Re: ELECTION OF BOARD OF DIRECTORS for Idat.org

From: Keely Isaak Meehan (lady3jane@hotmail.com)
Date: 09/17/01


Richard,

One question before I vote... Does a vote for Company in Space or Palindrome 
count as one vote or two?

----Original Message Follows----

Greetings all

Apologies for the delay in getting this out, but here at last is the
slate of proposed Directors who will be responsible for forming the
new dance and technology organisation, tentatively titled IDAT.org.
This will be a member organisation serving those involved in dance
and technology.  The initial board will have five members, and votes
will be collated by an individual who is not a candidate.  Please cut
the voting paper section only and e-mail to votes@idat.org by the
deadline shown below.


======== CUT HERE ==================


Nominations for the Preliminary Board of Directors

Vote for no more than FIVE candidates.
Send by e-mail to votes@idat.org by 5pm on Sunday, September 30.

[  ]  Johannes Birringer
[  ] (Company in Space) John McCormick & Hellen Sky
[  ]  Kent De Spain
[  ]  Keitha Manning
[  ]  John Mitchell
[  ]  Lisa Naugle
[  ] (Palindrome) Robert Wechsler & Frieder Weiss
[  ]  Jennifer Parker-Starbuck
[  ]  Richard Povall
[  ]  Douglas Rosenberg
[  ]  Scott Sutherland
[  ]  Peter V. Swendsen


======== CUT HERE ==================

Bios

=====
[Company in Space]  John McCormick is a choreographer and co-artistic
director of Company in Space. He is a choreographer and electronic
artists. His work with the company ranges from designing real time
computer interactive systems, real time vision orchestration, new
applications of telecommunications systems to deliver interative art
as well as overall concept and direction of image, choreography and
technology. John is currently an artist in residence ar RMIT's
interactive Information Information Institute researching live
interactive performance over the internet. As well as creating
electronic artworks, john has created a number of cross art events
and performance installations. He has taught and performed in China,
HongKong and Taiwan and has been invited to teach within a range of
Internantional Dance and Technology Workshops inlcuding Dutch
Electronic Arts Festival 2000, e- phos TRANSDANCE Athens 2001. He has
presented work with CIS in many national and international festivals.

Hellen Sky co-artistic director is a choreographer/performer/director
and co-artistic director of Company in Space. Her work for Company in
Space draws on her diverse experience in the performing and visual
arts and her interest in the body, architecture and virtual space.
She has choregraphed for companies and independent dance contexts in
Australia and Overseas. In 1998 she ahd John won a Green room award
for oustanding creativity in performance for Escape Velocity. Hellen
is a graduate of the VCA the Australian Ballet School and was a
founding member of Circus Oz and the innovative theatre group the
Australian Performing Group. She is a founder and Artistic Director
of Dancehouse. In 2001 She developed with John INCARNATE duel site
performance in assosciation with the Hong Kong Arts Centre for the
Digital Now Festival March 2001 and is Directing Architecture of
Biography a multi artform collaboration to be seen virtually in The
Behind the Scenes Program of MIFA 2001 and presented LIVE in 2002.

=====

Kent De Spain is a dance/multimedia artist and writer who has been
exploring the use of technology in dance performance and
documentation for almost 25 years. He has worked for more than a
decade as a professional dance videographer, doing both concert
documentation and video adaptations for numerous artists including
Hellmut Gottschild, Simone Forti, and Bebe Miller. He has also
created video, sound, and lighting components for numerous
performances of his own works and collaborations. He has toured
throughout the United States, including performances at Jacob’s
Pillow, Judson Church, the Philadelphia Fringe Festival, and many
others, and he has been the recipient of several awards and
fellowships, including the Pew Fellowship in the Arts for
Choreography and an Established Choreographer’s Fellowship from the
Pennsylvania Council on the Arts. He has been a Visiting
Artist/Professor at the University of Georgia, Ohio State University,
U.C.L.A., and the University of North Carolina – Greensboro, has
taught numerous master classes both in America and abroad, and has
designed and taught a university course in Dance/Video. He has served
on the Dance and Technology Committee at Ohio State University, and
presently serves as the dance and technology scholar on the Advisory
Board for Dance Research Journal. His recent articles, "Dance and
Technology: A Pas de Deux for Posthumans" and "Notes from the
Dance/Tech Front Lines", plus his presentations at Dancing with the
Mouse and other conferences have established him as an important
voice in the discourse surrounding the critical and theoretical
implications of the interface between the moving human body and
technology.

