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(Facebook event here and Artscape link here.) Single Carrot Theatre, Artscape Festival, 1727 N. Reading of “ The End of the Line“: (free admission) Screening made possible due to the generous support of the following Hopkins departments and programs:Īnd the Brown Foundation Digital Media Center.Įmail contact: writers from Poland, Hungary, the US and Spain respond to Polish playwright Wojtek Ziemilski’s “Mała Narracja” (Small Narration) by exploring the stories of their own grandparents. ***Also featuring a special guest film by Polish artists Marta Ostajewska and Justyna Apolinarzak.*** The Parallel Octave Chorus and student performers from JHU Summer’s Theater & Music Lab will be providing more musical mayhem.
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#Octave parallel free#
Free kazoos, noisemakers, and other sound-generating items will be distributed to all of the audience–or you are welcome to bring your own instruments! The screening will be followed by a live improvisation / collaboration session with the audience, where we read aloud poems with live acoustic music. Sample student film, Catherine Wityk’s “To See A World” (based on a fragment of William Blake’s “Songs of Innocence and Experience”): Refreshments available for purchase at 6.30 Vincent Millay, Emily Dickinson, Alan Seeger, Marceline Desbordes-Valmore, Stephen Crane, Pierre Reverdy, and more! On Monday, July 29, at the Creative Alliance, the Parallel Octave Chorus and students from “ Auteur 101: Short Film Laboratory” JHU will present the third annual screening of short films based on poems.īased on the the poetry of William Blake, Edna St. Eisenhower Library, the Museum is the building directly to your right.
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If you are standing facing the front of the Milton S. The Homewood House Museum is located on the circular lawn at Charles/33rd, at the front of the JHU campus. Poems: “Home Burial,” “Death of the Hired Man,” “The Wood Pile,” “Mending Wall,” “The Fear,” “A Servant to Servants,” and “After Apple-Picking.” With video projection designs by students from the “Auteur 101” class in the Film & Media Studies Program at JHU, under the direction of Mónica López-González. Special guest performance by Megan Ihnen and Katherine Magruder: selections from Ralph Vaughn Williams’s “Ten Blake Songs.” With Jeff Colosino, Chris Geekie, Richard Goldberg, Maddie Hicks, Connor Kizer, Sandy Koll, Kevin Moreno, Bruce Nelson, Lauren Reding, Natalie Ware, the Parallel Octave Chorus, and JHU Summer Programs students from Theater & Music Lab.
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Reception, 5:30-6PM: free refreshments and live music. Admission free but reservations *required* admission is extremely limited. Parallel Octave presents “Home Burial,” a site-specific spectacle based on poems from Robert Frost’s “North of Boston,” at the Homewood House Museum on the JHU campus, on Thursday, August 1st, at 5:30 PM. Music by Danny Schwartz and John Sullivan, with Stephanie Koziej and Phil Jenkins (including arrangements of 12th century French chanson)įeaturing Alexis Monroe, Dana Woodson, and Stephanie KoziejĮngineering by Aaron Smith and Josh Laskin Text adaptation by Dara Weinberg, from works by Coleridge, Heine, and othersĭirected by Danny Schwartz and Alexis Monroe THE LORELEI, THE ALBATROSS AND THE PINE TREE Come and help us celebrate poetry, music and dance! Both performances are free to the public. The Baltimore debut performances will occur at the Arellano Theater, Levering Hall, Johns Hopkins Homewood Campus on Sunday May 4 4pm and Tuesday May 6 6pm. The work is a collage of poems and texts by Coleridge, Heine and others, set to free-jazz/electronic music and dance. This spring, Parallel Octave, in collaboration with MOVEIUS Contemporary Ballet ( ), will perform a theatrical work by Dara Weinberg entitled The Lorelei, the Albatross and the Pine Tree (or Albatross/Lorelei for short).