, and there will also be frequent virtual meetings where the students can connect with the instructors, mentors and project partners about their progress.

The team has held two town halls to answer questions about the summer version of C4, with the last one scheduled for March 25 at 11 a.m. Applications to participate in summer C4 are due on March 26. There are more interested students than spaces, because the program has developed the reputation for being exciting, challenging and transformative. Those selected will be required to do some preparatory work for the upcoming project.

“When Danielle and I created C4, we were excited about the potential for cross-disciplinary collaboration, but we were most excited about the potential for participants to bring all of themselves to the space,” said Newland. “We want them to recognize that their discipline adds to their toolkit, but it doesn’t define them. We are all more than we realize.”

This alchemy can produce remarkable results, so stay tuned.

By Elaine Smith, special contributing writer to Innovatus

Grad students share challenges and successes of creation during the pandemic

Creative Shift FEATURED image showing Ella Dawn McGeogh basement studio
Creative Shift FEATURED image showing Ella Dawn McGeogh basement studio

Creative Shifts proved that creativity is alive and well at York University’s School of the Arts, Media, Performance & Design (AMPD), despite the challenges of the pandemic.

The November 2020 event brought together graduate students from across AMPD to share stories of transforming their research and creation projects in response to the COVID-19 restrictions.

Laura Levin
Laura Levin

“We want to think together across the arts,” said Laura Levin, AMPD’s associate dean of research, during her introductory remarks at the Creative Shifts event. “We feel this is vital for understanding the array of methods that this moment might be opening up. And we also want to think together about how we might support one another in this very unusual year.”

Despite the challenges of working alone with little opportunity for the usual cross-pollination that takes place in hallways, studios and around water coolers, these shifts led to fruitful research experiments and unexpected discoveries in artmaking.

The event, co-organized by Levin and Sunita Nigam, an AMPD postdoctoral researcher, offered wonderful stories and fascinating insights about creating.

A workshop reckoning and pivot

For Scott Christian, a master’s student in music composition, the pandemic necessitated turning around a carful of actors and returning to Canada from a New York state park in mid-March.

His off-Broadway workshop of Dead Reckoning, co-created with director and lyricist Lezlie Wade, had been cancelled due to public health closures.

Christian then received funding to film 30 minutes of the piece and present it online. The video launched in October 2020 and has been seen by more than 2,000 people.

Scott Christian Dead Reckoning image for YFile special issue
Christian, bottom left, filmed Dead Reckoning in the summer of 2020 when COVID-19 cases were in a lull

The camera as a dance partner

“If we were going to present a developmental workshop for an audience,” said Christian, “we might hit 100 people. So, the fact that we were able to create something that reached 2,000 people this year feels like a real victory.”

The camera also became a new collaborator for Meera Kanageswaran, a master of fine art student in dance, as she transitioned to a filmed version of her Bharatanatyam choreography, documenting this Southern Indian dance form.

“In Bharatanatyam,” said Kanageswaran, “we use facial expressions and movements of isolated body parts. The dancers adjusted pretty quickly to adjusting their respective cameras to focus different body parts – either their face, their feet, or their hands. I think the camera now has become a dancing partner, not just a documenting device, and that’s something I would like to retain in my practice.”

Kanageswaran, centre-top, found that the camerawork made necessary by Zoom “actually helped me focus on those movements and work on them”
Kanageswaran, centre-top, found that the camerawork made necessary by Zoom “actually helped me focus on those movements and work on them”

She notes the initial trouble of finding rehearsal space for each dancer to rehearse in, but reflected that this led to exploring other forms of physical expression. “Bharatanatyam uses strong footwork, which produced some unhappy neighbours. That resulted in us changing our choreography a little bit.”

Unintended basement collaborations

Ella Dawn McGeough, a PhD student in visual arts, was nearly an unhappy neighbour when her landlord proposed turning their basement into an extra apartment amid the pandemic.

