Creative Response Prompt: James Nizam

We decided to create a sculpture out of the little black containers that hold rolls of film. We also put negatives that didn’t work out into the containers. Originally, our project with James was to create some kind of sculpture using old film canisters and the their parts. Since we never got to finish that project, we decided to try on our own. We have both taken film photography so we had a lot of leftover film containers and pages of failed negatives so we thought it was the perfect opportunity to reuse these items. When James was telling us about the thought process he had behind the project, he mentioned the idea of memory. Every film canister once contained photos. We had hundreds, probably even thousands, of used film canisters, so basically we had the remnants of thousands and thousands of photos that were taken by strangers. What we had was essentially the skeleton of memories, but we’ll never have the original. The concept of memory was interesting to us so we wanted to explore the idea further and like the project we were doing with James, we wanted to use objects that have lost their original function but now have an opportunity to take on new meaning. James uses found objects, sculpture merged with photography in his practice and we were inspired by this. We decided to insert a piece of failed negative into each container but seal up the containers, so one would never be able to access it. Just like how we would never see how all those photos turned out, our failed negatives will never be able to replicate the failed photograph. We liked playing with the idea of the double unknown, because on one hand, the negatives are already failed, but now they don’t even have the opportunity to made into a print. James always emphasized going with the flow and having the sculpture create itself. When one thing didn’t work, he would just hop onto another option. We just experimented with a formation until we found one that we thought worked.

Studio & Events Analysis

This class requires you to engage in studio visits with your fellow peers in the class, as well as visit at least three art events within the Vancouver, UBC and/or Greater Vancouver art community.  At least one of these visits should be at an institution or event that a peer in the class is involved with, and none of the events can be ones that you are contributing for your own partnership.  This component of the class consists of three parts.


Part 1

External Events – You must attend at least 2 events of various forms, such as an exhibition opening, a screening, an art fair, an artist or art historian or curator talk or tour, a UBC visiting artist/cultural thinker talk, or you may set up a visit with an artist that you are interested in, or is participating in programming at your partnership institution or that you are curious about.  This must go beyond the artist/institution you are working with, and at least one event should be with a peer’s institution/artist from the class. Try and go to very different types of events and spaces for your two events, it can help broaden how you approach, internalize and what you learn from these visits.


Part 2

In class we will be speaking about the role of the studio in artistic practice, and will be participating in peer studio visits with each other, as the artist/maker and as the visitor.  This will happen in class on November 6th.


Part 3

At the end of the course, you will contextualize the experiences of your in class studio visits and art events in an analysis of a maximum of 1000 words.  While the analysis might choose to detail certain elements because they were more influential, try and cover as many of the questions found in the Connect journal as possible. Please submit in the appropriate Connect journal in the text box, or as a word or pdf document, please note the “journal” space as it is completely confidential.  I do provide guiding questions but you can focus on a revelation of the experiences that might focus on only a few of of the questions.  Please answer holistically, in a narrative, towards creating your own story of where you feel you fit in this whole crazy art thing.

Due:  November 27th, through Connect journals, 9am before class starts.

Please note:  For those attending the BAF workshop as one of your events, then you may have an extension to December 1st 11:59pm  through Connect journals

 

Reflection Journals

We will have many reflective moments where we will bring our experiences into the classroom; I welcome and embrace these connections.  Sometimes they will happen in relationship to the readings we are discussing, other times you will be strategically guided through questions, and there will be times where it organically appears through various other class components such as critiques or a talk.  As well, you will be writing out two reflective journals on your own at home.


Reflection Journal #1 – Goal Setting

This first journal asks you about your expectations, and to set individual goals as you embark on this experience.

  1. Briefly explain your overall impression and resulting expectations of what community engaged experiential learning might look like, and what insight you hope it will give you.
  2. This is an ideal time to pause and articulate personal, academic, and professional goals that you hope to achieve by the end of the course. This intentional creation of personal learning goals will help you to more fully collaborate with your partner while taking an active role in your own learning. Below are some guiding questions that you might find useful in writing one of each type of goal. Instead of simply listing the goal, provide some background/context to make it clear why this goal is important to you, and what it will mean to you if you achieve it. Setting goals that are achievable within the frame of the course is important. Consider how you will know if you have achieved them, how can you measure them?  What will that look like to you?

