Joan Dickinson

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Joan Dickinson is a contemporary American artist, writer, director, curator, and educator.

Biography[]

Education and Teaching[]

Dickinson holds a doctorate (2012) from the Literary Arts program at the University of Denver, and teaches independently serving diverse populations from pre-school age to elders in rural and urban classrooms; as a faculty member and visiting artist in art schools, colleges, universities; and in writing and learning centers with self-identified learning disabled students, homeless women, and writers from Mexico, China, Japan, Egypt, Viet Nam, Pakistan, Norway, Iraq, Italy, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, France, and the United States.

Creative Practice[]

Beginning as a young woman, Dickinson has developed and sustained ways of working using interrelated forms including visual and performance art, photography, books and multiples, teaching, farming and environmental restoration, astrology, ceremony, and palliative care. During a twelve-year period, Dickinson moved her creative practice to a 300-acre wetland wilderness sanctuary in rural Illinois, often living outdoors or inhabiting a six-floor silo and barn. In that place and its surrounds, Dickinson created and directed twelve place-based, large-scale performances each derived from the direct experience of living in a wilderness sanctuary, reading and writing, music, friendship, contemplation, and physical labor. So too, in cooperation with others, Dickinson learned basic environmental restoration practices such as how to unpin rivers, remove agricultural tiles, rout buckthorn, and safely conduct controlled burns. She became a beekeeper and herbalist, and learned to observe and integrate celestial alignments. In these and other ways, including her work as an artist, Dickinson familiarized herself with one place – its stories and mythologies entwined with its geographies, communities, and climate – and the wider connection of one place to others.

In roughly the same time period and continuing into the present day, other work, including a long-term collaboration with the performance group, Goat Island, has been presented in more traditional contemporary art spaces and theaters including the Institute of Contemporary Arts in London,[1] 3rd Eye Center & Center for Contemporary Arts in Glasgow, PS 122 in New York City,[2] Highways Performance Space in Santa Monica,[3] Illinois State Museum in Springfield,[4] and many locations in Chicago. Chicago venues include: the Lyric Opera,[5] the Chicago Cultural Center,[6] Hyde Park Art Center,[7] Randolph Street Gallery,[8] the Lurie Garden at Millennium Park,[9] and the Museum of Contemporary Art.[10] Other venues included the Experimental Sound Studio, Club Lower Links, Cabaret Metro, and, in Denver, Platte Forum and Counterpath Press, and within numerous creative residencies around the world.

  • Goat Island Retrospective/Exhibition + Performances + Symposium (2019)[11][12][13][14][15]
  • The Cooking School of the Air (2012-2019)[16]
  • Coming in from the North (2007-2016)[17][18]
  • The Dream of the Owl Sisters (performance + book; 2013-2015)[19]
  • "Mule Deer Are Everywhere in the West" from A Poetic Inventory of Rocky Mountain National Park (2012)[20]
  • "Lindow Man" from Fat Boy Review (2011)[21]
  • With All that She Is She Desires to Give Great Pleasure (2007–2009)[22]
  • pretty pretty pretty over there too (2007)[23][24]
  • Degrees of Wildness/The Charioteer (2006)[25]
  • The Language of Birds (2005)[26]
  • Atmosphere (2005)[27]
  • In the Palace of the Night Heron (2004)as part of Bird Brain with Jennifer Monson[28][29][30]
  • 13 Moon (2003–2004)[31]
  • Devotion (2001–2002)[32]
  • Drove Road (1999–2000)[33]
  • The Architecture of Honey (1997–1998)[34]
  • Flower (1996–1997)
  • Hunter’s Moon (1995–1996)[35]
  • Hula (1994)[36]
  • Big Goddess Powwow (1994-1996)[37][38][39][40][41]
  • Black Cake (1993)[42]
  • White Castle (1993)[43]
  • Mental Beauty/Enduring Affection (1992)[44]
  • We Got A Date (1989); Can’t Take Johnny to the Funeral (1991) as part of Goat island Performance Group[45][46][47][48][49][50][51]

Awards[]

