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re.Birth:
Multidisciplinary workshops for kids and teens Duration: Two hours Group: Around 12 kids or teens from 8 to 14 years old How the workshop unfolds: First hour: ● Warm up games for 25 minutes; ● Memory games 35 minutes. Second hour: ● Divide the group and the space in 3 (Theatre zone, drawing zone and story writing zone); ● Have them select a postcard among many; ● Have them look at it for a minute. Every activity revolves around their memory of the picture; ● Send each group in each zone for 15 minutes then move to the next zone; ● Have each group present their creation in front of the others at the end. |
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WHAT
re.Birth: is a collective exploration of short-term memory through multidisciplinary workshops, experiments, research and performances. What do we remember, how do we remember, why our memories tell who we are? The exploration starts after an event happened, when it stops to be and is being brought back to life by our recollection of it. HOW Through dance, theatre, sounds, music, drawing, story telling, video, multimedia, visual art and creative processes. WHERE The project will move to various locations, looking for different types of energy, landscape, people and mood. Location based workshops and performances are to be expected. WHEN Started in June 2010, the project will unfold until the end of the year, through workshops, experiments, research and performances. WHO Inma Moya Pavon: Dancer, teacher, choreographer, visual artist and workshop facilitator. Fernando Tunon Hernandez: Director, screenwriter, multimedia artist and workshop facilitator. The core team for the performances come from classes, workshops and previous collaborations. FOR WHO Whoever interested in the project. No specific skills, knowledge or education required. The larger the diversity, the more relevant the outcome. FOR WHAT We are memories under construction. We are the memory of anyone and anything that we remember. This project aims to reflect and understand how we build memories as much as explore different ways to perceive through the whole body. |