March 2nd, 5:45pm
Storyhound Theatre and UNCG's Art Truck - Project One Art launched an experiment - to bring together more than three dozen Greensboro artists working in six forms to unmake the body and investigate what it is to be human.
Each of these artists, among them poets, filmmakers, theatre-makers, dancers, composers is working INDEPENDENTLY for a little more than three months, creating new work engaging with one of the four HUMORS of the body - phlegm, black bile, yellow bile, and blood, and their connected temperaments - phlegmatic, melancholic, choleric, and sanguine.
In the evening of March 2, part of GREENSBORO FIRST FRIDAY, they'll bring their work TOGETHER, transforming Greensboro Project Space for one night into a living breathing body.
Running order is TBA. Below are our incredible collaborators.
PHLEGM (Phlegmatic)
MOVEMENT - Melot Ayalew
THEATRE - Paper Lantern Theatre for Our Tomorrow
POETRY - Brian Lampkin
MUSIC - Shelley Stolaroff Segal
FILM - Brinson Langley
VISUAL ART - Linda Kent, Chanel Webster, Zora Meder, RJ Hooker
BLACK BILE (Melancholic)
MOVEMENT/THEATRE - Benja S Newnam & Denise Gabriel(Collaborating)
THEATRE - M.A.T.T. (Tori Galloway Stern)
POETRY - Kathy Goodkin
MUSIC - Tyson Ca
FILM - Cari A Hopson
VISUAL ART - Melinda Morgenstern, Margot L. Horney, Jenny Jones B, Rachel York
YELLOW BILE (Choleric)
MOVEMENT - Christine Kiernan Fisher
THEATRE - The Phoenix Theater Company (Jessica Nunn)
POETRY - Ashley R. Lumpkin
MUSIC - Julie Milligan Hughes
FILM - Imani Thomas
VISUAL ART - Judy Glazier, Phoenix Mangus, Jessica Wilkins + Susan Kirby-Smith (collaborating), Spencer Stephenson
BLOOD (Sanguine)
MOVEMENT - Madeline Saintsing
THEATRE - Scrapmettle (Kerri Mubaarak)
POETRY - Michelle Rosquillo
MUSIC - Cynthia James
FILM - Harvey Robinson
VISUAL ART - Angela Aguigui Justin Walton, Janay Green, Brian Mullins, Adnama Trebies
1 Comments
Mar 3, 2023, 1:39:07 PM
Quavannah Twan - Dear the Greensboro Project Space I was so inspired by the installation you showcased back in 2018. On March 2nd 3 years ago I attended and saw the life-changing works of art. After moving to my past residence in Toronto I felt an unexplainable sorrow, but such an intense and thought provoking gallery installation had changed me, and showed me there was hope. I write this now at the lowest point in my life, but fate landed me back here. Thank you, Quavannah Twan