TAKING CARE WHILE MAKING WORK ABOUT YOUR LIFE

TAKING CARE WHILE MAKING WORK ABOUT YOUR LIFE

Workshops
With Justina Zatzman and Rick Miller

Creating autobiographical work or artwork that draws from personal experience can be a powerful and evocative process for an artist and any collaborators. Sharing examples from his own work, filmmaker and photographer Rick Miller offers insights on supporting your mental health through the process of creating autobiographical work, in conversation with friend, collaborator and former Workman Arts Membership Manager, Justina Zatzman.

For one hour, Participants are invited into a conversation about how to support creative work with personal material, not only in caring for yourself, but also to create healthy and supportive creative environments for collaborators. As lifting restrictions allow artists to re-engage more openly with collaborative work, we have an opportunity to envision collective growth in how we care for the artists we work with (including ourselves).

At the end of the conversation, Rick and Justina will share a draft tool that they’re co-creating to offer suggestions for creating trauma-informed creative environments with a focus on filmmaking, but which could be useful for artists practicing collaboratively in any artistic discipline.

The structured discussion will end after an hour, but interested participants are welcome to stay for an additional 30 minutes to share or ask questions.

WED, NOV 3, 3 – 4:30 PM PM ET
Online

After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting.
Accessibility
ASL Interpretation is available upon request.
PRESENTED BY
Access Canada_Multi-Color_Black_transparent

WORKSHOPS AND PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT EVENTS

WORKSHOPS AND PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT EVENTS

Workshops

Free Workshops,

Professional Development Events and

Development Series for Artists and Filmmakers

This year Rendezvous with Madness Festival is thrilled to present a range of workshops and professional development events for the public, arts professionals, artists and filmmakers!

Most events will be hosted virtually, though some activities will happen in person.

See the full scope of events below!

This year, the workshops and professional development events in the Rendezvous With Madness Festival will be presented virtually from October 25 to November 7.

ACCESSIBILITY

Self-Care Kits are available for pick up on site. For more information contact Membership & Hospital Programs Manager Raine Laurent Eugène at Raine_LaurentEugene@workmanarts.com .

All workshops and professional development events are presented by Warner Media Access Canada.

EVENTS:

Work-shops

A-SITE HOSTS AI AND AR WORKSHOP SERIES

Work-shops

ART COLLAGE WORKSHOP

Work-shops

CHELSEA WATSON MASTER CLASS

sarah trad workshop image

SARA TRAD:
EMOTIONALITY IN ACTION

thumbnail_TIGS-RWM promo image (1)

DUKE AND BATTERSBY:
INFERNAL GROVE STUDY GROUP

Gil workshop still frame

GIL GOLETSKI:
ANIMATION FOR EVERYONE

Work-shops

TAKING CARE WHILE MAKING WORK ABOUT YOUR LIFE

Work-shops

HOW TO DISTRIBUTE YOUR FILM AND
MAKE IT ACCESSIBLE

Work-shops

FUNDING YOUR NEXT PROJECT

FUNDING YOUR NEXT PROJECT

FUNDING YOUR NEXT PROJECT

Workshops
With Bushra Junaid and Mark Haslam, Ontario Arts Council (OAC)

Applying for an arts grant can be confusing or overwhelming. Join Ontario Arts Council (OAC) officers for detailed information about grant opportunities for Ontario-based artists and arts groups with a special focus on accessibility and Deaf and disability-related granting opportunities.

FRI, NOV 5, 1 – 2:30 PM ET
Online

After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting.
Accessibility
ASL Interpretation is available upon request.
PRESENTED BY
Access Canada_Multi-Color_Black_transparent

HOW TO DISTRIBUTE YOUR FILM AND MAKE IT ACCESSIBLE

HOW TO DISTRIBUTE YOUR FILM AND MAKE IT ACCESSIBLE

Workshops
With Morgan Sears Williams and Shannon Gagnon, Canadian Filmmakers Distribution Centre (CFMDC)

Join this informative session about what film distribution means for independent media artists and how to make your works as accessible to as many audiences as possible.

