SUMMER ARTS FESTIVAL APPRENTICESHIP


Structured as a two-week intensive, Summer Arts Festival Apprenticeship (SAFA)  will work with visiting artists to conceive of, collaborate on, create, and premier new work for the public at the NYAP loft. Projects will be explored through contemporary dance, experimental music, film, and visual arts mediums. Indeterminacy 2023 will emerge from intensives led by Jonathan Golove, Spencer Parsons, Adelheid Mers, and Melanie Aceto. The week will culminate in two large-scale performances.  

Application Deadline: May 15th

  • Collaborate, develop and premier new work in NYC

  • Receive professional training from acclaimed contemporary dancers, experimental musicians, filmmakers and visual artists

  • Learn how to create and navigate in the professional arts sector

  • Expand your community in NYC

  • Cross-train creative muscles to develop versatility in disciplines outside of your own

  • Attend curated artist talks, performances and events throughout NYC 

THE APPRENTICESHIP

What does it look like to conceive of, produce and premier work as a professional artist? 

SAFA guides you through this process to ground emerging artists as they navigate the first steps of a professional practice. You will expand your creative toolbox and strengthen your resilience and agility as an artist through hands-on experience and training, growing your knowledge and abilities in disciplines outside what may already be familiar to you. 

THE STRUCTURE

SAFA Creative Labs Structure

OVERVIEW: 

  • July 2nd: SAFA fellows arrive for opening night party

  • July 3rd-7th: apprentices arrive at the NYAP loft for morning sessions in the social and professional practice studio of Adelheid Mers followed by afternoons sessions:

    • sound lab with Jonathan Golove

    • movement lab with Melanie Aceto

    • film lab with Spencer Parsons 

  • Apprentices will participate in all labs with the option to delve deeper into a specific area as the week progresses

  • July 7th and 8th: new work premieres will be hosted in the evenings featuring completed work from all the labs incorporated into a finale performance 

  • Throughout the week artists and apprentices will attend nightly talks, performances, and gatherings hosted at the loft and around New York City featuring outside guests and festival collaborators

THE VISITING ARTISTS

THE CREATIVE LABS

  • Artists have evolved specific ways of speaking with each other about their work, and about the development of their personal trajectories. Such ways can be usefully, and playfully applied to other contexts and subjects. The facilitated workshop, 'Micro-practices for a New Gentleness', introduces participants to conversation techniques that, though individually small, add up to generative and gentle ways of structuring focussed and respectful exchanges. We will interact with art objects specifically created for this workshop. Topics will be determined by the participants, who will also learn about ideas behind the methods, including connections to facilitated theater and pedagogy, that will empower each person to adapt this material to their needs and circumstances.

  • Exploring new approaches to music-making, artists will be introduced to tools and devices that have been designed by artists and composers to facilitate discovery of sounds free from pre-existing rules and techniques. These novel instruments will help enhance a sense of play and reward individual and collective creativity. Guided by composers and sound engineers experienced in experimentation, they will be ready to lead participants in a week of musical exploration from experimenting with pre-existing instruments to building their own to an end of the week ensemble performance. No background or experience necessary, beginners and non-musical welcome.

  • How do we transform objects such as rope, water or 3,000 square feet of plastic into animated materials that communicate meaning, message, and beauty? In this workshop participants will learn how to "brainstorm" with materials to reveal their meaning-making potential. We will start with an introduction to this process and an investigation of materials to work with. From there, participants will explore generative structures and build upon this vocabulary throughout the workshop. This creative process emphasizes a prioritization of production, offering participants an opportunity to see the power of creation over concept. A background in movement is not necessary.

  • We all have stories to tell. Stories about life changing events or about when we met someone who changed our lives. Some of these stories we tell frequently, and others we have buried away and rarely share with anyone. As screenwriters and filmmakers, we can excavate these moments of significance and unpack the nuances and details that compose the true events of our lives. Through a process of writing and recitation we will re-construct our stories and shape them into screenplays that we will write and produce over the course of the week.

ADMISSIONS

Who can apply?

SAFA is ideal for individuals seeking hands-on experience in artist performance production.  A background in studio arts, film, dance, composition, or music performance is a plus, but not required. 

How much does it cost?

$2,000 (non-refundable), includes the full week of four visiting artist workshops and evening events.  

Where will the intensives take place?

Intensives will take place at the NYAP Loft in NoMad at 121 W 27th Street.

Is housing provided?

Housing is not provided but we’ve compiled a list of housing resources found HERE

DEADLINES

Application Deadline: May 15th

Payment Deadline: June 1st

The Indeterminacy Festival

In 2016 Vaubel founded THE INDETERMINACY FESTIVAL offering established and emerging artists the opportunity to slow down and regain creative consciousness. Over a one-week residency, selected emerging and visiting artists work together to create and premier new work for the public. Anchored by site-specific environments such as abandoned grain silos and the moon-like landscape of a fossil park, the festival invites collaborators to grapple with the unpredictability of these sites as a medium in their creative process.

The festival has been supported by the Fulbright Foundation, New York Council for the Arts, Techne Institute, The University at Buffalo, McGill University, Alfred University, The University of Malta, The Mark Diamond Research Fund, suoni per il popolo, and hosted at such venues as the grain silos at Silo City, Penn Dixie Fossil Park, Hi-Temp Warehouse, Sala Rossa, The Burchfield Penney Arts Center, and Hallwalls Contemporary Arts Center.

STANZI VAUBEL

Stanzi Vaubel, PhD, Fulbright Scholar, began her training as a classical cellist at The Juilliard Pre-College. She received her BA from Northwestern University, her MFA, and PhD from The University at Buffalo in the Media Study Department while on teaching fellowship.

She has collaborated on projects at Robert Wilson’s Watermill Center, and has performed at venues such as Tanglewood, The Long House, and Carnegie Hall. She has worked as a producer for New York Public Radio and produced a series entitled “The Gift” for Chicago Public Radio (WBEZ). Her audio documentaries have been featured on WNYC, WBEZ, BBC, and spotlighted by The Third Coast Audio Festival. 

Her work has been commissioned by The Whitney Museum of American Art, The Burchfield Penney Arts Center, KANEKO, UnionDocs, Public Space One, and Free City Festival. During her time in Buffalo, she created site-specific immersive productions, Sites Do Things to People (2015) staged at Hallwalls Contemporary Arts Center, Excursions into Unknowable Worlds (2016) staged at the Hi-Temp Warehouse.