  • Flinders Island Artist Residency (2016-2017)
  • Platte Forum Creative Residency (2013)[52]
  • University of Denver (DU) (2008-2012) Fellowship[53]
  • DU Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences Graduate Writing Scholar (2009-2010)
  • Crosscut Award (2007)[54]
  • Illinois Arts Council Project Grant (2006)
  • Columbia College Faculty Development Award (2006)
  • Chicago Department of Cultural Affairs commission (2005)
  • Illinois Arts Council Fellowship (2004)
  • Illinois Arts Council Project Grant (2002)
  • Richard H. Dreihaus Individual Artist Award, the Richard Dreihaus Foundation, Nomination (2001)
  • Cal Arts/ Alpert Award in the Arts, Nomination (2001)
  • Columbia College Excellence in Teaching Award (2000)[55]

Other Cultural Work[]

Beginning in 1989 and continuing until early 1997, Dickinson worked at Randolph Street Gallery (RSG), the erstwhile alternative arts space in Chicago (1979-1998). Initially, Dickinson was a member of the committee responsible for performance programming (called “Time Arts” at RSG) under the direction of Mary Jo Schnell along with Peter Taub, the Executive Director of the gallery. From 1993 and until her resignation, Dickinson was the Director of Time Arts and worked in both curatorial and production capacities.[56][57]

In addition to Time Arts programming, and what are now called “live” art events (including the Grotto d’Amore––a fund-raiser cum ceremonial happening wherein same-sex couples and groups, inter and intra species companions, and lovers of the incarcerated could marry and divorce in a single night), Dickinson’s work, in tandem with the Time Arts Programming Committee and RSG Staff members, included the design and implementation of several public art projects beginning in 1989 with the first Day without Art events in collaboration with Encarnacion Teruel and the Mexican Fine Arts Center Museum (now called the National Museum of Mexican Art), the University of Illinois with Matthew Owens, and with Nathan Mason, the First Presbyterian Church. On December 1, 2, and 3 of that year, portraits of people living with AIDS were projected at locations throughout Chicago: the ballroom of the museum, the student union of the university, and outdoors against the walls of the church on Michigan Avenue’s Gold Coast.

Selected Time Arts Programming [58][59][]

Quraysh Ali,[60] Nancy Andrews,[61] Ron Athey,[62] [63] Sadie Benning,[64] Dalida María Benfield, Jaap Blonk,[65][66] Lynn Book[67] ,[68] Mwata Bowden,[69] Maris Bustamante, Janet Cardiff,[70][71] Sandra Cisneros, William Close,[72] Portia Cobb, Dominique Dibbell, Richard Elovich [73] ,[74] Coco Fusco,[75][76] Goat Island,[77] James Grigsby,[78] Essex Hemphill,[79] In the Flesh (Series)[80] ,[81] John Jesurun,[82] John Malpede,[83] Iris Moore,[84] Jennifer Monson, Eileen Myles,[85] Natsu Nakajima[86] ,[87] Achy Obejas, Matthew Owens,[88] Michelle Parkerson, Guillermo Gomez Pena,[89][90] Adrian Piper, Pomo Afro Homos,[91] , Marlon Riggs ,[92][93] Root Wy’mn Theater Company,[94] [95] Sacred Naked Nature Girls[96] ,[81] Carolee Schneeman[97][98] Dread Scott, Joe Silovsky, Theodora Skipitares, Laetitia Sonami,[99][100] Patricia Smith, Spiderwoman Theater,[101][102] Lawrence Steger,[103][104] Chris Sullivan, That Time of the Months (Series),[105] Blair Thomas, Rose Troche,[106] Kitty Tsui, Brendan de Vallance, Gregory Whitehead,[107] Dolores Wilber,[108] Michael Zerang[109]

References[]