PERSONAL
How might this experience inform my identity as an artist and/or arts professional?
What personal characteristics do I hope to better understand and develop through this experience?

ACADEMIC
What histories, theories or models do I hope to learn more about?
What knowledge do I hope to gain about artistic practice as research?

PROFESSIONAL
What skills do I hope to gain through this experience that will help me in my future art  or related career?
How can I ensure this experience allows me to gain the skills I need to embark on a career in the arts?

Due:  To be completed by 9am on September 25th, (no extensions) before class starts, in the Journal section in Connect.  Journals are completely confidential.  In some cases, you may not be able to meet with your partner institutions until after the due date.  Please email me ahead of time to let me know if this is the case, and you will be granted an extension to accommodate this.


Post-Reflection

A post-reflection written journal will be distributed through Connect for you to self-reflect on your entire experience. You will be asked three leading questions that you should aim to respond with deep introspection and thought.  Your ability to disseminate and articulate your experience will result in life-long learning skills, wherein you will get the tools you need to see real life experiences as learning experiences.
Due: December 8th, midnight

 

Creative Response Prompt

The final day of class will be a celebratory event where we will present, in a visually creative execution, a response that highlights an aspect of your partnership. The work can be done in pairs, and we will each present the work to the class explaining how your experience(s) informed this work.  You must record and describe this work on your blog, as well as bring it into the final class for presentation.  As an optional token, you may want to gift this creative response to your supervisor at the partnership as a way to say thank you for the experience.

Due:  December 5th 2017 (3:30-5pm in 3rd floor Audain)

 

Final Synopsis or Blog Posts

Your CBEL Project Grade will take into account and be an accumulation of all CBEL components of the course, including presentations, reflections, your outline, peer, self and institutional evaluations, etc…  Part of this grade will use your project synopsis as a guide to understand the work you did, and what was learned.  You have a choice of the form of your synopsis, it can consist of gradual contributions and updates to your blog section throughout the term, (at least three) or it can consist of a 3-4 page paper due at the end of the term.


OPTION 1:  BLOG CONTRIBUTIONS         

You may fulfill your project synopsis throughout the course by adding at least four more blog posts/contributions during the term, the posts must be at least a couple of days apart.  However, required posts and final resume line do not adhere to the same scatter.  This option is less summative and more accumulative, and thus may consist of blog posts that report on a specific detail, moment, or event that you participated in.  Since these blog visits will record the ‘during’ of the partnership, that means the posts may consist of just about any moment or idea that may come at different intervals of the course.

Overall, the contributions should show a varying of approaches, particularly;  images, some auto-ethnographic accounts of your process through the partnership, and connections to readings through quotes, class discussions or other class work.

You can include:

  • Interim written or creative reflections on new revelations or insights of the art world.
    You may use the general guideline by Kolb’s (1984) cycle of reflection, which consists of: “What? (did you notice) “So What?” (could it mean) followed by “Now What?” (will you do with that information, how will you use, apply or process it?).  The final question is the most evolved handling in the process.
  • Profile/research of the community (geographical or cultural) you are working in/with and how this relates to in class conversations, readings, or other research.
  • Images of your work space, with a description of what you saw/heard or even tasted, impressions of how the space functions, surprises that defied expectations about how the space was set up, and can even include further questions you wish to uncover.
  • You may wish to add notices of when the trajectory of your project changed, why it changed, and how you will prepare and adapt for that change.
  • An image of an object you created or an event you were part of that is captioned by details, and described skills you utilized and/or gained to complete the task.
  • Quotes or details of a shift, summary of conversation with co-workers, supervisor, or even with yourself, biography posts/pages on people, artworks, books you are working with or learning about.
  • Post describing insights of how class work (in this class or other classes) has been activated in your partnership time, how, what that means, and how you can continue to use these influential cross-overs in your thinking. Please include quotes.
  • A curation of vital links & resources you’ve amounted.
  • You may also want to get some ideas from the hard copy synopsis prompt below.

Beyond the minimum extra four posts, you are to also provide a post that contains a fully developed resume line(s) that details the name of the space, title of role, etc… and underneath that heading, write a brief summary of key skills and professional characteristics that you utilized in the position.  Including the resume post, which will indicate the end of your blog updates, you should have at least seven, but more if you like, authored posts scattered throughout the term to opt for this method.