THURS, NOV 4, 1 – 3 PM ET
Online

After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting.
Accessibility
ASL Interpretation is available upon request.
PRESENTED BY
Access Canada_Multi-Color_Black_transparent

TAKING CARE WHILE MAKING WORK ABOUT YOUR LIFE

TAKING CARE WHILE MAKING WORK ABOUT YOUR LIFE

Workshops
With Rick Miller and Justina Zatzman

Creating autobiographical work or artwork that draws from personal experience can be a powerful and evocative process for an artist and any collaborators. Sharing examples from his own work, filmmaker and photographer Rick Miller offers insights on supporting your mental health through the process of creating autobiographical work, in conversation with friend, collaborator and former Workman Arts Membership Manager, Justina Zatzman.

For one hour, Participants are invited into a conversation about how to support creative work with personal material, not only in caring for yourself, but also to create healthy and supportive creative environments for collaborators. As lifting restrictions allow artists to re-engage more openly with collaborative work, we have an opportunity to envision collective growth in how we care for the artists we work with (including ourselves).

At the end of the conversation, Rick and Justina will share a draft tool that they’re co-creating to offer suggestions for creating trauma-informed creative environments with a focus on filmmaking, but which could be useful for artists practicing collaboratively in any artistic discipline.

The structured discussion will end after an hour, but interested participants are welcome to stay for an additional 30 minutes to share or ask questions.

WED, NOV 3, 3 – 4:30 PM PM ET
Online

After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting.

Accessibility
ASL Interpretation is available upon request.
PRESENTED BY
Access Canada_Multi-Color_Black_transparent

GIL GOLETSKI: ANIMATION FOR EVERYONE

GIL GOLETSKI: ANIMATION FOR EVERYONE

Gil Goletski: Animation for Everyone

Join us for a creative animation workshop led by Gil Goletski, a multimedia doer from Vancouver Island. They make animation, illustration and music. Their unique experience as an Autistic transgender person informs most of their work; odd impossible proportioned bodies, ugly porous faces and strange wobbly lines. Recently they have been exploring the idea of identity by using proxies and micro-narratives to explore different aspects of flawed personalities.

Workshop Outline 

  1. Introduction /about Gil
  2. Pros and cons of professional training: “art school” and learning the “right” away to animate 
  3. How to unlearn professional tactics: become a beginner again with an emphasis on having fun: “work VS “play”
  4. become a beginner again, emphasis on having fun, animation “work” vs “play”
  5. “Show & Tell” brief explanation of a quickly drawn animation by Gil
  6. Explanation of different mediums and techniques that are helpful when animating quickly (examples: Crosshair technique and simply tricks on your smartphone)
  7. A conversation about different 2D and 3D resources and software for quick animations. 
  8. Q &A

November 2, 3:30PM
Online

After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting.

 

Accessibility
ASL Interpretation is available upon request.
PRESENTED BY
Access Canada_Multi-Color_Black_transparent

DUKE AND BATTERSBY: INFERNAL GROVE STUDY GROUP

DUKE AND BATTERSBY: INFERNAL GROVE STUDY GROUP

thumbnail_TIGS-RWM promo image (1)
With Emily Vey Duke and Cooper Battersby

The Infernal Grove Study Group

DRUGS, FREEDOM AND THE TYRANNY OF REPRESENTATION

 

Friday Nov. 5, 5:00-6:30pm EST

Featuring: Margaret Sadovsky, Dani ReStack, Liz Roberts, Mikiki, Cooper Battersby and Emily Vey Duke

 

 

Reading: excerpts from Maggie Nelson’s On Freedom (2021) (pdf)

Video: The Infernal Grove

Reading the text and watching the video are not required for participation in the discussion.

 

The study group brings into dialogue a group of artists from across the continent who have lived experience with substance-use, and who represent a range of current relationships to sobriety and its alternatives. They will discuss Maggie Nelson’s On Freedom. The book is an interrogation of the concept of freedom and the way it is deployed in philosophical, literary and political discourses. We will read a section of Chapter 3 Drug Fugue she describes the frame put around drug use and addiction by ideas of freedom and confinement.

In recovery programs, perhaps by necessity and certainly by design, there is a push to accept received wisdom. But for addict-intellectuals, it’s hard to forfeit critical thinking to recovery. In addiction, connection to the intellectual can become tenuous. It’s easy to lose the relationships and identities that support rigorous critical thinking. Recovery can mean recovering those relationships and identities.

