Independent Theatre Creator’s International Training Scholarship

Why Not Theatre and Theatre Ontario have partnered in creating this unique and exciting Scholarship that provides the opportunity for up to two emerging theatre artists to train in theatre creation on an international level.

The Scholarship allows for up to two emerging artists to train with Anne Bogart and the SITI Company for one month (May 25 to June 21, 2014) in Saratoga Springs, New York.  They will train in Suzuki, Viewpoints, as well as directing and devising new work.

SITI was founded in 1992 by Anne Bogart and Tadashi Suzuki to redefine and revitalize contemporary theatre in the United States through an emphasis on international cultural exchange and collaboration. For the past 22 years, their impact can be seen on theatre creators around the world.

This program is designed to address the need for theatre artists to access more contemporary artistic training opportunities and to encourage artists to set the stage for the future of theatre and performance creation in Ontario, by having the opportunity to experience high calibre international training.

The scholarship includes course training and application fees, accommodation for the training period, and a travel allowance.  It is sponsored by Nekison Engineering and Contractors Ltd. and funds have been matched by artsVest Toronto.  artsVest Toronto is run by Business for the Arts with the support of the Canadian Heritage and the Toronto Arts Council.

Independent Theatre Creator’s International Training Scholarship Eligibility:

  • Demonstrated professional experience in the Ontario theatre community
  • Recent graduate of a post-secondary theatre training program (no more than three years out of a professionalized training program)
  • Under the age of 35

Applicants:

  • Should demonstrate a commitment to a career in theatre and the development of the Ontario theatre community

Application Procedure – Please include the following:

  • Your professional theatre resume
  • Cover letter/proposal from applicant (2 pages max.) addressing the following:

Describe where you feel you are in your career and what you are searching for.
How will training with the SITI Company affect your work? Advance your career goals?
Why do you want to do the SITI Company intensive?
How do you plan on bringing the training back into your work in Ontario?
How do you plan on sharing the training with the Ontario Theatre Community?

  • 1 letter of reference – from a post-secondary instructor or professional in the theatre industry who is familiar with your work.

Applications will be reviewed and successful Scholarship applicants will be selected by a joint committee of Why Not Theatre and Theatre Ontario. All decisions made by the committee are final. The successful Scholarship applicants will be notified by email no later than Monday February 24th, at which time they will complete SITI Company’s online application by March 1st, 2014.  Please note, this is a two-step process and training scholarship will be paid in full only upon successful acceptance to the training program through SITI’s online application.

Application Deadline Feb 17, 2014 – late applications will not be accepted, all applications are considered confidential.

Please submit your Scholarship application by email as a single PDF to Mairin Smit atmairin@theatreontario.org

Please mark the subject line: Independent Theatre Creator’s International Training Scholarship

Note: Should a suitable application(s) not be selected this year, Why Not Theatre and Theatre Ontario reserve the right to hold the funds for future application rounds.

About Theatre Ontario:

Theatre Ontario is committed to developing and supporting a strong, vibrant, diverse and sustainable theatre community throughout the province. We are a dynamic not for profit arts service organization that ‘bridges the gap’, helping theatre artists and organizations make creative and career transitions and share best practices, collaborate and celebrate!

We are the ‘go to organization’ supporting the professional, community and education theatre sectors across the province, by providing resources, networking, training and advocacy

About Why Not Theatre:

Founded in 2007, Why Not Theatre is a Toronto-based theatre company with an international scope. Under the Artistic Direction of Ravi Jain, Why Not has established a reputation as a company synonymous with inventive, experimental cross-cultural collaborations resulting in shows featuring new Canadian writing, company-devised shows alongside revitalized interpretations of classics. We develop and produce new work that has gained critical acclaim and has toured across Canada and around the world. Over the last 6 years we have developed over 15 productions, touring to 17 different cities on 4 continents. Essential to our creative process are the collisions that arise from our different cultures, languages and experiences provoking us to seek new styles, stories and forms. In recent years, the company has also become known for its presentation of international productions and workshops from diverse cultures and artistic practices, along with support for the development of local emerging artists and companies.