The blogs will be visited intermittently throughout the course, but will ultimately be graded for the December 6th deadline.  Please remember to categorize your posts with your partnership label so that I can see when I click on your menu link.

 


or  (you only need to do one!)


OPTION 2:  FINAL SYNOPSIS/REPORT

You must hand in a 1000-1500 word (hardcopy) project synopsis to aid in communication and clarity of the components and overall growth of your partnership project.  For this report, I highly recommend that you re-visit your initial outline that you handed in, and revise it to show the tasks, changes and evolution of the partnership engagement project itself, for the second part of the paper please delve into larger understandings and growth. This report should develop a cumulative understanding that summarizes experiences of the term.

Guidelines of what should be covered in the report:

  • Describe exactly what you did for the project. You can figure out how to organize this (if it was many components) in the best way possible to communicate the areas you covered.
  • The description can be modeled from your initial outline that you handed in, and you can actively update it.  Or you can start from scratch.
  • What you did may have changed, this was very much expected — don’t worry or see it as anything but an exercise in being flexible!
  • If your role changed, how did it differ from your initial project plan?  How come?  What did you do with that challenge? How did you feel about it?
  • If your schedule changed, how did it differ from your initial timeline?  Why did it change?
  • Describe the geographical and cultural location of your partnership/institution and how this informed your impression and type of work, name critical outlooks on the successes and limitations of the integration of the community you were in.
  • Detail the relationship you had with your co-workers, peers in the class, supervisor, or other personnel that you encountered in the position, did you have any opportunities or challenges with relationships? Looking back, how do you think you could improve next time?
  • List skills you previously had that you utilized for the project, and how you used them.
  • List new skills you had to gain to complete the project, and describe how you felt about that.
  • Dissect when and how these skills may be useful in the future.
  • Detail lessons learned, new insights, and applications of your partnership overall, including a critique of your improvement/progress throughout the project.
  • Develop an analysis of the ‘real world’ experience as an academic enterprise, therefore approach affective (doing & feeling) responses towards cognitive execution. Therefore, describe ways the experience connected to course learning outcomes and content? Readings and discussions?  What concepts and principles does it illustrate?
  • As well, describe any challenges you encountered, or things you had to figure your way through. Describe your decision-making/research process, what steps and what strategies did you take?  What problems did you encounter and how did you overcome?
  • Did you take any risks and get out of your comfort zone? When and how did it feel?  What did you learn and what will you do with that new understanding?
  • You may want to wrap up the paper by describing how you would assess your own progress, growth, strengths and weaknesses. How valuable was this experience to your learning? What did you learn through it?  Now that you have finished, what would you do differently?
  • At the end of the synopsis, also include a resume line that details the name of the space, title of role, etc… and underneath that heading, write a brief summary of key skills and professional characteristics that you utilized in the position.
    (Think of this final component as how you would write out this experience on your resume!)
  • As this is a hard copy document, print images alongside to visually illustrate the space you worked in, the project you worked on, or yourself in context of the space, activities and actions.

Due:  At grand finale party (last day of contact) hard-copy form.

 

Project Outline

After you have met with your partner and written notes of the project purpose and plan, you will write a ‘plan of attack’ or project outline that organizes the components needed to complete the project.  You will be doing one outline per pair if you are doing your project together, and one outline each if you are doing your project individually.

This outline should not only specify important dates and tasks, it should also outline your own personal goals with the projects, skills you will utilize to complete tasks, as well as skills you will need to gain to accomplish parts of the project, and how you will gain those skills.  This outline can take on whatever form you feel it needs to take to truly get involved and work through the components of the project, and your place in doing them.  It can be reflective and journalistic as well as practical and organized.

Please consider:

  • Take the time to reflect on your expectations and assumptions, what will it be like?
    Revisit this after the meeting and process what differed, was not what you expected, and what was? What might this mean to the process of the project?
  • Reflect on how this project will function in a larger context (for the gallery, the artist, for the class, for you!)
  • How does this project fit into the goals of the organization/artist you are working with?
  • What expectations does the partner have for the project?
  • Are there important deadlines and dates?
  • Is there a set schedule for being on site and for checking in?  Otherwise, how will the project schedule run?
  • Who will you be working with directly?
  • Will and how will feedback be provided as the project develops?
  • What is the best method of communication with the Centre/artist?  How frequently?