McGeogh’s basement-turned-studio, home to “various cleaning supplies, buckets and brooms, a large washer dryer, four or five crock pots filled with beeswax”
McGeough’s basement-turned-studio, home to “various cleaning supplies, buckets and brooms, a large washer dryer, four or five crock pots filled with beeswax”

More than just a storage space, the basement was a generative place to create in the first few months of the pandemic before she returned to her studio at York University.

“The basement’s floors had long been a feature of fascination,” said McGeough, “a chaotic mystery of poorly poured layers of uneven concrete, the buckle and bend and fragmented sections of exposed dirt.”

She could even spot 30-year-old paw prints from a resident cat, Charlie. The basement was never made into an apartment and these non-human entities that she discovered in her art spaces over the last year became, in her words, “unintended collaborators, but I was also thinking of them as viewers.”

Taking theatre to Zoom

For Lisa Marie DiLiberto, a PhD student in theatre and performance studies, these broader audiences have become a recent focus of her work engaging the imaginations and aspirations of young people in her role as artistic director of Theatre Direct.

“One of the questions I had at the beginning of this pandemic,” said DiLiberto, “was how can theatre help young people heal through this traumatic experience of living through the pandemic through these last few months?”

One of her answers was Eraser: A New Normal, a digitally touring and Zoom-produced show that touches on issues that young people are facing in the pandemic.

Four performers from Eraser: A New Normal was created and co-produced by the company of Eraser Theatre and has seen its virtual school tour extended due to popular demand
Four performers from Eraser: A New Normal. The production was created and co-produced by the company of Eraser Theatre and has seen its virtual school tour extended due to popular demand

The show’s digital nature has led to a broader and more geographically diverse audience. “[We’ve] reached audiences across the country or internationally, whereas that might not have been such an easy possibility to begin with,” said DiLiberto.

Accessible code illuminates environmental content

Sarah Vollmer and Racelar Ho, PhD students in computational arts, have shifted original research-creation plans by expanding the participatory scope of their virtual reality project Luminiferous Funeral, which discusses the invisible erosions brought on by climate change.

Vollmer and Ho have used tools like Google Collab and Miro to make their code accessible and allow participants to submit their own environmental content to Luminiferous Funeral.

“The original point,” said Ho, “was to break through the privilege of museums and galleries, so we tried to make our work more digital and flexible so audiences could participate in our work as content generators.”

Vollmer and Ho used Miro, a digital and collaborative mind mapping tool, to plan out Luminiferous Funeral’s mechanics
Vollmer and Ho used Miro, a digital and collaborative mind mapping tool, to plan out Luminiferous Funeral’s mechanics

The two have found more time to write about their work, which led them to present on how they handled their constant flow of climate data and content at a conference on information and online environments.

“That work transfers immediately into the pandemic state,” said Vollmer. “So, we’ve been able to help in ways that we didn’t think we could.”

Using augmented reality to situate artifacts

Tarachansky used a 3D scanner to create digital copies of artifacts, like a hat mould, from St. John’s Ward
Tarachansky used a 3D scanner to create digital copies of artifacts, like a hat mould, from St. John’s Ward

After initial setbacks in her PhD work, Lia Tarachansky, a PhD student in cinema and media studies, developed her research interests through a newly created Mitacs grant supporting her Toronto-based augmented reality (AR) project in the historic St. John’s Ward. Archeologists uncovered the artifacts in 2015 and transported them to London, Ont. Tarachansky hoped to use AR to situate them back home.

COVID-19, though, has continued to alter the project. “Through a series of trial and error I was able to get a 3D scanner from [CMA professor] Dr. Caitlin Fisher,” said Tarachansky. She then scanned artifacts like a hat block (mould), a memorial plate of Uncle Tom’s Cabin, and a children’s doll, which will allow her to place the digital copies in Toronto via AR.

The current social challenges are just as serious as the technical ones and have led to important discoveries about the nature of research, something that is all too often taken for granted as an autonomous endeavour.

“Without access to people, without the ability to interact and brainstorm together,” said Tarachansky, “working in isolation is bringing out the understanding of how collaborative academic research is, even when pre-COVID we used to think it was very isolated and self-driven.”

