Hybrid Arts Lab: Rapid Fire Text

Esposito art
Tue, September 8 - Fri, September 11, 2020
All Day
Hopkins Hall Gallery

Time: 11 a.m. - 4 p.m.
Event Host: Hopkins Hall Gallery, Hybrid Arts Lab
Short Description: Rapid Fire Text acknowledges forces that can manipulate, elevate, sensor or silence. Harnessing this ancient fluid media (ink), students become familiar with how duration and speed can function as tools for developing their writing, self-representation, and expression within a classroom community.


Rapid Fire Text is the result of an improvisational ink workshop facilitated by Lori Esposito, PhD candidate in the Deptartment of Arts Administration, Education and Policy, with her class “Visual Culture: Investigating Diversity & Social Justice.” Taking inspiration from poetry, jazz,and graffiti, this rhythmic drawing approach merges the expressive potentials of ink with the written word. “Rapid” implies speed, quickness of movement and thought. “Fire” calls to attention the potential power and explosiveness of speech and the written word. Rapid Fire Text acknowledges forces that can manipulate, elevate, sensor or silence. Harnessing this ancient fluid media (ink), students become familiar with how duration and speed can function as tools for developing their writing, self-representation, and expression within a classroom community.

Though a series of durational works, students practice syncing their physical movement of painting with the pace of their thinking. By the completion of the event, their drawing surface is saturated with layers of calligraphic text. These surfaces may be excavated for meaning or remain semi-illegible. The materiality and viscerality of ink may be interpreted as expressive marks or it may deliver more nuanced messages as does the written word.

The improvisational ink workshop experiments with an alternative platform for developing material-led thinking processes that foster meaningful in-class discussion. The student is invited to apply various durations (one to three minutes) to structure their thinking processes. The event facilitator introduces the materials and provides durational prompts. Students are asked to express themselves through the materials and express their culture and identity as pertinent to the context of the course (ARTEDUC 2367—Visual Culture: Investigating Diversity & Social Justice).

Learn more.

If you have questions or require an accommodation such as live captioning or interpretation to participate in this event, please indicate contact Emily Oilar, Urban Arts Space operations manager. Requests made 10 days prior to the event will generally allow us to provide seamless access, but the university will make every effort to meet requests made after this date.