Read more about Why Not Theatre 

The SITI Company’s TRAINING PHILOSOPHY
It is through the dialogue between Suzuki and Viewpoints, two very distinct yet complementary approaches to the art of acting, that the philosophy and technique of SITI Company is continually explored, revitalized, and articulated.

The Viewpoints and the Suzuki Method are two distinct methods of actor training used in building and staging SITI productions. Company members have been trained by Anne Bogart and Tadashi Suzuki and are uniquely qualified to introduce other theater artists to these challenging and innovative methods.

Read more about The SITI Company’s Training Philosophy 

SUZUKI METHOD
Developed by internationally acclaimed director Tadashi Suzuki and the Suzuki Company of Toga, the Suzuki Method’s principal concern is with restoring the wholeness of the human body to the theatrical context and uncovering the actor’s innate expressive abilities. A rigorous physical discipline drawn from such diverse influences as ballet, traditional Japanese and Greek theater, and martial arts, the training seeks to heighten the actor’s emotional and physical power and commitment to each moment on the stage. Attention is on the lower body and a vocabulary of footwork, sharpening the actor’s breath control and concentration.

VIEWPOINTS
A technique of improvisation that grew out of the postmodern dance world. It was first articulated by choreographer Mary Overlie, who broke down the two dominant issues performers deal with—time and space—into six categories. She called her approach the Six Viewpoints. SITI’s Anne Bogart and our company members have expanded Overlie’s notions and adapted them for actors. The Viewpoints allows a group of actors to function together spontaneously and intuitively, and to generate bold, theatrical work quickly. It develops flexibility, articulation, and strength in movement and makes ensemble playing really possible.

Toronto Arts Council’s New Partnerships Bring the Arts Close to Home

Toronto Arts Council’s New Partnerships
Bring the Arts Close to Home

Toronto Arts Council (TAC) is pleased to announce the creation of three exciting new partnerships that will support artists working in communities outside the downtown core. In keeping with TAC’s vision of building a Creative City: Block by Block, these new programs will respond to local needs in neighbourhoods across Toronto.

In collaboration with Toronto Public LibraryCity of Toronto Museums and Toronto District School Board, TAC is designing these programs to offer artists opportunities to animate Toronto’s historic, educational and public spaces while connecting the arts and everyday life in communities in all corners of the city.

“These exciting new partnerships are just the beginning of a larger conversation about animating public spaces through art,” says Claire Hopkinson, Director and CEO of Toronto Arts Council.  “Our goal is to create avenues for deep engagement with the arts in neighbourhoods outside the core and to offer new opportunities for artists working in all disciplines.”

This series of pilot initiatives will create platforms for public engagement with the arts and will form the basis for possible future collaborations.  TAC’s partnership with Toronto Public Libraries, Artists in the Libraries, will include five arts residencies in branches outside the downtown core.  These programs will offer increased arts access and participation in local communities, and create new avenues for collaboration and career development for Toronto artists.

“Strengthening cultural participation in local communities, and creating dynamic and creative destinations are key priorities identified in the library’s strategic plan, so we are delighted to be offering our library spaces for this innovative initiative,” comments Jane Pyper, City Librarian.

TAC’s collaboration with the City’s Museum Services department will provide opportunities for artists to animate and connect with up to five Toronto Heritage sites, creating new possibilities for interpreting the City’s historic spaces.  The sites selected for this program – Scarborough Museum, Gibson House, Montgomery Inn, Todmorden Mills and Mt. Zion Schoolhouse – are all located outside the downtown core.  “Having artists engage directly with the City’s historic sites will result in new ways of seeing our city’s past and imagining its future,” says Karen Black, Manager of Museums Services for the City of Toronto.

In partnering with the Toronto District School Board on the Dare to Create spring festival, TAC will support over 25 artists to participate in residencies, mentorships and performances in schools outside the downtown.  The festival will encourage student voices to tell the stories of our City through the arts, while creating connections and shared learning among artists, educators and students.  In collaboration with Prologue to the Performing Arts, TAC will provide outreach and create new opportunities for artists to engage young people in multiple art forms within the school system.

