Walking stirs the creative conscious and provides a moment to connect with the Creator and the ancestors.
As I ask for permission and guidance to begin my process, the sound of traffic, leaves blowing, children playing, adults scurrying to meet appointments, the sound of clicking my pencil against my rings lands on my being as I walk to play with my artist child.
To explore my warm-up, please press play on all three walking images.
Along the walk, there are natural sounds that begin to speak to me and invite me to play.
The sounds say use me, enjoy me, make me your sound board for discovery and new knowledge
To experience a sample of inspiring sounds, please press play on your right. Bathe in the sounds and allow the to usher and guide your gestures, play, and embodied metaphors.
INSPIRATION FOR ALLOWING, ACCEPTING, WALKING, AND PLAY
A wakening up to the sensing body, moving out of our heads and into the present moment of what is within us and around us. (A Widening Field, Journeys in Body and Imagination, Miranda Tufnell and Chris Crickmay)
Feeling with the eye…drawing with touch. Let your eye travel over the object as your fingers did before. Feeling the lines of the object…in the movement of your hand…on paper. (A Widening Field, Journeys in Body and Imagination, Miranda Tufnell and Chris Crickmay)
Curating as a practice. Moving, thinking, and making in a curatorial framework is choreographic. The dramaturgy of curatorial assemblage. (Assembling A Praxis, Lauren O’Neal)
Walking- diagram embodied experience by moving in, around, and through the place, letting inform my next movements. (Assembling A Praxis, Lauren O’Neal)
Think outside the box. (Twyla Tharp, The Creative Habit, Learn It and Use It for Life)
Art is process. Make a playdate with the artist child (The Artist Way, Julia Cameron)
Choreography is Aesthetic Grammar. Choreographic inquiry is Movement Making. Ethnographic Exchange. Embodied Metaphor. The Argument as Dance. Choreo-Thinking, use movement to stimulate your thinking/feeling or theoretical elements of your research and Meaning-Making (PLAY, Dr. Adesola Akinleye)
Outline the way of thinking about doing ethnography that takes as its starting point the multisensoriality of experience, perception, knowing, and practicing. Reconceptualize the interview (conversation) through a sensory approach. Interviews (conversation) refer to the sensoriality of experience, not only verbally, metaphor, gestures, touching, scents, images, and taste. (Doing Sensory Ethnography, Sarah Pink)
“Learn By Doing”. Mind is a blank slate, passively accepting whatever experiences might write on it. (John Dewey and the Lessons of Art, Phillip W. Jackson)
"Less Talk, More Action." (Creative Pep Talk, Andy J. Miller)