  1. ^ "Home - Institute of Contemporary Arts". Archived from the original on 2017-02-26. Retrieved 2015-07-09.
  2. ^ "Performance Space 122".
  3. ^ "Highways Performance Space & Gallery".
  4. ^ "Welcome to the Illinois State Museum--Illinois State Museum".
  5. ^ Lyric Opera of Chicago
  6. ^ "City of Chicago :: Chicago Cultural Center".
  7. ^ "Home - Hyde Park Art Center".
  8. ^ Randolph Street Gallery
  9. ^ "City of Chicago :: Millennium Park".
  10. ^ "MCA – Home".
  11. ^ The Visualist. "Goat Island Archive". Retrieved 29 March 2019.
  12. ^ May, Mary. [goat island archive – we have discovered the performance by making it https://www.chicago.gov/city/en/depts/dca/provdrs/attractions_eventsandexhibitions/news/2019/january/goat_island.html "goat island archive – we have discovered the performance by making it"]. City of Chicago. Retrieved 24 January 2019. {{cite web}}: Check |url= value (help)
  13. ^ Lowe, Nick. "From the archives". SAIC. Retrieved 1 February 2019.
  14. ^ Climenhaga, Royd (2020). "Goat Island". Routledge Performance Archive.
  15. ^ Island, Goat. "Goat island Archive". Youtube. Retrieved 24 June 2019.
  16. ^ "Joan Dickinson, artist - The Cooking School of the Air".
  17. ^ "Joan Dickinson, artist - Invisible Channels of Commonality".
  18. ^ "TOP V. WEEKEND PICKS (9/29-10/5) | Bad at Sports".
  19. ^ "The Dream of the Owl Sisters - A ceremonial performance for listening at the river".
  20. ^ "A Poetic Inventory of Rocky Mountain National Park".
  21. ^ "12 days of projects from Fatboy Review". 5 January 2011.
  22. ^ "Joan Dickinson, artist - With All That She Is She Desires to Give Great Pleasure".
  23. ^ "Joan Dickinson, artist - pretty pretty pretty over there too".
  24. ^ "pathogeographies".
  25. ^ "Gapers Block: Slowdown - November 16, 2005".
  26. ^ "Joan Dickinson, artist - Invisible Channels of Commonality".
  27. ^ "Joan Dickinson, artist - Invisible Channels of Commonality".
  28. ^ "Joan Dickinson, artist - In The Palace of the Night Heron".
  29. ^ http://www2mcachicago.org/event/jennifer-monsonbird-brain-ducks-geese-migration[permanent dead link]
  30. ^ "Dancer Jennifer Monson goes where birds take her".
  31. ^ "Joan Dickinson, artist - 13 Moon".
  32. ^ "Her Field of Dreams Performance Artist Joan Dickinson Says the Costumed Bears, Dancing Horses and Shrouded Women in Her Work Have Deep Meaning - but Does Anyone Get It?". 17 October 2002. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  33. ^ "Featured Articles about Performance Art - Page 3 - tribunedigital-chicagotribune".
  34. ^ Burbank, Carol (21 May 1998). "A World Apart".
  35. ^ Dickinson, Joan; Mallozzi, Dawn; Moore, Iris (1 December 1998). "Hunter's Moon and Flower: Two Performances by Joan Dickinson". TDR/The Drama Review. 42 (4): 14–36. doi:10.1162/105420498760308337. S2CID 57572188.
  36. ^ Obejas, Achy (30 June 1994). "Hula, Part I".
  37. ^ Obejas, Achy (13 May 1993). "Big Goddess Pow Wow III: the Empress Provoked".
  38. ^ Rago, Carmela (2 June 1994). "Celebrating the Spoken Word".
  39. ^ "Performance Artist Wilke Heads For L.a."
  40. ^ "Wordsmyths Offer A Cultural Explosion".
  41. ^ "Girls' Night Out".
  42. ^ Obejas, Achy (4 February 1993). "Bizarre and Logical".
  43. ^ "Exhibitions - Gallery 400".
  44. ^ Obejas, Achy (21 May 1992). "Next Step". Chicago Reader.
  45. ^ "Goat Island Performance Group - Performances".
  46. ^ http://muse.jhu.edu/login?auth=0&type=summary&url=/journals/theatre_journal/v048/48.2bottoms_fig02.html[dead link]
  47. ^ Hayford, Justin (2 November 1989). "Intimate Details". Chicago Reader.
  48. ^ "Goat Island Performance Group - Performances".
  49. ^ Tsatsos, Irene; Dickinson, Joan; Christopher, Karen; Goulish, Matthew; McCain, Greg; McCain, Tim (1 January 1991). "Talking with Goat Island: An Interview with Joan Dickinson, Karen Christopher, Matthew Goulish, Greg McCain, and Tim McCain". TDR. 35 (4): 66–74. doi:10.2307/1146163. JSTOR 1146163.