This first session of the Study Group explores the notion of drug-taking as an adaptive strategy in a world stripped of ritual and connection to land.

The Infernal Grove Project exposes the disproportionate effects of public trauma (including the COVID pandemic) on drug users, especially addicts of color. It’s become an organizing principle in our thinking about this work: we need to show the connections between addiction and the socioeconomic forces that create and exploit it.

ig: @the_infernal_grove

The Infernal Grove Project takes place mostly on stolen Mi’kmaq and Onondaga land.

The festival hosting this version, Rendezvous with Madness, is located on the traditional territory of many nations, including the Mississaugas of the Credit, the Anishnabeg, the Chippewa, the Haudenosaunee and the Wendat peoples and is now home to many diverse First Nations, Inuit and Métis peoples.

To those who have allowed us to stay, we humbly extend gratitude and honour.

FRI, NOV 5, 5 PM ET
Online

After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting.

Accessibility
ASL Interpretation is available upon request.
PRESENTED BY
Access Canada_Multi-Color_Black_transparent

SARA TRAD: EMOTIONALITY IN ACTION

SARA TRAD: EMOTIONALITY IN ACTION

sarah trad workshop image
With Sara Trad

Join Sarah Trad via Zoom for a glitch art workshop on November 1 6:30-7:30 PM ET

Using the open-source, free and multidisciplinary software Audacity, Sarah Trad will be teaching an introductory workshop on how to glitch still images. Glitch art experimentation uses Sonification as a process within audio software that disturbs the file data of images to create a new visual effect. In this workshop, Sarah will give a step-by-step tutorial on how to glitch an image. As well as provide historical context for glitch art; how it fits into the history of found art and collage including, artists that have inspired her artistic practice.

 

ABOUT SARAH

Sarah Trad, a Philadelphia-based video artist and curator who explores the relationship between subjective and objective emotionality, navigating daily life and relationships while faced with mental illness and breaking down stereotypes of gender and narrative. Her work also highlights how mental illness and coming from marginalized backgrounds intersect with internal emotional worlds.

 

This workshop is limited to 12 participants.

 

After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing a link to download Audacity, workshop materials and information about joining the meeting.

MONDAY, NOV 1, 6:30-7:30 PM ET
Online

After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting.
Accessibility
ASL Interpretation is available upon request.
PRESENTED BY
Access Canada_Multi-Color_Black_transparent

CHELSEA WATSON MASTER CLASS: SELF ISOLATION – LEARNING TO MAKE COMPUTATIONAL ART DURING A GLOBAL PANDEMIC

CHELSEA WATSON MASTER CLASS: SELF ISOLATION – LEARNING TO MAKE COMPUTATIONAL ART DURING A GLOBAL PANDEMIC

Workshops
With Chelsea Watson

In spring 2020, Chelsea Watson taught herself how to make art from code by creating 100 computational pieces in 100 days. What started as an exploration of a new artistic medium, this structured approach to creating art became a way for her to connect and cope while self-isolating for the better part of a year. Join Chelsea as she takes you through her challenge, and walks you through a hands-on workshop to explore generative art and introduce the basics of creating art using code.

OCT 28 – NOV 7
Online

Accessibility
ASL Interpretation is available upon request.
PRESENTED BY
Access Canada_Multi-Color_Black_transparent

ART COLLAGE WORKSHOP

ART COLLAGE WORKSHOP

Workshops
With Anna Redish

ART COLLAGE WORKSHOP inspired by the documentary Poly Styrene: I Am A Cliché features an opportunity to make a collage alongside an informal discussion of the film.

Art journaling and collage is a way of expressing yourself in an encouraging environment without judgement or criticism. Make time for yourself, connect with others and share in an experience that can change your life, help you process difficult emotions or just tap into your creative side!

No experience needed.

Facilitated by Anna Redish.

20 participants maximum.

*Participants who register by November 1 will be mailed a collage kit!
It is helpful to have the following supplies on hand (feel free to improvise): magic markers, paints, scissors, glue stick and/or tape.

FRI, NOV 5, 3 – 5:30 PM ET
Online

After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting.
Accessibility
ASL Interpretation is available upon request.
PRESENTED BY
Access Canada_Multi-Color_Black_transparent