=====

KEITHA DONNELLY MANNING, Ed.D., is currently on the faculty of Texas
Christian University as a theoritican which provides an excellent
opportunity to advocate arts, technology, and education. TCU has
created a choreographic computer lab/teaching-broadcast facility and
established a dedicated dance server to expand the use of technology.
Recently, she was the Program Chairperson for the International Dance
and Technology '99 conference, the coordinator of the IDAT '99 Panels
and Roundtables, the coordinator of the 2000 Dancing with the Mouse:
Texas Style conference, co-coordinator of the 1999 Dancing With the
Mouse: Format for the Future, editor of the NDAlistserve (1997-2000),
Vice President of Dance Science, Medicine and Technology (1997-1999)
and currently serves as their site coordinator for future MOUSE
conferences and produces the conference proceedings. While acting as
the "Technology person" in many organizations she has also served/is
serving on numerous Boards of Directors/technology committees and
received numerous citations for educating dance organizations to the
benefits of technology. She has anxiously awaited the formation of an
IDAT organization and is interested in focusing her energies in this
area. Current projects include: Research on University Dance
Technologists, Sound/dance imaging choreography, Cecchetti Method
DVDs, providing dance technology workshops and keeping dancers
informed through listserves. Degrees are held in Dance (Performance)
from Adelphi University (B.A.), in Interdisciplinary studies (Dance,
Theatre and Gifted and Talented Education) from the University of
North Texas (M.A.), and in Dance (Dance Education and Instructional
Technology) from Temple University (Ed.D.). --

=====

John D. Mitchell is a multi-disciplinary composer, educator and
researcher, concentrating on using technology to expand sensory and
creative experiences in arts and education. He is the director of
both the Intelligent Stage Research Facility and the Dance Multimedia
Learning Center at Arizona State University. Mr Mitchell has worked
with artists from around the world to design and realize research
projects ranging from multimedia dance archival models to interactive
multi-site tele-performance initiatives.
As a proponent of using new communication and information systems in
dance creation and education, Mr. Mitchell has helped to create many
opportunities for dance practitioners, educators and students to
learn about and experience new technologies. Events such as the
International Dance and Technology Conference'99 (IDAT99), Cellbytes
2000, and the Summer Workshop in Dance and Performance Telematics
open up new performance and educational possibilities to wider
population. As founding chairman of the Association for Dance and
Performance Telematics (ADAPT http://isa.hc.asu.edu/adapt) Mr.
Mitchell heads a group of five research universities in exploring and
examining a range of possibilities available in this new medium.
As a composer and interactive performance designer, Mr. Mitchell has
collaborated with numerous artists to create performance works that
have been performed throughout United States and abroad. John D.
Mitchell currently teaches interdisciplinary media in the Department
of Dance and serves as a Resident Artist in the Institute of Studies
in the Arts at Arizona State University.
For information on the Intelligent Stage and projects completed over
the last ten years please see http://isa.hc.asu.edu/istage.

=====

LISA NAUGLE, Assistant Professor of Dance at The University of
California, Irvine received her MFA from New York University, Tisch
School of The Arts. She is currently working on her Ph.D thesis
titled, "Collaborative Online Methods in Dance". Lisa was a member of
The Nancy Hauser Dance Company and has performed with several
companies in the United States and Canada. Her background as a dancer
includes training with Hanya Holm, Alwin Nikolais, Merce Cunningham,
Eric Hawkins, Viola Farber and others. She has taught at the Julliard
School, New York University, Marymount College, Simon Fraser
University and is has been a guest artist at several universities and
colleges in the United States, Canada, Europe and Asia. Lisa has been
working with motion capture technology since 1998, and is the first
to integrate this animation technique into a university dance
curriculum. She is co-author of "Dancing in Cyberspace: Creating With
The Virtual Body", the first totally on online choreography course.
Her papers and publications have been presented at CORD, SDHS, MTAC,
ICKL, IDAT '99, Korean Society for Dance, Dancing with the Mouse
Conference and in Dance Research Journal, Journal of Distance
Education, and IEEE Multimedia. Her research and creative activity
also includes internet performance and sensor technology. Lisa began
choreographing for telematic performances in 1996. Projects such as
The Cassandra Project and Janus/Ghost Stories integrate dance, music
and theatre from different geographical locations in the United
States, Canada and Eastern Europe. She is one of five founding
members of ADAPT (Association for Dance and Performance Telematics) .
Lisa is the recipient of the Cecil and Ida Green Honors Professor's
Award, 2000. Her videodance, inviTRIO was presented in the Dance and
the Camera Festival, 2001 in New York City. Lisa's choreography has
been presented in London, Amsterdam, Germany, Italy, Poland,
Budapest, Canada and the USA. Her most recent works SPLIT, PORTAL,
and INVISIBLE WALLS are part of a trilogy that involve digital image
processing techniques, motion tracking sensors and live performance.
Lisa teaches modern dance, improvisation, choreography, digital
technology and motion capture at the University of California at
Irvine.

