Monthly Archives: September 2010

The Yes Men in the LPAC Cinema on October 7th!

SWARTHMORE COLLEGE’S DEPARTMENT OF THEATER AND THE WILLIAM J. COOPER FOUNDATION PRESENT A PERFORMANCE-LECTURE WITH THE YES MEN

September 15, 2010The Department of Theater at Swarthmore College and the William J. Cooper Foundation will present THE YES MEN in a performance-lecture on Thursday October 7th at 4:15PM in the Lang Performing Arts Center’s Cinema.  The event will be free and open to the public without reservations.  Live presentations by THE YES MEN are hilarious, insightful, disturbing, and thoroughly entertaining. The prolific pranksters discuss their legendary hoaxes and identity corrections through storytelling and multimedia – featuring props used in the pranks and unreleased footage from their recent and classic exploits.

THE YES MEN are a group of activist performers started by two notorious pranksters who organize events in order to bring attention to corporate, government, and institutional policy contradictions. The two founding artists, Mike Bonnano and Andy Bichelbaum bring their backgrounds in the fine and performing arts to raise awareness about issues of social concern. THE YES MEN have gained international acclaim and notoriety for exposing dehumanizing business practices and helping to keep critical issues in the international spotlight. They do this through impersonating representatives of powerful corporations and government organizations such as ExxonMobil, McDonald’s, and the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. THE YES MEN’s famed hoaxes include a collaboratively produced fake New York Times announcing the end of the Iraq War, inserting queer soldiers as characters in a video game, and the false announcement of the World Trade Organization’s dissolution in order to shift focus to helping the poor.  One of their earliest interventions was commissioned by the artists’ collective RTmark and involved switching the voice boxes of Barbie and GI Joe dolls in stores at Christmastime.  Their recent activities have involved posing as members of particular corporations and policy organizations to affect potential outcomes. For example, Andrew Bichelbaum appeared on CNN as a spokesman for Dow Chemical, taking full responsibility for the Bhopal disaster and promising to use $12 billion to compensate victims. In this sense, his appearance as a corporate spokesmen announced the position the company should have taken. They call this “pranking for progress,” which involves telling “little lies to get at big truths – the idea is to reveal the real hoaxsters.” These “culture jammers” try to bring attention to inequities or hypocrisies through performance practices that model alternative behaviors and possible outcomes. The faculty advisors for the project are Assistant Professor Erin B. Mee in the Department of Theater and Associate Professor Janine Mileaf in the Department of Art.

THE YES MEN will also host a Workshop in the LPAC Frear Ensemble Theatre titled “Developing Performance Pranks for Social Activism” on Friday October 8th from 2:00 – 5:00PM. This event is free and open to students, but please contact Professor Erin Mee (emee1@swarthmore.edu) to reserve a space.  THE YES MEN will also be organizing an on-campus action with Workshop participants.  Please contact Blaine O’Neill (boneil1@swarthmore.edu) for more information.

For further information about these events, contact Tara Webb at 610-328-8260 or twebb1@swarthmore.edu.

The Department of Music and Dance presents the Intergenerational Drum and Dance Project

Fall 2010

COME JOIN US FOR
the
Intergenerational Drum and Dance Project

***Do ask about our scholarship and internship opportunities!***

COMMUNITY, MERRY MAKING, DISCOVERY
Presented by:
Jeannine Osayande, Founder & Director, Dunya Performing Arts Company
& Sharon Friedler, Director of The Dance Program

Swarthmore College Department of Music and Dance

Featuring Traditional Drum and Dance from Mali and Guinea
Jeannine Osayande and Ira Bond, Arts Educators
Ages: 5 – Well Seasoned Adult

When:
Saturdays, October 16, 23, 30,
and November 13 & 20
10:00am-12:00pm (Arrive 10 minutes early)

Where:
Swarthmore College
Lang Performing Arts Center (LPAC)
Boyer Dance Lab

Fees:
$100.00 participant (child)
$10.00 off each additional child
$100.00 participant (adult)
$75.00 parent accompanying child

To Sign up Now Contact:
Jeannine Osayande at 484-431-4378
or Satya at satyanelms@gmail.com

The Department of Music and Dance presents the Intergenerational Drum and Dance Project

Fall 2010

COME JOIN US FOR
the
Intergenerational Drum and Dance Project

***Do ask about our scholarship and internship opportunities!***

COMMUNITY, MERRY MAKING, DISCOVERY
Presented by:
Jeannine Osayande, Founder & Director, Dunya Performing Arts Company
& Sharon Friedler, Director of The Dance Program

Swarthmore College Department of Music and Dance

Featuring Traditional Drum and Dance from Mali and Guinea
Jeannine Osayande and Ira Bond, Arts Educators
Ages: 5 – Well Seasoned Adult

When:
Saturdays, October 16, 23, 30,
and November 13 & 20
10:00am-12:00pm (Arrive 10 minutes early)

Where:
Swarthmore College
Lang Performing Arts Center (LPAC)
Boyer Dance Lab

Fees:
$100.00 participant (child)
$10.00 off each additional child
$100.00 participant (adult)
$75.00 parent accompanying child

To Sign up Now Contact:
Jeannine Osayande at 484-431-4378
or Satya at satyanelms@gmail.com

