Events

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School of Thought, Skill, and Dialogue 2017 Briefing

Acquiring the Ability to Weave Art Projects Together

Genre:
  • Art Project ,
  • Others

The School of Thought, Skill, and Dialogue embodies the skills required to drive art projects. This year, it will be reincarnated as a new program. This year’s School of Thought, Skill, and Dialogue lecture series centers on two courses: “Weaving Words out of Projects” and “Weaving Experiences out of Projects.” With art projects being undertaken in a range of locations, the ability to weave words and experiences into an understanding of the appeal and value of art projects that confront issues of our times or society is becoming a crucial skill for connecting art projects to communities. This year’s courses focus on cultivating people who can weave art projects together by thinking about current issues, utilizing the necessary skills, and engaging in dialogue with others.

As well as detailed explanations of the program content and features, this briefing will feature a talk session with a special guest, the artist Yu Sato (Teller of Enchanting Stories / GoroGoro Azamihira Representative / Head of the OHANASHI Wagon / President, “Know-It-All” Art University), who weaves together art projects through a variety of activities.

If you’re interested in opening up new ways to encounter art projects, please feel free to come along to this briefing!

Schedule

14:00-14:15 Explanation of purpose: What is the School of Thought, Skill, and Dialogue?
14:15-15:15 Performance/Talk:
“Telling Enchanting Stories About Art Projects” Yu Sato
15:15-15:45 Outline of the “Weaving Words out of Projects” and “Weaving Experiences out of Projects” programs and explanation of application details

Capacity

About 50
*No reservation required

Contact

Tokyo Art Research Lab Office Nomad Production (General Incorporated Association)
TEL:080-3171-9724
FAX:03-6740-1926
E-mail:info@tarl.jp

Venues

Arts Council Tokyo ROOM302 (Arts Chiyoda 3331)

Credit

Organized by
Arts Council Tokyo (Tokyo Metropolitan Foundation for History and Culture)