=====

[Palindrome]  Robert Wechsler (robert@palindrome.de) studied
biochemistry and molecular genetics at Ames, Iowa in the United
States.  A transfer to dance and
choreography (at State University of New York in Purchase ,BFA and New York
University, MA) did not lessen his interest in science. In New York City
(1975-1984) he trained under the tutelage under Merce Cunningham and
worked in various New York-based modern dance companies.  He became a
founding
member of the Palindrome Dance Company in 1982.  For choreography he was
selected for a Fulbright Fellowship (1983) and grants from the Marshall
Fund (1984), the Epstein Foundation (1984) and the city of Nürnberg
(1989-present).  From 1985 to 1995 he taught dance and choreography at the
University of Erlangen in Germany.  Starting in 1995 he began a series of
collaborative projects with computer engineer Frieder Weiß and in so doing
realized a new artistic direction in his work.  Palindrome became an
"Inter-media Performance Group" -- dance seen as an element in a dynamic
and relationship with other media realized or augmented by computer-driven
systems.  This shift in focus, and the new generation of work it has
precipitated, has been accompanied by international engagements, workshops
and critical acclaim including 6 European and 4 U.S. tours as well as a
trip in 1991 to Argentina.  He has presented his work at numerous
scientific conferences including the International Computer Music
Conference (ICMC), the Seventh International Theater Arts Conference, the
first and third International Conferences on Dance and Technology.  He has
written numerous articles concerned with dance and new media for Leonardo
Magazine, IEEE of Technology and Society Magazine, Ballet International,
Dance Magazine, Dance Research Journal, Nouvelle de Danse and Der Tanz der
Dinge.  In 2001 he became the first artist-in-residence at 01-Plus
Institute for Art, Design and Media Technology at the State College of
Design in Nürnberg,Germany.


Frieder Weiß (frieder@palindrome.de) is a free-lance computer engineer
working for various companies in Germany and United States (for example
Bosch and Siemens). His specialization is in the area of quality control
and computer-imaging systems. He is a designer of software and hardware
besides being a musician with the groups Thevomefüme, American Drama Group
Europe, Nürnberger Jazz Art Ensemble. Together with installation artist
Reiner Hofmann he developed an interactive installation work for the DATEV
comapny.  It is called 'Lichtbild' and uses camera interactive technology
to track the motion of individuals in an entrance hall and convert them to
light patterns on the adjacent wall.  Starting in 1995 he has worked with
Palindrome as Interactive Systems Designer and together with Robert
Wechsler he has conceived and realized dozens of performance and
installation projects.  He is the author of the EyeCon motion-tracking and
analysis software system.  EyeCon is touted as one of the most flexible and
user-friendly systems of its kind in existence and is being used by
artists, singers, dancers and theater companies the world over.  Mr. Weiß
has also designed miniaturized portable devises to allow the individual
muscle contractions of a dancer's body to control other media, as well as a
system making the dancer's heartbeat audible and available to control other
media (such as the tempo of the music).  Since 2001he has been became
Director of the Media Laboratory at 01-Plus Institute for Art, Design and
Media Technology at the State College of Design in Nürnberg, Germany.
Since Spring 2001 he is also Director of the Media Lab of the 01plus
Institute for Art, Design and Mediatechnology based at the Design College
in Nürnberg.


