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Showing posts from November, 2021

Languages

  After a lot of deliberation in the past few days, I have come to a decision on the artefact I want to create. Given the themes around dance as language, emotion as language, emotion as story, and story as language that have been threaded through my inquiry, it felt right to use these as the base for the artefact. At first I considered creating a dance, as this seemed completely logical for dance, emotion, and language themes. However, the more I thought about it, the more this didn't feel right. It felt as if I could have done that before the inquiry, and even before the BAPP course. I didn't think it really showed that I had learned and progressed. But the idea of languages and also story as being the 'how' rather than 'what' of dance was stuck in my head. I also thought about the inquiry process and how the language of my keyboard was used to conduct the whole thing - researching, writing blogs, zoom interviews, writing the report etc. These were such involv...

Artefact Acrobatics

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 "Creativity is intelligence having fun." - Albert Einstein A very short blog today just thinking in open space. Contemplating the artefact for my portfolio feels like a daunting task as there is so much that could be incorporated. To narrow it down I've had to really think about what has been most important, what has stood out, what means the most to me, and what I'll carry forward in my practice. Even when considering these things, there is still the problem of how to translate and represent them in some kind of artefact. There are a million different things you could do and I keep jumping from one idea to the next, but none of them feel like I can ground myself or my inquiry in them. A key point I have also been contemplating is the emphasis of the artefact showing the inquiry journey - including that of creating the artefact - as well as just what you actually found within the inquiry. It feels like a lot. In some lighthearted creativity Googling I came across thi...

Cook Your Veg!!

  "Data will talk to you if you're willing to listen." - Jim Bergeson As I've come to realise, analysing data is a very involved enterprise that requires transformation of raw material in to something of value and meaning. Simply presenting information you found isn't enough. It has to do something. In a recent call, Helen related this to having a bunch of vegetables as your ingredients, but throwing them together in a bowl doesn't make it a meal - you have to cook them, blend them, heat them together, allow them to interact and affect each other, add your own spices, stir and blend them... you have to transform them.  And then you have a meal. In short, cook your veg. Admittedly this isn't the easiest of processes and knowing just how to cook them can be hard in itself, though this is where planning in Module 2 comes in very handy so you have established what approach or philosophical view you are taking and what steps are involved in the analysis proce...