Education News | Page 17

ANTHROPOLOGY OF THE DISCARD: INTERACTIVE EXHIBIT THE LISTENING LAB (AN INTERVIEW WITH DR. KATHRYN RICKETTS) What is the Listening Lab and why is it so called? The Listening Lab is an artist/research/teacher residency committed to bold explorations of experimental arts with the purpose of developing user-friendly language and resources that can be shared within and beyond the university Who is it for? The Listening Lab is directed by myself and interfaces with artist, teachers, and researchers from the University of Regina and beyond to colleagues within Saskatchewan and further to our national community. What is your goal/vision in developing the Liste ning Lab? I wanted to create a kind of laboratory that combined this concept and experimental play with the purpose of generating not only a stronger appreciation of experimental arts but also more approachable methods for practicing art making within the broadest range of contexts. Coming from a professional dance background, I have participated in countless creative labs and have experienced the great value of these experiments for both artists and audience members. I wanted to extend this idea to an educative context. What were some positive results you saw from last year's Lab? So far I am working with serendipitous connections to the lab and inviting participants that I continue to work with from across the country. I have been able to broker many connections and foster meaningful relationships with these residents within our Faculty and beyond to other Faculties including within the First Nations University. I have also been able to bridge these research projects with key players in the community including arts programmers, studio directors, professional artists, and teachers in the field. The residency has been able to further inquiries and deepen methods of practice for each individual resident. A few examples are listed below: • Daya Madhur (Ethnomusicologist, Arts Education Specialist): Socially engaged arts-based practices. • Loft Lift Off: A studio celebration of two exhibitions, live music, dance, video and storytelling with Ned Bartlett, Johanna Bundon, Ian Campbell, Patrick Lewis, Kathryn Ricketts & Gale Russell. • Vicki Kelly (Associate Professor, Arts Education, SFU): Indigenous arts-based practices as knowledge practices. • Susan Gerofsky (Assistant Professor, Curriculum & Pedagogy, UBC): Embodied methods of understanding math. • Performance and Difference: Developing new accessible and inclusive languages/methods for experimental art making. Kathryn Ricketts with Dr. Randy Johner & Dr. Kathleen Irwin. Where did the idea come from? One key component in my thesis work around the method Embodied Poetic Narrative was the notion of "deep listening." It strikes me that this is the nexus of all of our work as effective artists, teachers, and researchers. • Anthropology of the Discard, 5th Parallel Gallery: An interactive exhibition based on bags of objects bulging with stories. (see photos above) I have been able to support arts of these activities with the generous support of the Ruth Dafoe Fund from the Faculty of Social work as well as support from this Faculty. What are your plans for this year regarding the Listening Lab? I have a very exciting season filled with artists, teachers, and researchers from Vancouver, Victoria, Newfoundland, Prince Edward Island, Montreal, Toronto, Windsor, Winnipeg, North Battleford, and Saskatoon. The work will focus more on explorations of cultural displacement with creative place-based experiments. I will also be working with a variety of artists from a range of disciplines as performative contributors to the National tour of Anthropology of the Discard for 2016/18. I will be continuing to work with teachers in the field and within the lab furthering the creative capital of pedagogues in the classroom. And finally I will be working with Dr. Kathleen Irwin (Faculty of MAP) and Dr. Randy Johner (Faculty of Social Work), exploring and expanding language, methods, and resources in the realm of mixed abilities and performance. These last two projects are fuelled by grants from SSHRC Insight, SSHRC Seed and Humanities Research Fellowship, Ruth Dafoe Fund as well as the support from the Faculty of Education. I am hoping that in the future, I can welcome artists, researchers, and teachers by a call for proposals. I am excited by the notion of connecting inquiries with local resources and to watch how this exciting alchemy can further our research and deepen our own inquiries in our Faculty. Education News | Page 17