Levin agreed that events like this one aimed to bring makers and thinkers together to support each other. “Many of us are having conversations within our own disciplinary silos right now,” said the associate dean, “about how to wrestle with the conditions of distanced research, both intellectually, creatively, and in other modes.”

Judging by the lively discussion that followed the presentations, the event met its goal of sparking new connections across AMPD.

By Thomas Sayers, MA student in theatre & performance studies at AMPD

YCAR supports performance and workshop that explores Chinese Canadian family dynamics

woman computer webinar

A performance and workshop inspired by research on son preference and daughter discrimination among Chinese Canadians will run beginning March 20, and is a project supported by the Canada-China Initiatives Fund at York University and the Canada Research Chair in Gender, Justice and Development at the University of Guelph.A poster for the play Sister Brother supported by YCAR

The project “姐姐,弟弟 Sister, Brother: A Performance & Workshop” is inspired by playwright Lauren Chang’s undergraduate research on the topic. Chang is a fourth-year undergraduate student at the University of Guelph studying anthropology, and is also a writer, performer and peer educator at Sex Education by Theatre and the creator and team lead at Onions Don’t Cure COVID.

This project is her first foray into playwriting and directing, and is an opportunity for attendees to reflect on their experiences in their families and communities.

“姐姐,弟弟 Sister, Brother: A Performance & Workshop” follows a pair of siblings who have a difficult conversation about what it means to be a daughter and son in a Chinese Canadian family.

The siblings are acted by Jobina Sitoh and Franco Pang. Jobina is an up-and-coming actor and first-year student in York University’s Theatre Program. With a love for performance and storytelling across various mediums, she hopes to make strides in the artistic community as a young female creator of colour.

Franco (he/him) is a production and stage manager, designer, creator, and performer. He is a recent recipient of the 2019 Prix Rideau for Emerging Artist in design and creation. Franco also co-created, performed, and designed Light(less), a non-verbal show, which received an outstanding new work nomination from the Prix Rideau Awards.

As Chang started writing the play in 2020, there were no concerns about how the work would translate to the small screen – she designed it to be performed on Zoom.

“I created this play as a way to disseminate my research findings and start a conversation, through theatre, about gender discrimination in my community,” said Chang. “We’ve had a lot of fun playing with the capabilities of Zoom to play with audience interaction and immersiveness through the performance.”

The performance and accompanying workshop will be held on March 20 and 27 and April 3 and 10. To reserve a spot, visit https://www.eventbrite.ca/e/sister-brother-a-performance-workshop-tickets-143805789989.

Following the virtual performance, audience members will be invited to create their own short plays on the topic of gender discrimination that will be performed by the actors during the workshop.

“I look forward to seeing what we all create together,” said Chang. “Hopefully, this will be a space where we can share our stories and imagine brighter futures.”

CERLAC recognizes exceptional scholarship on the Latin American diaspora in Canada

Image announcing Awards

York University PhD student Tamara Toledo (Department of Visual Art and Art History) and MFA film student Jean Pierre Marchant (Department of Cinema and Media Arts) were named the recipients of the 2020 TLN Telelatino Award from the Centre for Research on Latin America and the Caribbean (CERLAC). An honorable mention was also awarded to PhD student Asheda Dwyer (Graduate Program in Social and Political Thought).

The TLN Telelatino Award is awarded annually to an undergraduate or graduate student at York University on the basis of outstanding work on the experiences of the Latin America diaspora in Canada. The prize was established in 2009 by a donation made to York University by Telelatino (TLN), a television channel that broadcasts multicultural programs of interest to the Latin American and Italian communities throughout Canada. Two prizes of $1,000 each are awarded annually.