=====

Jennifer Parker-Starbuck is a ABD from the City University of New
York Graduate Center. Her dissertation is titled Cyborg Theatre:
Corporeal/Technological Intersections in Multimedia. She has a
chapter on dancer Cathy Weis and her Internet Performance forthcoming
in an anthology on disability and performance from the University of
Michigan Press (edited by Phillip Auslander and Carrie Sandahl).
Additionally, Jennifer has been teaching at Baruch College in New
York for several years. She has numerous reviews and articles in
other scholarly publications.

=====

RICHARD POVALL is a digital artist, composer and researcher,
co-Director of half/angel (with Jools Gilson-Ellis), and a Director
(currently Chair) of Aune Head Arts in the UK. His work centres on
the making of intelligent environments for performance using
motion-sensing and computer-vision tools. Current major projects
include the earth diaries (in collaboration with The Eden Project in
Cornwall), and Spinstren a visual-theatre work. Recent projects
include The Secret Project a dance-theatre project co-produced by,
and premiered at the Banff Centre in Canada in October 1999, and by
the Institute for Choreography and Dance in Cork, Ireland (formerly
Firkin Crane); and mouthplace, an artists' CD-Rom. He has held Senior
Research Fellowships at Middlesex University (London) and at
Dartington College of Arts (where he was also Senior Lecturer in New
Performance Media). He has taught in numerous colleges and
universities, and was Director of the Division of Contemporary at
Oberlin Conservatory of Music in the US from 1997-1999. Povall holds
a BA(Hons) in Music from Dartington College of Arts, an MFA in Music
Composition and Electronic Media from the Center for Contemporary
Music at Mills College (Calif., USA), and is currently completing a
PhD with the University of Plymouth. He lives in the southwest of
England, on the edge of Dartmoor.

=====

Douglas Rosenberg has been working in the field of dance/video since
the early 1980's and was the Director of the Video Archival Program
at the American Dance Festival for over a decade. He is both an
independent producer/director and scholar of dance for the camera and
has worked with numerous choreographers and dance companies
including, Pilobolus, Erick Hawkins, Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Co.,
Eiko and Koma, Molissa Fenley, Li Chiao-Ping and others. Mr.
Rosenberg is the recipient of numerous grants and awards including an
National Endowment For the Arts/Southeast Media Fellowship, a Bay
Area Dance Coalition Izzie Award, an Independant Production Fund
Video Project Grant and most recently, a Fellowship from The Soros
Foundation in support of the documentary "Singing Myself A Lullaby",
in collaboration with Ellen Bromberg. His writing on dance/film/video
has been published in numerous venues, including, LEONARDO, Journal
of Science and Technology (published by MIT Press) and Movement
Research Journal. He has been invited to present papers and lectures
at conferences and locations across the country and abroad,
including, the International Dance and Technology conference,
Performance Studies Conference, and the College Art Association
Conference and taught workshops on Dance for the Camera in Buenos
Aires, the American Dance Festival and universities across the
country. He was recently one of 14 artists/scholars chosen to
participate in an international research symposium in Brussels. His
documentary, "Singing Myself A Lullaby", made in collaboration with
Ellen Bromberg, recently aired on Wisconsin Public Television and his
work in dance video has been screened around the world. Mr. Rosenberg
recently taught in a 2 week workshop on Dance and Performance
Technology at The Institute for Studies in the Arts at Arizona State
University and is currently a member of ADAPT, the Association for
Dance and Performance Telematics. In 1999 he organized the first
International Dance For the Camera Symposium at the University of
Wisconsin, Madison, where he is currently an assistant professor in
the Dance and Interarts and Technology Program.

=====

SCOTT SUTHERLAND is a dance-technologist specializing in interactive
media applications in the arts, computer-based tools for dance
documentation and preservation, and dance photography. From 1988
through 1995, he was on staff at Ohio State University's Department
of Dance, where he developed the LabanWriter Labanotation editor
software with Lucy Venable and co-founded the Multimedia Dance
Prototype project with Dr. Vera Maletic and Dr. A. William Smith.
Sutherland has also been the Technology Director for the Indiana
University Herron School of Art, a faculty member in New Media
Department of the I.U. School of Informatics, and a practicing
programmer and web developer in various industries. Sutherland
currently resides in Cincinnati, Ohio, USA, where he manages the idat
mailing list, moderates the five-hundred-member dance-tech mailing
list, maintains the Dance & Technology Zone web site (soon to be
dance-technology.org) and works as a project manager in the eHealth
department of Cincinnati Children's Hospital.

