Teaching and Learning Pages

Saturday, November 24, 2012

The Evolution of Dance: A Caribbean Perspective

Lecture on the evolution of Caribbean dance by Dr Jorge Luis Morejón, from UWI’s Department of Creative & Festival Arts, during a participatory presentation at the First Symposia of Decades of Dance, Dance Festival, on October 10, 2011 at Queen’s Hall.  (Photo: Anisto Alves from Trinidad Express Newspapers).
The Evolution of Dance: A Caribbean Perspective
Jorge Morejόn’s paper breaks new ground in using dance as a medium for interrogating aspects of Taino cosmology. Morejόn argues that Taino dance forms, particularly the areito, successfully withstood the encounter with Europeans, unlike the Taino population itself. His paper attempts to make a case for the inclusion of Taino dance in schools’ curricula, not merely its historical value, but even more importantly, for its potential in fostering community and self-discipline.  Cludius Fergus

History in Action Journal



















Thanksgiving - Book Launch

Thanksgiving - Book Launch for Dr. Lyndersay and Mr. Gibbons on November 8th, 2012, at the NALIS audiovisual room in the National Library.  Trinidad and Tobago, West Indies
 
 
The book launch was an event that took the form of a Thanksgiving ceremony. And by 'thanksgiving,' Marvin George, organizer and director of the program, meant "borrowing from the Spiritual Baptist/African understanding of the performance." The first part of the event was animated by the Festival Ensemble Dance with a dance for the African goddess Oshun and the second part by the Theatre Production II class, with excerpts from Rawle Gibbon's plays.  Both groups are from the Department of Creative and Festival Arts, Faculty of Humanities and Education, The University of the West Indies, St. Augustine.  The Festival Ensemble was integrated by dancers Ardia Yearwood, Janelle Young, Lashawna McLean, Karissa St.Louis and Amanda Bertrand.  The piece was choreographed by Dr. Jorge Luis Morejon.  The dancers' makeup was done by Nikihsia Benjamin. 
As noted by Mr. George in his produciton notes, Dr. Lyndersay and Mr. Gibbons both regard the occasion as their giving thanks for these works; fruits of their years of labour. Thus, the content of the two books was given a performance frame within which they could be located. Dr. Lyndersay's book surveys a range of Nigerian ethnic wear, from varying ethnicities that she made contact with in Nigeria. Mr. Gibbons' book is a collection of three plays, whose action, style and content are crafted from the poetics of traditional African cultural practices and narratives, as they are known in Trinidad.
Based on Mr. George's notes, the thanksgiving idea was used as the 'performance crucible' of this myriad of African and African Creole content.  Thanksgiving was the device to give ceremony to the occasion, and by extension, to occasion the books' content at the ceremony.  "Because possession is so important to these rites," says George, "the performance used its time-space shifting poetics, to move in and out of plays and images and speeches. Shifts happened simply with sound sometimes. " The players all woar white; pure white dresses, headties, trousers and shirts. "Strips of colour or traditional African wear - as provided by Dr. Lyndersay's collection/wardrobe, added an African touch to the sets displayed in the lobby of the space . "The images of traditional dress, from Dr. Lyndersay's research appeared... like a visitation, punctuating the programme" as they were projected on a screen that served as backdrop.
The programme's speakers were introduced via a 'pointer' (Edna) who, in trance, called the name of a presenter. The presenter entered, did as s/he was invited to do, and the pointer moved the programme further using the same method.  At one point the theatrical chorus from the Production II class, enters the room to bring the event to a grand finale.  There was a table on which, the books were placed. It was well decorated like an alter or table at a thanksgiving. The action took place around this table and the authors wigned copies of their books.

Comments

Thanks deeply for last night's launch. Not sure I said it quite as I should have, but the work put in by Marvin, Jorge and the students was truly impressive and moving. Every aspect of the event was thoroughly managed by the class and the event conceptualized and performed powerfully. We've done launches before, but I'm sure I speak on behalf of both Dani and myself when I say that now at the other end, it was new and special experience to walk into the space, relax and simply slip into the flow." Mr. Rawle Gibbons



The unique ThanksGIVING which you and your tremendously creative, sensitive and energetic team of dancers, actors, musicians, designers, ushers & well-wishers created last evening.... is a once in a lifetime experience!!! Thank you, and thank you, and thank youuuuuuuuuuu. “I would thank you from the bottom of my heart, but for you my heart has no bottom.” (Anonymous) It also has endless love for all of you." Dr. Danielle Lyndersay
 
