A Research Lab in the Performing Arts

Back to All Perspectives Stories
Nancy Joseph 03/09/2018 March 2018 Perspectives

Argentinian choreographer Margarita Bali has spent months thinking about Seattle’s stairs. The elegant stairs in UW’s Suzzallo Library. The bold central staircase in Odegaard Undergraduate Library. The concrete steps in downtown Seattle’s Freeway Park.  As a visiting artist at the UW through mid-April, Bali is collaborating with students, faculty, alumni, and community dancers on a work that features stairs as a way to explore physical movement in diverse settings.  

Bali is one of more than a dozen artists from around the world immersed in creative research at the UW through the Creative Fellowships Initiative, a program funded through a three-year, $750,000 grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. The initiative is spearheaded by the UW’s Meany Center for the Performing Arts.

During her residency, Margarita Bali is creating a videodance incorporating stairs, inspired by artist M.C. Escher.

“This initiative focuses on process, not product,” says Michelle Witt, executive and artistic director of Meany Center, who co-leads the initiative with Todd London, executive director of the School of Drama. “If the byproduct of a fellow’s process is a new work, that’s fabulous, but they are not required to develop any kind of final product. That makes this very different than other types of grant support.”

All the UW performing arts units are involved in this initiative. Since spring 2016, they have welcomed a diverse group of fellows, from playwrights to composers to performance artists to choreographers, with visits ranging from ten days to several months or longer. Fellows sometimes teach workshops, discuss their creative process in public forums, and collaborate with faculty and students during their visits — but only if they choose to. Their approaches to the fellowship are as varied as their creative work.

The JACK Quartet, a string quartet committed to contemporary music, is midway through its residency, with six campus visits scheduled over three years. Drawn to the UW by the innovative work being done by DXARTS and School of Music faculty in the area of experimental music, the quartet is collaborating with Professors Richard Karpen and Juan Pampin to create and perform music that incorporates live electronics manipulated by brainwaves and arm motions. The collaboration involves experimentation, collection of data, and the design of an interactive electronic musical instrument, all using cutting-edge technology developed at the UW.

At the UW, JACK Quartet musicians and UW faculty are collaborating on work that uses brainwaves in musical performance.

“Experimental work involves quite a bit of trial and error,” says JACK Quartet’s John Richards. “This residency provides the time and space necessary to fully develop these ideas into dependable and usable musical devices that artists can use in the live performance.” The residency will culminate with a concert-length work for string quartet and electronics in 2019, with the audience engulfed in sounds controlled by the live actions and brainwaves of the quartet on stage.

Dustin Chinn, a playwright with Ma-Yi Theater Writers Lab, spent his month-long residency hanging out with a non-arts crowd. He traveled to the UW’s Friday Harbor Lab in the San Juan Islands, where he met with marine scientists to gather information for a play he’s writing about Herschel, a nickname given to the sea lions who became famous for preying on Washington’s endangered steelhead trout.

“The process gave me a much-needed historical and scientific perspective on the events the play is based upon,” says Chinn. “It also gave me firsthand contact with scientists, and a notion of how they talk, think, and how they might want to be represented in a fictional context.” Chinn presented a reading of his play-in-progress during a public event at the School of Drama.

Artists have so much to teach us about innovation and creativity.

For choreographer Bali, the opportunity to immerse herself in creative work for three months, away from her home in Argentina, has been a huge plus. “I’ve been able to give all my attention to the work,” she says. “Total focus. It’s an opportunity to do something unusual, and I’m thankful for that.” Bali is creating a videodance—a dance choreographed to be filmed rather than performed on stage—that will feature faculty, students, and community dancers on stairs that curve, lead nowhere, or overlap with a mind-bending nod to artist M.C. Escher. She also is teaching a UW course on technology and dance, which has attracted students from physics, math, and drama as well as dance.

The public can attend a work-in-progress presentation of Bali’s videodance on April 3, followed by a discussion with the artist. Also this spring, Mellon fellows Nguyễn Thanh Thủy and Ngô Trà My from Vietnam, Stefan Östersjö from Sweden, and Garth Knox from France join long-time artistic partner Karpen in the performance of two new musical works collaboratively created for the one-of-a-kind Harry Partch instrument collection at the School of Music. Previous initiative projects have included a new piece by dance company BANDALOOP, performed at Meany Center in October 2017. “It was the world premiere, and the piece will now have an international life,” says Witt. “The residency allowed BANDALOOP to break into a completely new type of work.”  

Several members of Ma-Yi Theater Writers Lab have residencies at the UW through the Creative Fellowships Initiative.

Not all fellows present their work or lead workshops, but they all inspire students through their presence and their creative process. “They all work in different ways, and they model for students the ambition, imagination, and artistic freedom that are part of research in the arts,” says London. “The Creative Fellowships Initiative is trying to create a semblance of a research laboratory by giving the fellows space and time and some resources in a way that only a large research university can.”

And this is only the beginning, adds Witt. “We’re hoping to continue to build and grow this initiative,” she says. “Artists have so much to teach us about innovation and creativity.”

. . . 

Margarita Bali's work-in-progress presentation is scheduled for 7 pm on April 3 at the Northwest Film Forum. Visit the event webpage for information or to RSVP.

Two new musical works created collaboratively by fellows Nguyễn Thanh Thủy, Ngô Trà My, Stefan Östersjö, and Garth Knox, and UW Professor Richard Karpen, will be performed on May 11 at 7:30 pm in Meany Theater during the School of Music's Harry Partch Festival. Visit ArtsUW for information or tickets.

 

More Stories

Zaid Harchaoui with open laptop and computers on either side of him.

A Statistician Weighs in on AI

Statistics professor Zaid Harchaoui, working at the intersection of statistics and computing, explores what AI models do well, where they fall short, and why.

Nick Riley and doctoral student in his lab, in white lab coats.

The Mystery of Sugar — in Cellular Processes

Nick Riley's chemistry research aims to understand cellular processes involving sugars, which could one day lead to advances in treating a range of diseases.

Two women in white, dancing in-between trees on the UW campus.

Dancing Across Campus

For the dance course "Activating Space," students danced in public spaces across the University of Washington's Seattle campus this spring.