Tuesday, February 21, 2017

Round Robin

By Maegan Sugrue
By Emily Dickerson

By Courtney Miller

By McKenna Colver

By Kindi Nybo

Monday, February 20, 2017

Textual Poaching: Sisters



Artist/Teacher Statement:

One of my favorite parts of my identity is my identity as a sister. My sense of what it means to be a sister has evolved as I've gotten older. I remember watching movies like White Christmas and singing, "Sisters, sisters. There were never such devoted sisters..." with my own sisters. We'd dress up and act out different songs and scenes and argue about who got to be whom. I remember watching Parent Trap and being able to relate a little when Susan and Sharon would argue and do things on purpose to bother each as well as when they finally started to like each other and made plans together and conspired together. At this point, my definition of "sister" depended on biology. Although we were good friends, my sisters were my sisters because we had the same parents and that's what it meant to be a sister.

As I got older, I've realized that being a "sister" doesn't depend on biology and DNA. Being a sister means being a friend no matter what, "in all kinds of weather" as Rosemary Clooney and Vera-Ellen sang, whenever, wherever, whatever, always and forever. It means late night chats, borrowing and lending clothes, Snapchat streaks, confidantes, and anything else we need it to mean. This has helped me broaden my definition of "sister" and I consider my closest friends to be my sisters as well. To be a sister is to share a connection with another woman that strengthens, comforts, encourages, and supports. I love being a sister.

I really like the idea of using an assignment like this in the classroom to help students think about their identity and how that identity has evolved and been shaped by media and other influences in their lives. I think it would also be interesting to use this as a way to study characterization and examine how characters' identities form, what they're influenced by, and how they evolve and progress through a play or a novel.

Sunday, February 5, 2017

Process Piece: Making the Bed


I decided to do a silent video of myself making the bed. I felt like a silent video would be more effective for this act of human labor than just audio because there isn't a lot of sound that goes into making the bed, and I felt like the act would be better represented through video than audio. The actual recording was 8 minutes long, so I also liked the idea of doing video so that I could use my entire recording (I cut a little off the very beginning and the very end), just speed it up to be under a minute, and still have the process be recognizable. I feel like if I were to do audio of something that was 8 minutes long and then speed it up or cut it to be under a minute, it wouldn't be the same. Which could be an artistic choice/result of the process, but I wanted it to be more realistically representative of the process. I recorded the process on my iPhone and then sped up the video x8 in iMovie. This was also chosen a lot out of convenience. I had just finished the laundry and I needed to make the bed and I hadn't done this assignment yet, so here we are.