Due:  October 2nd  9am – Project Outline is due at the start of class on your blogs. In some cases you may not be able to meet with your partner institutions until after the due date, please email me ahead of time to let me know if this is the case and you will be granted an extension to accommodate this.

Partnership Poster Presentation

The poster presentation should be done with all who are linked to the same institution or artist.  If you are independent in your partnership, you will be making your poster alone, and if you are paired you will be working together on one poster.  You are to research and prepare a (minimum) 20-24 inch poster on your partner gallery or artist.  Showcase the institution or artist by giving a succinct historical account, and valuable information for knowledge sharing with your peers.  For an institution you are expected to display operational capacities, history and mandate.  For artists you should dissect ways in which the artists’ history and interests have evolved by way of their participation in the art world.  This can include mapping pivotal moments in their career trajectory (such as their first published catalogue, or their move to a specific subject matter or technique, etc) that have signified growth.

You may include images and design strategies in the execution, but it should contain enough information to get a good degree of knowledge, first and foremost.  Please go beyond just regurgitating history and facts, find ways to contextualize the institution or artist, their trajectory, contribution and function within the Vancouver art community, and make it fun!  As well, examine how it structures itself internally or personally, its mandate/focus, funding and administrative structures, (and other insights you feel are pertinent to how one this Institution functions) relate to its place in the larger Vancouver art community context.  The poster should think of your student colleagues as the main audience for the purpose of knowledge sharing.

You may also bring in catalogues, pamphlets, books, etc. to accompany the presentation time.

Please also provide a summary post tagged by your gallery category, of your partner on your blog, accompanied by a small version of the poster for your peers to download.

Due:  October 16th in class & on blog

You can use the Bining lab, info here, or you can use a poster printing place.  This one is available in the Woodwards building, info here.

Partnership Blog

Every partnership institution must have its own blog.  For those who are working alone with their partnership institution this will be a solo-blog that you will create and report on individually, but for those who are doing the same project together, you can work on your blog together.  There will also be those who are working with the same institution, but on different projects, you will have areas that you will do together and areas that you will do separately. Use the blog to display a comprehensive, active and reflective account of your project and partnership through various phases.

The required elements of the blog, (everyone) and a description below are:

  • project outline/organization or plan (details below)
  • summary of your poster presentation on the institution/artist you are working with and attached smaller pdf of poster for download

Note that your final project synopsis can also be illustrated through various blog posts throughout the term, so keeping up with the blog at different intervals can alleviate the stress of recording it all at the end, and usually ends up in a more attentive report instead of relying on memory.

Please categorize your posts by your partnership, therefore under the “category” selection of a post, label it by your partner so that it will automatically show up in the blog link.  Please ensure you are doing this correctly or I may not be able to see it!

Assignment prompts also located here:

Orientation Meeting

The project starts with you contacting your partner (mostly email) and arranging an orientation or meeting with your partner.  You should attend this meeting aware and knowledgeable about the institution, the mandate, exhibitions currently on view, have reviewed the posting.  Some things to consider:

  • Research the organization or artist, through the web, in person, the neighborhood, area of the city the gallery is located, people who may be associated to the space, etc.
  • While many questions will be answered after the first meeting, it is always good to bring a list of questions to the meeting to be sure all topics of inquiry have been covered.
  • If you are in a pair, before your official meeting, meet with your student partner that will also be working at the space with you, and discuss what you have learned in mutual research and share your list of questions.
  • Indicate your skills, knowledge, and experience you bring to the project/organization.
  • What areas do you hope to develop greater experience in or will need to learn?
  • It can be wise to have 3 goals set for what you wish to accomplish in the first meeting.

It would be best if you could attend this meeting as pairs if there are two of you assigned to the position.  At this meeting you will hopefully get a good idea of the expectations of your partner, arrangement of hours/schedule more details about the partnership, and a general sense of the person you will be working with.  Please take notes and bring in questions that you may have.  This meeting may also contain safety demonstrations or other administrative duties and procedures.

*This component of the partnership is required but not graded.  If you do not “pass” this component, you will not be able to pass the course.

Contact Due:  September 15th (latest) and orientation/first meetings should happen by September 22nd.