Tamara Toledo
Tamara Toledo

Toledo, a doctoral student in art history and visual culture, uses an interdisciplinary approach to explore issues of power and representation. She is an accomplished curator, arts administrator, and visual artist. She is co-founder of the Allende Arts Festival and the Latin American – Canadian Art Projects (LACAP), a not-for-profit arts organization that implements art projects that promote Latin American art in Canada. At LACAP she has curated numerous solo and group exhibitions as well as the organization’s Latin American Speakers Series. She has presented at conferences in Montreal, New York, Vancouver, Chicago and Toronto, and her writing has appeared in ARM Journal, C Magazine, Fuse and Canadian Art. Toledo is currently the curator/director of Sur Gallery, Toronto’s first gallery space dedicated to the implementation of art projects showcasing and promoting contemporary Latin American artistic practices.

“Toledo’s essay ‘Space and Recognition: Curating Latin American Art in Toronto’ documents a very impressive body of curatorial work. The essay is compelling, frank, and connects autobiographical experience to broader themes of state power and surveillance, illustrating a sophisticated theorization of both context and aesthetic expression,” said a member of the CERLAC Awards Committee.

Marchant is a second-year MFA student in film whose work touches on class, politics and complicated histories of migration and exile. He uses his own family archive, found footage, narration, and the remediation of media from the forces of commerce, politics and culture to better understand the hopes, dreams and disappointments of his migrant parents.

His award-winning entry, the short film A Life on the Borderlands, explores the experiences of his father, who immigrated to Montreal from Chile in the early 1970s after a hard-scrabble life on the streets of Santiago. “Marchant’s work spoke to us in varied and deeply moving ways. We were impressed by the film’s creative use of materials (particularly home movies and slides) and aesthetic sophistication, as well as its outstanding musical score,” said a member of the CERLAC Awards Committee.

“On behalf of everyone in AMPD, I am delighted to congratulate the recipients of the TLN Telelatino Award for their outstanding contributions to representations of the Latin American diaspora in Canada. These award-winning projects demonstrate the significant impact that the arts and visual culture make in society and the critical importance of diverse representation across media and audiences. My thanks and congratulations to them and their faculty on this recognition from CERLAC. I look forward to what they will do next,” said Sarah Bay-Cheng, dean of the School of the Arts, Media, Performance and Design.

Asheda Dwyer
Asheda Dwyer

Dwyer, a doctoral student in social and political thought in the stream of Black studies and theories of race and racism, is jointly pursuing a graduate diploma in curatorial studies and visual culture at York. She is also co-founder of a communal library project located in northern Chile called La Biblioteca de Liberación Negra [Library of Black Liberation], which operates as a free, multilingual, communal literacy space for Black and Indigenous peoples.

Her prize-winning poem “A Personal Dispatch from Slavery in Chile” examines Chile’s history of whiteness, exploring the country’s racial hierarchy as a primary feature of its modernity. Dwyer eloquently describes her work as “an offering: an ode to the memory of one of the earliest migration of Africans, whose arrival into centuries of forced enslavement, and their subsequent survival, etch the Andean interiors of the longest country in the world.” Dwyer’s work “particularly stood out for its affective impact and aesthetic achievement,” said a member of the CERLAC Awards Committee.

The prize-winning entries have been made available online as part of CERLAC’s TLN Telelatino Winning Essays Series.

Grad student and alumna’s pandemic-themed play helping young audiences

Student Phoebe Lawson-Morrow watches the online play from home. Photo credit: Martin Morrow
Student Phoebe Lawson-Morrow watches the online play from home. Photo credit: Martin Morrow

York University’s School of Arts, Media, Performance & Design (AMPD) undertakes extraordinary work in extraordinary times. It has found imaginative new ways to lead others through the pandemic and novel opportunities for community and collaborations, demonstrating that resilience and perseverance can carry us through the current challenges.

Lisa Marie DiLiberto, an AMPD grad student (MA ’19) and artistic director of Theatre Direct, has commissioned and co-produced a true-to-life play about COVID-19 for young audiences: ERASER: A New Normal. The production, created and co-produced by Eraser Theatre, and co-written and co-directed by York Theatre alumna Sadie Epstein-Fine (BA ’16) with Bilal Baig, is designed for kids in Grades 5 to 8. Cast members Christol Bryan (York alum), Marina Gomes, Nathan Redburn (York alum, BFA ’17), Tijiki Morris and Tony Perpuse were also co-writers.