=====


Peter V. Swendsen is a graduate student at the Mills College Center
for Contemporary Music, where he is in the final months of his MFA in
Electronic Music and Recording Media. He received his BM from the
Oberlin Conservatory of Music in Technology in Music and Related
Arts. His work has been seen in Boston, Cleveland, Washington,
Austin, Santa Fe, Los Angeles, and throughout the Bay Area. Swendsen
has studied composition with Richard Povall, Gary Lee Nelson, and
Kristine H. Burns, and is currently working with Gail Wight, Chris
Brown, Maggi Payne, Fred Frith, and Pauline Oliveros at Mills.
Swendsen is currently creating and performing with interactive
environments, dance, installation, video, and sound.

Much of my recent musical output has been produced specifically for
modern dance pieces. Driven by several exciting commissions and
collaborations, I have created over a dozen new pieces of electronic
music for dance in the last two years. My collaborative involvement
with dancers and choreographers has been one in which I am not only
composing the music, but also helping to create and inform all
elements of the piece. This strategy, in which each collaborator is
part of the creative process from beginning to end, is particularly
rewarding and exciting to me. My work with technology and dance has
also involved creating video (both as accompaniment to live
performance, and as video dance) and interactive systems. My most
current work is concerned with implementing these systems in aerial
dance situations. A new, evening-length collection of pieces will be
realized this fall in collaboration with choreographer Lisa Russo.
This work will make use of various media and interactive
technologies-including Mark Coniglio's new software, Isadora-and will
feature at least two pieces for aerial dance.

Many of the issues and ideas revealed by recent creative endeavors
have also led me to research projects, such as "Contextualizing the
Contemporary: The Influence of John Cage and Merce Cunningham on
Emerging Forms of Technological Art," a paper which seeks to explore
the impact of these great collaborators on technologies within and
outside of their own fields, while comparing how quickly and deeply
each embraced technology in his own work. Work is also underway on my
current research, which attempts to present a current definition of
"interdisciplinarity" while exploring its role and relevance in
higher education.

Much more can found on my website: http://www.earthlink.net/~vinding




ORIGINAL CALL



Call for nominations to the Board of Directors of IDAT.

As part of the formation of a professional organisation supporting
the area of Dance and Technology (tentatively titled IDAT for
International Dance & Technology, taken from the prior conferences of
the same name), this is a call for nominations for preliminary
members of the Board of Directors.

The preliminary Board will take on the responsibility of forming the
organisation, and will continue in office until such time as the
first Annual General Meeting takes place, and the full membership of
the organisation is given the opportunity to vote for a Board of
Directors.

We are looking for a preliminary Board with up to six members. If we
receive six or fewer nominations, then all those nominated will form
the Board of Directors. If we receive more than six nominations, then
an online election will take place on the dancetech mailing list.
This will give members of the dancetech community the opportunity to
elect the first slate of Directors for the organisation.
Particularly, we are looking for people with a known commitment to
this area, who have a strong sense of the issues facing the
community, and who are willing to commit some time to the venture of
forming and constituting an international organisation. It is highly
desirable that the Board have an international makeup. Directors will
not be paid, nor, at the moment, will expenses be covered by the
organisation.

You may nominate yourself. If you nominate someone else, it is
essential that you check with them first to ensure that they are
willing to be elected. There is no limit to the number of people you
may nominate.

Nominations should be sent by e-mail to board-nominations@idat.org no
later than 12 noon on Friday, August 24, 2001. Nominations should
include name of Nominator, name of Nominee, address of Nominee,
e-mail address of Nominee, short bio/cv statement of Nominee.


--
R i c h a r d   P o v a l l
digital artist; co-artistic director, half/angel
http://www.halfangel.org.uk;  richard@halfangel.org.uk
=================================================
Court Gate Cottage, Harbourneford, South Brent, Devon TQ10 9DT  UK.
Home/Studio:  +44 (0)1364 72044   Fax:  +44 (0)1364 72046


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