From the Worldwide Faith News archives www.wfn.org
Baha'i World News Service
From
Bahá'í World News Service <bwns@bwc.org>
Date
Sun, 5 Sep 2004 12:01:01 +0300
Title: BWNS -- Unveiling a new world of learning
Baha'i World News Service
See story with photographs <http://www.bahaiworldnews.org/>
http://www.bahaiworldnews.org
For more information, contact <mailto:editor@bahaiworldnews.org>
editor@bahaiworldnews.org
Unveiling a new world of learning
SIDCOT, United Kingdom, 5 September 2004 (BWNS) -- Learning about masks
unveiled new layers of self-confidence for a participant at the Baha'i Academy
for the Arts.
"The very positive attitude towards the students shown by all the tutors is a
powerful way of improving both self-confidence and self-expression," said
Alison Scrutton, who attended a workshop on performing with masks.
Ms. Scrutton, who is not a Baha'i, said that the academy far exceeded her
expectations.
She was one of some 280 amateur and professional artists who attended the
academy, held 31 July-7 August 2004.
Ms. Scrutton, a schoolteacher by profession, said the encouragement given to
students helped them achieve more than they had thought possible at the
beginning of the week.
"The tutors worked hard to develop confidence and artistic growth in their
students and everyone's contributions were always valued," she said.
"The course was brilliant," she said. "After a week I felt far more confident
about my abilities to express myself through movement and mask work."
Held annually for 12 years, the academy attracted participants came from a
variety of countries, including Bulgaria, Greece, Japan, New Zealand, Nigeria,
Portugal, Spain, and the United Kingdom.
A British Baha'i, Anne Wong, said that the academy provided an ideal
environment for learning.
Participants could work for the highest standard of excellence in their
selected courses, said Ms. Wong, who was attending the academy for the first
time.
"I enjoyed watching the unveiling of confidence and creativity in people. [At
the academy] everyone is engaged in some kind of art whether it be singing,
drumming, sculpture, painting, textiles, drama," Ms. Wong said.
"The whole ethos of the academy is based on a profound statement from
Baha'u'llah that we are 'mines rich in gems of inestimable value,' and art is
a means by which we can manifest these gems," she said.
Some of the courses introduced this year for adults included abstract
painting, textile art, black and white photographic printing, drumming, and
computer presentations. Junior youth (ages 12-15) were offered new courses in
theater arts, creative painting, and dance.
Another new feature was the "Art of Living" class. Drawing on the Baha'i
writings on health, hygiene, and the environment, as well as on the results of
scientific research in these fields, students learned how to integrate
spiritual concepts and the arts into how they looked after their health and
managed their lives.
This year's artist-in-residence was pianist Nancy Lee Harper, assistant
professor of piano at the University of Aveiro in Portugal.
Dr. Harper taught a master class for experienced artists, including a singer,
a violinist, two pianists, and a flamenco guitarist.
"Remaining open to the moment and using consultation as the basis of our work,
[we found] the results were truly staggering and far beyond anyone's
imagination," Dr. Harper said.
In addition to developing their own individual work, the group created a
musical narrative titled "The Journey," which they performed as part of the
evening program.
The piece portrayed the dramatic story of the transfer of the remains of the
Bab in the late 1800s from Persia (now Iran) to the Holy Land, where they were
laid to rest on Mt. Carmel in 1909.
Dr. Harper said that as opposed to some other art courses, academy students
are not judged for their abilities, and there is no negative criticism --
quite the opposite.
She said that peer teaching is a very strong element of the academy and that
the artists naturally respond to such a helping and encouraging environment.
Evening sessions were also a source of inspiration. A new feature was the
screening of films and documentaries, many of them focusing on the artistic
creative process.
London-based architect and designer Sabiha Foster gave a lecture on the
development of humanity's relationship with architecture, using such examples
as the earliest remnants of architecture through to the Baha'i House of
Worship in New Delhi, India, which opened in 1986.
Theater artist Bill George and his daughter, Anisa, from the United States,
used a dramatic performance to explore the relationship of the Baha'i Faith
and the theater.
The academy also offered space for students to work independently on their own
projects.
(Photos by Rob Weinberg.)
For more information, http://www.bahai-artsacademy.com/cms
For a story about last year's academy, see
http://www.bahaiworldnews.org/story.cfm?storyid=245
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