“We are excited to work together to nurture and celebrate the creativity of our students. This partnership will allow us to expand our Dare to Create Arts Festival and ensure that voices from our diverse communities are celebrated through the arts,” said Donna Quan, Director of Education. “Thanks to the support of the Toronto Arts Council, even more students will have the opportunity to collaborate with artists through residencies in schools, artist mentorship of secondary students and more public performances and art exhibitions.”

The impact of creating new partnerships with Toronto’s civic institutions will be far-reaching and include increased access to free arts activities and events in public spaces, particularly for young people and local communities.  These programs are a direct response to the need for increased access to culturally diverse and relevant arts activities beyond the City centre.

Access to arts space has emerged as a key priority for artists and communities in Toronto, as revealed in a number of community consultations, the City’s 2011 Creative Capital Gains Report, and the Toronto Arts Foundation’s 2013 research paper Transforming Communities through the Arts.  TAC is responding to this need by creating partnerships that not only allow us to maximize our arts investment, but will open new avenues for the creation and sharing of art.

Media Contact: Kerry Swanson kerry@torontoartscouncil.org 416-392-6802 x 209

 

More information for each program is available at
www.torontoartscouncil.org/Featured/TAC-New-Programs-2013
Deadline for applications for all programs is January 15th, 2014.
TAC will be hosting a Round Robin Information Session on all three programs on December 12th from 4pm to 7pm at TAC office  200-26 Grand Trunk Crescent. To RSVP for the session send an email confirming your attendance to michelle@torontoartscouncil.org.
Grant Programs Contact: Peter Kingstone peter@torontoartscouncil.org 416-392-6802 x 208

About Toronto Arts Council
Toronto Arts Council, an arm’s length body of the City of Toronto, funds artists and arts organizations across the city through its grants programs. In 2012, approximately $10.3 million was disbursed to 419 arts organizations and 272 individual artists following assessment of 1562 applications. Toronto Arts Council’s grant budget has increased to $14.3 million in 2013. Click here for Creating Value with Increased Investment in the Arts, a report which identifies and targets immediate arts funding needs and longer term programs and goals, created following the City of Toronto and Toronto Arts Council’s 2013 consultations with Toronto’s cultural sector held in collaboration with Toronto Cultural Services, Beautifulcity.ca, and the Creative Capital Advisory Committee.

Click here for TAC’s Priorities for New Funding, 2013 – 2016.

Marketing Decks Fundamentals: December 3, 2013

Tuesday, December 3, 2013 | 9:00-11am

Centre for Social Innovation – Alterna Savings Meeting Room
215 Spadina Avenue, Toronto, ON M5T
The workshop will guide participants into understanding how to effectively use strategic information of their organization to create messaging that can help prospect, and secure investment from potential corporate and individual sponsors. With Demographic, empirical and organization history, a strong Marketing strategy allowsothers to get a sense of an organization from a business perspective. With the need to build capacity, sponsorship is linked to marketing each providing transferable information for an organization to:

• understand and utilize your value proposition
• assessyour prospects and understand what they need

Attendees can expect to get an overview of 3 key elements:

1. Identifying prospects/ creating a fundraising pipeline
2. Value proposition of the organization
3. Effective Implementation of the process

What benefits can you offer sponsors?
• How do we find and speak to potential sponsors?
• How do we price sponsorship of our event or activity?
• What makes sponsorship different from a straight donation?

Registration Fee: $15
Registration Link: http://www.eventbrite.ca/e/marketing-decks-fundamentals-tickets-8389460101

About the Facilitator:

Sudarshanis headshot pictureSudarshan is an active dreaming and doing citizen of India and Canada. Professionally, Sudarshan brings over 16 years in developing markets and paths, consulting and delivering change across the travel, telecom and financial sectors Sudarshan also consults with non profit-agencies in fundraising, strategic planning and implementation of small strategies towards success. Additionally, Sudarshan mentors new immigrants and has served on a few non-profit boards. Sudarshanbelieves in dreaming big and achieving it with small victories. With so much time left, Sudarshan plays league cricket and is learning how to sing. Sudarshanis driven by the desire to illuminate within and share the light with the world with the Gandhian doctrine – “It starts with one”.