  50. ^ "The Last Performance".
  51. ^ "The politics of becoming(-woman): Deleuze, sex and gender". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  52. ^ "Joan Dickinson - PlatteForum".
  53. ^ "IMPACT: The Campaign for the University of Denver".
  54. ^ "Experimental Sound Studio - Past Crosscut Recipients". Archived from the original on 2014-07-14. Retrieved 2014-07-03.
  55. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2014-07-14. Retrieved 2014-07-03.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  56. ^ "Programmer Leaving Randolph St. Gallery".
  57. ^ "For Art's Sake".
  58. ^ https://www.saic.edu/academics/libraries-special-collections/john-flaxman-library/special-collections/randolph-street-gallery
  59. ^ https://digitalcollections.saic.edu/rsga
  60. ^ "Quraysh Ali Lansana". January 2022.
  61. ^ "Home".
  62. ^ "::::Ron Athey::::".
  63. ^ Obejas, Achy (10 June 1993). "Martyrs and Saints".
  64. ^ "Sadie Benning - Video Data Bank".
  65. ^ "Jaap Blonk's Website".
  66. ^ Corbett, John (14 November 1996). "Jaap Blonk".
  67. ^ "Lynn Book".
  68. ^ "'Gorgeous Fever' Lets Book Plant Ideas".
  69. ^ "Mwata Bowden - Department of Music - The University of Chicago".
  70. ^ "Janet Cardiff & George Bures Miller".
  71. ^ Litvin, Michelle (15 December 1994). "On Exhibit: hearing is believing".
  72. ^ Group, Twelve : Twenty Four Design. "Mass Ensemble - A New Design in Music".
  73. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2013-07-26. Retrieved 2014-12-20.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  74. ^ Williams, Albert (12 November 1992). "Someone Else From Queens Is Queer".
  75. ^ "Coco Fusco".
  76. ^ Rago, Carmela (28 January 1993). "Specimens From the New World".
  77. ^ "Goat Island Performance Group".
  78. ^ Hayford, Justin (22 August 2002). "In Performance: celebrating James Grigsby's polished menace".
  79. ^ "Essex Hemphill". January 2022.
  80. ^ "Featured Articles about Randolph Street - Page 5 - tribunedigital-chicagotribune".
  81. ^ a b "Randolph Street Takes 'In The Flesh' Literally".
  82. ^ Hayford, Justin (20 October 1994). "Cubist Collage".
  83. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2014-12-20. Retrieved 2014-12-20.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  84. ^ "Iris Moore and Christina Cobb". 10 March 1994.
  85. ^ "Eileen Myles' Homepage".
  86. ^ Mihopoulos, Effie (19 August 1993). "The First Butoh".
  87. ^ "The Way Of Butoh".
  88. ^ "Matthew Owns: Extreme Pet Portraits".
  89. ^ "top".
  90. ^ Rago, Carmela (14 January 1993). "Guillermo Gomez-Pena and Coco Fusco".
  91. ^ "Owen Keehnen: Interviews".
  92. ^ http://marlonriggs.com/
  93. ^ "Living 'Color'".
  94. ^ Sharon Bridgforth (3 December 2008). "The root wy'mn Theatre Company" – via YouTube.
  95. ^ Obejas, Achy (16 June 1994). "Sisters in the House".
  96. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2008-09-07. Retrieved 2014-12-20.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  97. ^ http://www.caroleeschneemann.com/
  98. ^ Stamets, Bill (5 November 1992). "Art Facts: Carol Schneemann drives men crazy".
  99. ^ "LAETITIA SONAMI".
  100. ^ "Review_Chicago".
  101. ^ "Spiderwoman Theater".
  102. ^ Telingator, Sue (24 October 1991). "Theater Notes: the cause of the Spiderwoman".
  103. ^ Hayford, Justin (5 December 1996). "In Performance: the mortal passions of Lawrence Steger".
  104. ^ Hayford, Justin (29 June 1995). "Brilliant Demise".
  105. ^ Rago, Carmela (29 October 1992). "That Time of the Months . . ".
  106. ^ "An interview with Rose Troche - AfterEllen". 7 March 2012.
  107. ^ "Gregory Whitehead".
  108. ^ "Home Page of Dolores Wilber - Home".
  109. ^ Strell, Meghan. "Michael Zerang".

External links[]

Retrieved from ""