ERASER was originally a play, set for an October-to-December run in 2020, but the pandemic necessitated a major pivot. This gave birth to a whole new kind of production – one that has been met with tremendous success.    

Sadie Epstein-Fine and Lisa Marie DiLiberto
Sadie Epstein-Fine and Lisa Marie DiLiberto

ERASER is an answer to the question: ‘How can theatre help young people heal from the traumatic experience of these past months?’ It’s an offering to help teachers initiate these important conversations with students. We hope it will be a catalyst for young people as they search for ways to unpack feelings of isolation, anxiety and the impacts of this new virtual world,” DiLiberto explains. “The goal is to help young people feel less alone.”

“The kids relate to what the characters are going through, like being cooped up in your home with all your siblings, being super bored, losing a loved one and having to go through the grief process in this weird time,” Epstein-Fine adds.

The pre-recorded, 45-minute play, watched by children in live classroom settings together and in virtual classes, is not a passive encounter. A live digital talkback completes the experience, allowing audience members to speak directly with the show’s creators after the play.

The goal of ERASER is to help young people feel less alone
The goal of ERASER is to help young people feel less alone

Story follows kids traversing through the pandemic

ERASER follows the lives of six students navigating their way through COVID-19. “They dance, sing and vlog their way through the struggles of the COVID-19 pandemic, finding new ways to connect while fantasizing about how things could be different in this ‘new normal,’” says the Theatre Direct press release.

The characters in the production face losing loved ones, isolation from friends and more while coming to terms with how to stay safe and socially distant.

Pivoting in the face of COVID-19

ERASER was originally presented as part of Why Not Theatre’s RISER 2019 Project. Next, it was in development in Theatre Direct’s season with support from Young People’s Theatre and Roseneath Theatre. That same year, it was nominated for five Dora Mavor Moore Awards, which honours theatre, dance and opera productions in Toronto.

Student Phoebe Lawson-Morrow watches the online play from home. Photo credit: Martin Morrow
Student Phoebe Lawson-Morrow watches the online play from home. Photo credit: Martin Morrow

Epstein-Fine explains the massive pivot they took when COVID-19 hit: “The live show was supposed to tour in the autumn, but that became impossible. Theatre Direct encouraged us to create a digital ERASER to share with schools virtually. Together, we decided not to try to translate the live show to a digital platform, but instead put the characters from ERASER in the pandemic, having to attend online school, not being able to see their friends.”

The team had only three short months [July to September 2020] to pull it all together, including writing, rehearsal, re-writing and filming, all of which happened over Zoom, Epstein-Fine recounts.

Interestingly, they opted not to feature the words “COVID” or “pandemic” in the script, but instead to concentrate on the feelings the characters are experiencing.

“The performers developed these characters over many years, so they’re real and deep. This work is reflected in how honestly and authentically they’re able to navigate the huge emotions,” Epstein-Fine explains.

Applicable across the curriculum

With themes of culture, identity, community, gender, sexuality, mental health and more, this production would be applicable in almost any educational setting. Existing curriculum for which this production would naturally fit include social studies, dramatic arts, critical thinking and student development.

Two livestream classroom talkbacks – discussions surrounding the themes with members of the creative team – are part of this. At the end of each talkback, Psychotherapist Melissa Nigrini runs a mindfulness session, which helps the students process the issues the play raises and helps them cope with the challenges of life during COVID-19.

Enhanced by educational enrichment package

ERASER: A New Normal is accompanied by an educational enrichment package with activities and exercises related to the play’s themes. The package, purchased by schools as part of their booking, also includes six additional videos that follow each of the characters.

