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iLAND

Interdisciplinary Laboratory for Art Nature and Dance

ArtsPool Member
  • About
    • iLAND
    • Jennifer Monson
    • Board of Directors
    • Funders
  • Dance Projects
    • move thing
    • Choreographies of Disaster
    • ditch
    • bend the even
    • in tow
    • IN TOW TV
      • IN TOW TV – Season 1, Episode 1: Kaleidoscope
      • IN TOW TV – Season 1, Episode 2: Nibia Line A
      • IN TOW TV – Season 1, Episode 3: Nibia Line B
      • IN TOW TV – Season 1, Episode 4: Fabric | Time Experiment
      • IN TOW TV – Season 1, Episode 5: Shrugs with balls-5:3
      • IN TOW TV – Season 1, Episode 6: Drawing Overlay
      • IN TOW TV – Season 1, Episode 7: In Out Cut 5:3
      • IN TOW TV Season 1, Episode 8: OUT-OUT-IN-IN-IN-OUT-OUT-IN-OUT-IN
      • IN TOW TV Season 1, Episode 9: Composite | Line
      • IN TOW TV Season 1, Episode 10: Flipping the Firmament | Flesh
      • IN TOW TV – Season 1, Episode 11: Perspective | Tone
      • IN TOW TV – Season 1, Episode 12: T | I | M | E
      • IN TOW TV – Season 1, Episode 13: Time + Tone | Tide Score B
      • IN TOW TV – Season 1, Episode 14: Time + Tone | Tide Score A
      • IN TOW TV – Season 1, Episode 15: Bells Long
      • Bonus Episode! Season 1, Episode 16: Video Perspective
    • Past
  • A Field Guide to iLANDing
    • Guía de campo de iLANDing
  • iLAB Residencies
  • iLAND Symposium
  • Resources
    • A Field Guide to iLANDing
    • BIRD BRAIN Educational Resource Guide
  • iLANDing Laboratories

Adaptability + Flow

Adaptability + Flow Panel Discussions

May 28, 2017 by

Understanding Urban Weather Systems and Designing for Climate Change

Moderated by Elliott Maltby, Partner, the thread collective & iLAND board member
Presented by:
Philip Orton, Research Scientist, Stevens Institute of Technology
Victoria Marshall, Assistant Professor of Urban Design, The New School
and
Higher E.D. (Ecology + Dance), 2012 iLAB Residents:
Liz Barry, Public Laboratory for Open Technology & Science
Jessica Einhorn, Dancer, Scientist
Lailye Weidman, Choreographer

Micro to Macro Movement in New York City waterways from East Tremont to Newtown Creek

Moderated by Carolyn Hall, Dancer, Historical Marine Biologist & iLAND board member
Presented by:
John Waldman, Professor of Biology, Queens College
and
Follow the Water Walks, 2012 iLAB Residents:
Rebecca Boger, Assistant Professor, Department of Earth &
Environmental Sciences, Brooklyn College
Damian Griffin, Education Director, Bronx River Alliance
Paloma McGregor, Choreographer

Specifically addressing the study of and relationship to the rivers and sewers of New York City, this panel serves to highlight how interdisciplinary strategies can broaden our understanding and embody a sense of a waterway’s past compared to its present through changes in the landscape, inhabitants’ migrations, and the communities that border its shores. Can such interdisciplinary studies enable us to find more flexible ways to address rising water levels, dense coastal populations, and increased frequencies of hurricanes? We will also discuss how the panelists’ efforts to renovate, restore, study, and discover such integrated water systems, native species, and human communities challenge them to physicalize, reinterpret, and seek collaborations to better understand their subjects. Moderated by dancer and historical marine ecologist Carolyn Hall, the panel features Queens College Professor of Biology and author John Waldman speaking on the health of the greater waterway ecosystem of NYC and specific studies on Newtown Creek and the Bronx River, and the iLAB residency fellows of Follow the Water Walks that explored East Tremont’s relationship to the Bronx River and the sewer ways that service the community through dance, education, and mapping.

Follow the Water Walks Workshop

May 28, 2017 by

Using choreographic, scientific and cultural research Follow the Water Walks developed interactive movement structures for a model that offers people an embodied experience of the storm water routes and the Bronx River, with attention to what was, is and will be part of that living landscape.

Higher ED: Weather scores, Wind scales, and Scattered Dances

May 28, 2017 by

In these two hours we will enact and create dance scores that grow and shift our understanding of weather in the city. We will also learn how to assess wind speed by observing the movement of objects and trees around us. We will seek out micro-weather factors around the New School such as buildings that protect us from wind or redirect it, temperature differences in areas of shade or sun, and the effects of nearby traffic or street trees. If there are the right conditions for gathering aerial imagery by kite, we will fly a camera as well. It is our hypothesis that the body is a highly tuned weather-sensing instrument, come test this with us!

A discussion and exploration on Mapping

May 28, 2017 by

Liz Barry and Becky Boger will lead a lecture/demonstration on the use of Geographic Information Systems(GIS) from their distinctive points of view. How can various mapping strategies empower community action related to urban planning and environmental issues? Drawing on their experiences with Public Laboratory for Open Technologies and Science(PLOTS) and Global Learning and Observations to Benefit the Environment (GLOBE) they will discuss mapping strategies with local and global communities.

Cooperation in the Land of Heroes: Nature and Improvisation on the Islands

May 28, 2017 by

Plenary by Meredith Ramirez Talusan, Artist, Scholar

Integrating embodied discourses from a number of disciplines, this interactive talk adapts the presenter’s childhood experience in the Philippine islands to think about the islands of New York. Historically Filipinos have often been depicted as improvisational and undisciplined when in fact they have developed sophisticated cultural practices and strategies adapted to the changing environmental and cultural phenomena of the islands. How might the nature of these improvisational strategies across disciplines and cultures influence how we understand the rapidly changing phenomena of  the islands of New York City?  This presentation uses cooperation as a theme to activate both embodied conceptual frameworks for defining and problemiting interdisciplinary collaboration through a thoughtful cultural lens.

45 // Time in Three Trajectories

May 12, 2017 by

Page 97 of A Field Guide to iLANDing.

Adaptability + Flow

April 4, 2013 by

This symposium focused on the phenomena of New York City’s waterways and weather systems, particularly the impact of Hurricane Sandy on the city and the role of interdisciplinary strategies to create flexible responses to large-scale phenomena. Presenters included Liz Barry, Jessica Einhorn and Lailye Weidman of Higher E.D.; Rebecca Boger, Damian Griffin and Paloma McGregor of Follow the Water Walks; professors John Waldman and Victoria Marshall and research scientist Philip Orton. Performances by Paloma McGregor and Meredith Ramirez Talusan.

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