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Pete Rizzo spoke with Director of Theatres & Academic Chairman Charlie Wittreich about the different opportunities students can get involved with in the Lively Arts Series program as well as discuss the current state of the local performing arts scene.
Brent Woods, Senior Director of Arts and Culture, returns to the podcast to talk about the upcoming grand reopening of the Theater on Blue Bell Campus and the start of the Montco Cultural Center.Recorded and edited by Donnell Woodsfrom the College's Sound Recording and Music Technology Program
New episode featuring very special guest Martin Popoff is alive! We discuss Martin's new book on The Damned "Lively Arts: The Damned Deconstructed". Dig it!
Brent Woods, Senior Director of Arts and Culture, gives a preview of the 2022-23 Lively Arts Series performances. Plus we'll learn more about the incoming Science Center Theater.Recorded and edited by Quinn Szentefrom the College's Sound Recording and Music Technology Program
Just the TV sound, recorded directly by wire - not sure why I didn't record the video. I think I had a VHS by then but tapes were so very expensive - and I had not joined the BBC yet... --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/simon-r-anthony/message
Have you ever wondered WHY the Waldorf approach is built around the arts? For many of us, these artistic activities draw us in to the method. And in today's episode, we explore the why behind the arts as well as some practical ways you can weave the lively arts into your homeschool lessons.Find the Show Notes for this episode here: www.artofhomeschooling.com/episode23Enjoying the podcast? You can leave a review ~ it's easy. Just click here: www.lovethepodcast.com/artofhomeschooling
In this episode, we are joined by award-winning author, David Pearl, to discuss his career as a creative confidante and personal development advisor to a number of the world's top CEO's and organisations. David is a respected public and keynote speaker and is the founder of Pearl Group, Opera Circus, Lively Arts and Impropera, as well as the non-profit organisation, Street Wisdom. What Was Covered How looking at business meetings – what David calls “the engine of post-industrial life” – through a different lens, say a theatrical one, can unleash the creative power of bringing the group together How storytelling can be used innovatively in leadership and how meaningful narratives can help to create meaning with business teams The benefits to being open and accepting of past failures and how sharing these as a leader can have a positive impact on employees The importance of self-introspection, understanding your past experience before future experiences, and how this leads to discovering your ‘why?' Key Takeaways and Learnings David's philosophy that colleagues must ‘really meet, not nearly meet' and how creativity is born in the space between us, not from us as individuals The potential impact within stories at work – and how a compelling narrative can engage people far more than simply a set of facts How re-framing low points as turning points in which maximum learning was achieved can help encourage talk and creative collaboration How, as a leader, your own personal ‘why?' should always be overlapping with the ‘why?' of your business Links and Resources Mentioned In This Episode: David Pearl's website Stories for Leaders by David Pearl Will There Be Donuts? by David Pearl Street Wisdom
Marc Schuster, Professor of English, chats with Brent Woods, Senior Director of Lively Arts, about the upcoming Lively Arts season.
Could our intestinal microbiome be luminescent? In this episode we discuss "Sympoiesis: Symbiogenesis and the Lively Arts of Staying with the Trouble", chapter 3 of our book. Link to Our new Facebook discussion group Featured in the show: The Hawaiian Bobtail Squid The Bee Orchid comic from xkcd.com Website for the Crochet Coral Reef (note: Dave's excited explanation of the hyperbolic mathematics involved in the crochet reef didn't make the final cut for this episode. But the math is fascinating. Check it out.) The Indigenous Critique of the Green New Deal Navajo Churro ram Email us at thebookonfirepodcast@gmail.com [[ Dave & Janet's Radical Vitalism :: Blog :: Instagram :: Website ]]
Marc Schuster, Associate Professor of English, chats with Senior Director of Cultural Affairs, Brent Woods, about the upcoming Lively Arts season.
Michele Cuomo, Dean of Arts and Humanities, talks with Brent Woods, Interim Director of Cultural Affairs, about the upcoming Lively Arts series at the college.
Lively Arts and Classical Poetry As Survival Schemes and Shenanigans . . .news from the Bard to Nietzsche to Dante to Star Trek, of the Clown, the Fool, The Witch, the Dodo—Us in the Poet’s Mind Writ Large and Personal. … Continue reading → The post THE POETRY SLOW DOWN . . . DISTINCTION IN AN AGE OF THE HOLOCENE EXTINCTION first appeared on Dr. Barbara Mossberg » Poetry Slowdown.
Guest host Michele Cuomo, dean of the Arts and Humanities division, chats with Brent Woods about the upcoming Lively Arts series.
(June 2009) Stanford Lively Arts artistic and executive director Jenny Bilfield previews the 2009-10 season.
(January 24, 2009) MacArthur fellow Elizabeth Streb’s company makes its Lively Arts debut with a performance that includes a work set on Stanford gymnasts and student dancers.
(January 18, 2008) Lively Arts artistic director Jenny Bilfield moderates a discussion with the Kronos Quartet and Stanford Chamber Chorale director Stephen Sano following their performance of Terry Riley’s Sun Rings.
(December 9, 2007) Lively Arts associate director Michelle Witt moderates a post-performance discussion with violinist Nadja Salerno-Sonnenberg and pianist Anne-Marie McDermott.