High praise from students and teachers

Students have responded resoundingly favourably to ERASER – a clear indication that it resonates with its young audience. Here’s what a few had to say about the live version of ERASER:

  • “It talked about… life really and life isn’t just a big fairytale, it’s got some hard moments.”
  • “I also like how each of the characters was from a different place, because I…relate…”
  • “It’s really different from all the other plays that I saw. Just really different and really nice…I felt like I was talking to them myself.”
  • “…one of the best play[s] I’ve ever seen.”

Teachers also saw great value: “The story was all the more dramatic for this audience because of their age; it was about first kisses, family tragedy and adolescent self discovery, the very things that are so important to them personally,” said Mary O’Connell (BEd ’89), a retired teacher from the Toronto District School Board (TDSB), about the live version.

To learn more about ERASER, visit the website. For more on Theatre Direct, visit the website. To read a related article in The Star, visit the website.

To learn more about Research & Innovation at York, follow us at @YUResearch; watch our new animated video, which profiles current research strengths and areas of opportunity, such as Artificial Intelligence and Indigenous futurities; and see the snapshot infographic, a glimpse of the year’s successes.

By Megan Mueller, senior manager, Research Communications, Office of the Vice-President Research & Innovation, York University, muellerm@yorku.ca 

Theatre and Performance Studies takes grad student conference online

Theatre

York’s Department of Theatre and Performance Studies, in the School of Arts, Media, Performance & Design (AMPD), will host its first Digital Grad Student Conference March 26 and 27.

The conference was originally scheduled to take place in March 2020, and has been reimagined for current times. In this new virtual format, conference participants and attendees will be able to maintain connection through shared academic discourse and artistic engagement. This online format also allows graduate students from around the world to participate in this conference.

Titled “Imagining Differently: Research-Creation Practices in Urgent Times,” the conference will explore interdisciplinary, theoretical, epistemological and methodological approaches to research-creation. Conference participants will join from all over the world, and presentations will take a variety of formats. In addition to more traditional paper presentations, presenters will offer performances, short films, interactive and mixed-media presentations.

A highlight of the event will be keynote speaker Natalie Loveless, an associate professor in the Department of Art and Design at the University of Alberta, and director of the Research-Creation and Social Justice CoLABoratory. Loveless’s keynote address will take place online on March 26 at 12 p.m., EST.

To conclude the first day of conference activities, there will be a screening of the morning I died I flew over the tobacco fields… at 6 p.m. This piece, based on a short story by Lynn Hutchinson Lee, was originally devised as a theatrical performance and was scheduled to be staged at York last March, but was cancelled due to the pandemic. This creative work has been adapted into an “audiovisual ethnobricolage” which combines a remix of text, image, physical theatre, photography and soundscape. There will be a brief talk-back with the creative team following the screening.

Admission to this online presentation is free, but RSVPs are required to receive the Zoom link. RSVP to https://forms.gle/fQ6RUzq183Bkx6hx6.

Felicia Mings joins the Art Gallery of York University as its new curator

Felicia Mings is the AGYU's new curator FEATURED image
Felicia Mings is the AGYU’s new curator FEATURED image

Felicia Mings will join the Art Gallery of York University (AGYU) as the gallery’s new curator. Mings comes to the AGYU from the Art Institute of Chicago, where she was the academic curator in the Department of Academic Engagement and Research.

Felicia Mings
Felicia Mings. Image: The Art Institute of Chicago

A key aspect of Mings’ curatorial practice is interpreting and presenting modern and contemporary art of Africa and the African diaspora, as represented by two recent exhibitions she co-curated for the Art Institute of Chicago: “Malangatana: Mozambique Modern,” 2020, and “The People Shall Govern! Medu Art Ensemble and the Anti-Apartheid Poster,” 2019. Mings co-edited the accompanying exhibition catalogues. The Medu catalogue includes writings by herself and other key contributors such as Antawan I. Byrd, Khwezi Gule, and Ashraf Jamal, among others. During her tenure at the Art Institute of Chicago, Mings provided leadership on several initiatives that fostered new approaches to training emerging museum professionals and artist and student engagement with the museum’s collection, including the Andrew W. Mellon Summer Academy and Undergraduate Curatorial Fellowship Program (2014–20) and the MacArthur Foundation International Connections Fund project “Curatorial Practice, Equity, and Exchange: A Dialogue Between Cape Town and Chicago” (2018–19).