Coming to campus October 1, 2010: Telephone Bronco does CARTOGORAPHASIA

Come see Telephone Bronco’s Cartogoraphasia, on FRIDAY OCTOBER 1ST at 8PM in the Frear Ensemble Theater, LPAC. Cartogoraphasia was developed for this year’s Philly Fringe and originally performed at the Circle of Hope Church in Philadelphia.

from the Broncos:
We tethered together myriad strings: memory, subjectivity, personal and political borders, sexuality, and the nature of the mind. Cartogoraphasia is the result of our explorations along all these paths. No surprise, then, that it’s also a celebration of anyone who is an intrepid adventurer, whether they’re exploring the caverns of their own subconscious or the contours of a lover’s hand. Cartogoraphasia’s themes ran together as our synapses fired, drawing distant connections and logics together. Eventually a web appeared, and the entire project of Telephone Bronco unfolded. We hope that as you take in the performance, the links will become clearer and more complex.

Telephone Bronco Theater Company is comprised of Theater Department alums and current students Nell Bang-Jensen ’11, Isa St. Clair ’11, Emma Ferguson ’10, Eric Holzhauer ’10, McFeely Sam Goodman ’10, Louis Jargow ’10, and Jessie Bear ’09. Take this once-in-a-lifetime chance to see Cartogoraphasia right on campus!

Khmer Court Dance and Music Workshops and Performances

Through September and October, Bryn Mawr College will sponsor several events highlighting the classical arts of Cambodia including dance, music, theater and discussions with the artists.

The performance of The Lives of Giants (see below for more information) is a ticketed event.  All other events are free.

MASTER CLASSES IN CLASSICAL CAMBODIAN TECHNIQUE with KHMER ARTS ENSEMBLE
Wednesday, October 20, 4:30-6:00 ~ Swarthmore College, LPAC Troy Dance Studio

Thursday, October 21, 4-5:30 ~ Bryn Mawr College, Pem Dance Studio

Saturday, October 23, 10:30 ~ Cambodian Association North Center Dance Studio:  5412 North 5th Street (appropriate for younger students)

Saturday, October 23, 1:00 PM~ The Performance Garage: 1515 Brandywine, Philadelphia (appropriate for dancers with more extensive training in Cambodian or other techniques)- Studio accessible by #2 bus or Orange-Broad street line

“LEARNING TO LISTEN” with KHMER ARTS ENSEMBLE
Cambodian Music Demonstration / Discussion
Saturday, October 23rd, 7 PM
Goodhart Free Admission. Reservations
required (Office for the Arts 610-526-5210)
Teaching artist, Ros Sokun

Continue reading

Khmer Court Dance and Music Workshops and Performances

Through September and October, Bryn Mawr College will sponsor several events highlighting the classical arts of Cambodia including dance, music, theater and discussions with the artists.

The performance of The Lives of Giants (see below for more information) is a ticketed event.  All other events are free.

MASTER CLASSES IN CLASSICAL CAMBODIAN TECHNIQUE with KHMER ARTS ENSEMBLE
Wednesday, October 20, 4:30-6:00 ~ Swarthmore College, LPAC Troy Dance Studio

Thursday, October 21, 4-5:30 ~ Bryn Mawr College, Pem Dance Studio

Saturday, October 23, 10:30 ~ Cambodian Association North Center Dance Studio:  5412 North 5th Street (appropriate for younger students)

Saturday, October 23, 1:00 PM~ The Performance Garage: 1515 Brandywine, Philadelphia (appropriate for dancers with more extensive training in Cambodian or other techniques)- Studio accessible by #2 bus or Orange-Broad street line

“LEARNING TO LISTEN” with KHMER ARTS ENSEMBLE
Cambodian Music Demonstration / Discussion
Saturday, October 23rd, 7 PM
Goodhart Free Admission. Reservations
required (Office for the Arts 610-526-5210)
Teaching artist, Ros Sokun

Continue reading

Watch coverage of the International Day of Peace, September 17-21

The International Day of Peace falls on September 21 each year.  This year, as the UN’s International Decade for a Culture of Peace and Non-violence for the Children of the World draws to a close, thousands of events are being planned around the world to signal a global yearning for peace and an intention to advance constructive human and environmental relations. The Millenium Development Goals will feature prominently in this year’s celebrations. You can follow unprecedented live coverage of Peace Day events here on the Peace and Conflict Studies website or at www.peaceday.tv September 17-21.  You may preview the broadcast now.

Reina Chano ’09 received the 2010 Elise Boulding Award

This is a quick follow up on a previous blog post announcing:

Reina ChanoReina Chano ‘09, an honors minor in Peace and Conflict Studies (History major), has been awarded the Elise M. Boulding Undergraduate Student Paper Award by the Peace, War, and Social Conflict Section (PWSC) of the American Sociological Association (ASA) for a paper, “Youth in Northern Ireland: The Role of Narratives in Promoting Reconciliation,” adapted from her interdisciplinary honors Peace and Conflict Studies thesis: Historical Education as Reconciliation: Teaching History in Northern Ireland.

Reina attended the annual meeting of the American Sociological Association in Atlanta, and on August 14, 2010 the award was presented to her by Dr. Morten Ender (USMA, West Point) during the PWSC section business meeting. Congratulations Reina!