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COLLISION SHOP: A Collaboration Of Performing Arts With Science

COLLISION SHOP: A Collaboration Of Performing Arts With Science TheatreArtLife

COLLISION SHOP is an MIT-produced crowdsourced virtual performance and exhibit that aims to bring people together. The project sees an unconventional merging of Performing Arts with Science, bringing a new approach to dance.

COLLISION SHOP aka THE POSSIBILITY OF JOY aka PEOPLE CAN BE F***ING MAGICAL is geared toward connecting people all over the world. Created and produced by students with MIT Theater Arts in collaboration with an international team of multidisciplinary artists, facilitated by Dan Safer, and presented in association with October Octopus. The online exhibit and in-person screenings are scheduled to begin May 4, 2021.

The Inspiration Behind COLLISION SHOP

MIT’s Music and Theatre Arts latest project has been facilitated by New York choreographer and Director Dan Safer. Prior to the pandemic, Dan taught dance to MIT students, however it was the work of the last year that inspired COLLISION SHOP. Working remotely with scientists posed new questions of what a performance should be in the post-Covid world. The production emerged in response to a call for intimate video self-portraits and is a meditation on the need for human connection and search for joy.

Dan Safer explained:

“As the pandemic destroyed the traditional ways of interaction and interpersonal communion, I began to ask myself: How do we make something that responds holistically to the moment we are in? To our current reality? This is when the concept of COLLISION SHOP was born. It had to be very different from a typical pre-pandemic work, extremely collaborative, open to the broadest possible group of participants and it had to play with and take advantage of the constraints imposed by the current state of affairs.

I brought this idea to the MIT students who have re-thought and re-imagined what a performance can be in response to the rapidly changing pandemic world. After fourteen months of isolation and displacement, everyone felt strongly that activating and connecting people makes more sense than doing another Zoom show. We wanted it to be funny and profound, spontaneous, accessible, and unpretentious but substantial. We open the virtual “stage” to those who rarely get to stand on it and this way, give the participants a reason to feel joy and connection. We invite them to reveal something personal and unique that will contribute to a broader understanding of where we are as people in this strange time.”

COLLISION SHOP

This collaborative project is based on and driven by ideas contributed by a diverse 13-member group of MIT students from various fields (from artists to computer engineers and chemists to cognitive scientists) whose unique sensibility and understanding of the world brought a new perspective to this performance-based work. COLLISION SHOP emerged through a series of Zoom workshops in which the MIT team was joined by four attendees of The Norwegian Theater Academy and a renegade dancer from Poland who was under lockdown in London. The work was facilitated by dance artist and MIT lecturer Dan Safer, in collaboration with performer and storyteller Wil Petre and dramaturge Ogemdi Ude.

How The Collaboration Will Work

In March 2021, the collective sent out a set of audio instructions, asking people to document themselves performing an unconventional 6-minute performance. The voice on the recording encourages one to “show us what a CELEBRATION looks like,” “find something very tiny,” or simply “sit like a boss” – opening a possibility for the enjoyment of simple tasks. The resulting clips will be viewed side by side, allowing the audience to compare how different people interpreted the same instructions.

Original scores by over 20 international composers, selected randomly for each playback, will ensure that the performance is never the same. Viewers will also be able to watch the clips in a “choose-your-own-adventure” style, selecting two or more videos and playing them simultaneously with the music score of their choice: for example, a clip by an amazing ballet dancer next to a 10-year-old child’s, or a 60-year-old business executive in Dubai next to a college student in NYC, etc.

The final show, scored and edited by the lead artists, will be available for viewing free-of-charge at collisionshop.org, starting May 4, 2021.

Live on-site projections will follow from May 4–11, 2021 on MIT’s campus (Cambridge, MA); The Invisible Dog (Brooklyn, NY); Art Lords Gallery (Kabul, Afghanistan); Art Spaces-Dance (Katowice, Poland) – with more venues to be announced.

COLLISION SHOP

About The Collaborating Artists

COLLISION SHOP is a collaborative project, produced and presented by MIT Music and Theater Arts, created by the cohort of students from the departments of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science (Elaheh Ahmadi, Cecilia Esterman, Kellie Everett, Victoria Longe, Pranav Murugan, and Shannen Wu), Brain And Cognitive Sciences (Daniel Estandian, Fiercé Tianyu Luo), Chemistry (Aniket Dehadrai, Madeline Holtz), Chemical Engineering (Mat Medina), Mechanical Engineering (Luisa Fernanda Apolaya Torres), Health Sciences and Technology (Claudia Varela), and Music and Theater Arts (Peter Tone). The international contributors came from Art Spaces-Dance, Poland: (Daniel Leżoń) and Norwegian Theater Academy (Albert Greve Rasmussen, Anna Rauhala, Clara Random, Karol Broski.) The production was facilitated by Dan Safer, with co-deviser Wil Petre and dramaturg Ogemdi Ude. The instructions soundtrack is by the award-winning composer Christian Frederickson. Aniket “Ani” Dehadrai is the Assistant Director. The production features design by Sara Brown and video installation design by Joshua Higgason. Video editing and the website design are by GLITCH | Attilio Rigotti and Orsi Szantho; WikiHow design by Tolu Akinbo. Miguel Flores is the Production Manager for the project. Presented in association with October Octopus.

COLLISION SHOP is a globally-crowdsourced multidisciplinary online exhibit, open to performers and non-performers alike. Its goal is to bring joy to people by inviting them to both take part in it and watch it.

COLLISION SHOP

Links:

The COLLISION SHOP Website

The October Octopus Website

Instruction audio file

Submission guidelines

MIT Music and Theatre Arts Website 

Also by Michelle Sciarrotta:

Accessibility At The Smith Center Series: Part One

James “Fitz” FitzSimmons Interview: The Boys In The Band On Netflix

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