Mings joins the AGYU’s curatorial team in the role of curator on April 12. She will work with Jenifer Papararo, and in collaboration with all AGYU curatorial staff. Mings’ focus on the intersections of curatorial practice and community-based arts education will be essential in AGYU’s evolution.

“I’m thrilled to be returning to Toronto at this time in my career and this transformative moment in the AGYU’s history,” says Mings. “It is an honour to join an institution that has long been invested in questions of how we can bring people together through contemporary art, to advance dialogue on global issues, histories, and ideas, with an eye toward their resonance with local communities. I look forward to contributing to the vibrant art community in Toronto and Canada more broadly.”

Mings’ accomplishments include independent exhibitions and educational programs such as “Intimate Encounters, Blanc Gallery,” 2018; “Body and Soul,” the Gene Siskel Film Center, 2015; “What We All Long For,” SAIC’s Student Union Galleries 2014; “Fine Color,” a series of short films for the Chicago Home Theater Festival, 2014; and the “Youth Film Club” at the Rebuild Foundation’s Black Cinema House, 2013. Mings has also been a part of the inaugural teams at The Council of Educators of Toronto and Nia Center for the Arts, both non-profit organizations working to enhance socio-economic opportunities for youth, and, respectively, educational attainment and access to the arts.

Born and raised in Canada, Mings earned her MA in visual and critical studies from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and her honours BA in art and art history from the University of Toronto and Sheridan College.

2021 Goldfarb Lecture in Visual Arts explores role of visual art in palliative care

Rice University Professor Marcia Brennan will present the Goldfarb Lecture at York University
Rice University Professor Marcia Brennan will present the Goldfarb Lecture at York University

Marcia Brennan, the Carolyn and Fred McManis Professor of Humanities at Rice University, is the featured speaker for the 2021 Goldfarb Lecture in Visual Arts presented by York University’s School of the Arts, Media, Performance & Design (AMPD).

The lecture will take place Wednesday, Feb. 3, from 2:30 to 4:30 p.m. on Zoom. Interested participants are encouraged to register by sending an email to sensinfo@yorku.ca and a Zoom Link will be sent out prior to the event.

Drawing on her creative clinical experiences in Acute Palliative Care, Brennan will examine the ways in which the curatorial model might be expanded to consider how aesthetics can serve as a form of care for people facing the end of life. Just as the artworks are produced during critical junctures of transition, they often appear as meditations on multiplicity as people imagine various forms of presence. Brennan’s talk will be followed by a public conversation with Jennifer Fisher, professor in the Department of Visual Art & Art History at York University and there will be an opportunity for a Q-and-A session with the audience.

Brennan in the Carolyn and Fred McManis Professor of Humanities at Rice University, where she works in the fields of Art History, Religious Studies and the Medical Humanities. She also serves as a literary Artist-in-Residence in the Department of Palliative Care and Rehabilitation Medicine at the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center. Her books include Life at the End of Life: Finding Words Beyond Words (Intellect), Curating Consciousness: Mysticism and the Modern Museum (MIT Press), Modernism’s Masculine Subjects: Matisse, the New York School and Post-Painterly Abstraction (MIT Press), and Painting Gender, Constructing Theory: The Alfred Stieglitz Circle and American Formalist Aesthetics (MIT Press).

This event is presented in conjunction with the nascent Art and Wellness initiative in AMPD. Brennan’s work exemplifies the important role that artist and curatorial residencies can bring to practices of caring and curing in hospitals and other health care contexts.

Brennan’s lecture is organized by the Department of Visual Art and Art History in conjunction with Sensorium: The Center for Digital Art and Technology. The Goldfarb Lecture in Visual Arts is made possible through the generous support of Joan and Martin Goldfarb, longstanding benefactors of York University’s Department of Visual Art and Art History and AMPD. This lecture is free to attend and all are welcome.

Year in Review 2020: Top headlines at York University, January to April

Typewriter with paper that reads 2020

As a new year emerges, YFile takes a look back on 2020 to share with readers a snapshot of the year’s highlights. “Year in Review” will run as a three-part series and will feature a selection of top news stories published in YFile. Here are the stories and highlights for January to April, as chosen by YFile editors.

January

Research on global environmental safety earns Professor Satinder Brar international award
Professor Satinder Brar‘s work aims to find innovative ways for cleaning contaminated water, ensuring communities have access to clean and safe drinking water for generations to come. This research earned her the International Achiever Award from Save the Environment.

Two York University professors receive large NSERC grants for research and development
Two York University professors received Natural Sciences & Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) Collaborative Research and Development (CRD) Grants. The grants – over $1 million each – were awarded to Professors Gunho Sohn and Derek Wilson.

Seymour Schulich doubles investment in scholarship program to $200M
Longtime businessman and philanthropist Seymour Schulich doubled his investment in the Schulich Leader Scholarships from $100 million to $200 million. With this investment, recipients of this science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) undergraduate scholarship doubled to 100 from 50 annual awards.

February

Lassonde PhD student solves an 18-year-old problem
Nearly 20 years ago, a satellite mission called GRACE was launched to monitor mass transfers occurring above or below the Earth’s surface. The gravity field maps derived from GRACE measurements were obscured by very disturbing thick lines sweeping from south to north. A Lassonde School of Engineering PhD student, Athina Peidou, solved this problem that has occupied the international scientific community for more than 18 years.

New Faculty of Environmental and Urban Change created to address world’s most pressing issues
York University announced the creation of the Faculty of Environmental and Urban Change to respond to the urgent global need for sustainable and just solutions to critical challenges posed by environmental change and urbanization.

Faculty associations’ award recognizes founder of motherhood studies, matricentric feminism
Andrea O’Reilly, a professor in the School of Gender, Sexuality and Women’s Studies, founder of Demeter Press and the Journal of the Motherhood Initiative, received a 2019 Status of Women and Equity Award of Distinction from the Ontario Confederation of University Faculty Associations. The award recognizes faculty whose work has improved the lives and working conditions of academics who belong to historically marginalized groups.

March

Toughest global health challenges will be tackled by Distinguished Research Chair at York University
York University Professor Steven J. Hoffman was named inaugural holder of the Dahdaleh Distinguished Chair in Global Governance & Legal Epidemiology. This unique research Chair brings scientific rigour and a social justice lens to seemingly intractable global health issues.

York researchers receive $1.1 million in COVID-19 research funding
Three York University researchers received more than $1.1 million in COVID-19 rapid research funding over two years to explore issues of trust, stigmatization and social perceptions of risk from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR). Additional funding from CIHR for COVID-19 rapid research was announced later in March.

As the seriousness of the global pandemic became apparent, faculty at York worked to educate the community about COVID-19 through the development of a simulation model to help families understand how to ‘flatten the curve’ and by explaining the math behind social distancing and why it works. Community members were also reminded of the benefits of mindfulness, and offered group meditation sessions online as part of the COVID-19 response.

April

More research and development on COVID-19 continued to be a focus at York University, including: Schulich’s development of an analytics dashboard to predict spread of the virus; research on why the feeling of mattering is an important source of support during the pandemic; the development of the Dahdaleh COVID-19 Global Health Portal; and the effects of mothering through a pandemic. In addition to ongoing research, the York community also rallied to support its students, front line healthcare workers, and its researchers.

AMPD faculty member receives prestigious award for young artists
Freya Bjorg Olafson received the National Art Gallery of Canada’s 2020 Sobey Art Award. Described as a pioneer in Canada’s dance community, Olafson is an intermedia artist who works with video, audio, painting and performance.

Check back in the next edition of YFile for Year in Review 2020: Top headlines at York University, May to August.