"Allow me to extend the Department’s gratitude and my own as well to Mr. George, Ms. Quamina and Dr. Morejon for the superb artistic direction and most importantly firing up the students with the enthusiasm to pull over the production with such energy and class." Mr. Jessel Murray
"Thanks for including me ( not a moment too soon ) as a witness to the "Book Launch and Thanksgiving" yesterday. It was special and lovely- as Gordon, Funzo and others hovered as ancestral guardians over the celebration while and the youth of DCFA took centre stage. The setting was just large enough to accommodate all, and intimate enough for the flow of events, sound and staging- some display of spatial skills for movement and audience-centering in the training at DCFA! The manifestation of visuals, spoken word, sound, music and chants were innovatively-woven into interspersing "book reviews", "reflection of community as central experience for the theatre here( This caused me to ponder on the techniques and engagement spiritually that you unobtrusively engage with- like Raviji's "Pichacaree", the Rada traditions and the Drum ceremonies, etc ( It will be interesting to hear your recall of Belmont and its environs as a point of significant influence in your birthing to community in T&T). As content, we were regaled with great insights intellectually, warm encounter, great artistic ( though unobtrusive ) representationof less publicly- acclaimed cultures, even counterposed ( in a positive sense ) by the authoritative welcome and headship lines of Jessel Murray. I felt appreciated to be made a witness, and am happy for both you and Dani- as every book sold would not hurt your penny bank." Mr. Roderick Sanatan

Cafe XV: the Journey of Cuban Artists Symposium

Graphic Art by Leandro Soto

Café XV: the Journeys of Cuban Artists Symposium at UWI, Cave Hill, was a cultural event where Ms. Linda Bair and Dr. Jorge Luis Morejon, along with other presenters, discussed ideas about diasporic communication, the arts, cultural retention and collaboration outside the diaspora. They also presented the dance piece My Hands, Tus Brazos with Solodos Dance which in the context of the symposium illustrated the diasporic issues discussed, but through the creative process used in dance. The symposium invited other important presenters such as key speaker Achy Obejas, Lecturer Dr. Grisel Pujala and Performance Artist Leandro Soto.  In the audience there were present the Cuban Ambassador in Barbados, the Cuban Consul, representatives of the Canadian Embassy, UWI students and other audience members.

Carpentier en Barbados: El Siglo de las Luces

From left to right, Leandro Soto, Linda Bair and Jorge Luis Morejon.
The event took place in the NuEdge Gallery, at the Limegrove Lyfestyle Centre Holetown,
St. James, Barbados on October 26, 2012


 
 Video: https://vimeo.com/manage/videos/232984234

 
The performance piece Carpentier en Barbados: El siglo de las luces was part of Café XV: the Journeys of Cuban Artists, a yearly event curated and directed by visual and performance artist Leandro Soto and Dr. Grisel Pujala respectively. Dr. Pujala is also a lecturer at UWI, Cave Hill. As part of Solodos Dance, Dr. Jorge Luis Morejon was able to play three of the male characters of Carpentier’s novel El siglo de las luces (literally The Century of Enlightenment), titled in English Explosion in the Cathedral, while Ms. Linda Bair played Sofia, the most important female character in the story.  Leandro Soto played Alejo Carpentier, the writer himself. The event invited dancer, chorographer and lecturer Neri Torres, who interpreted a dance for Afro-Cuban goddess Oshun.



Sunday, October 21, 2012

Changing Higher Education


Dr. Jorge Luis Morejon participated in the 3rd Barbados International Conference on Higher Education and Human Resources Development, which took place from October 21 – 24, 2012 in the Hilton Hotel at St. Michael, Barbados.  The title of his paper was Changing Higher Education Paradigms: Crafting New Multidisciplinary Educational Programs and Policies.  Dr. Morejon had the pleasure of sharing his paper with a numerous audience of educators from different fields of study who for the first time were faced with the benefits of the arts as catalyst in the acquisition of technological and scientific knowledge. The presentation was part of an attempt to develop Higher Education research in the area of the arts.  In his study he considered the implementation of the arts across Higher Education curricula as a way to improve Higher Education pedagogy, communication between fields of study and professional environments, quality of multidisciplinary education and cognitive as well as embodied learning structures.

Thursday, July 5, 2012

Conference: 54 International Congress of Americanists



“Building dialogues in the Americas."

Paper Title: Performance Ritual in the Cuban Diaspora."

University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria. July 5 – 20, 2012.

LINK: http://lai.at/54-ica-international-congress-of-americanists

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

XXX International Congress of the Latin American Studies Association



Toward a Third Century of Independence in Latin America.

Paper Title: Caribbean First Ritual Performance Practices: Restoring the Areito.

Marriot Marquis Hotel. San Francisco, California. May 23rd – 26th, 2012.

Tuesday, May 22, 2012

It’s all about love Sunday night at gallery performance



May 18, 2012 - Posted by Special to The Enterprise
 

Jorge Luis Morejon and Linda Bair will dance Sunday evening at the John Natsoulas Gallery, 521 First St. in downtown Davis. Mattias Falk/Courtesy photo“A Small Evening About Love” will be presented at 7 p.m. Sunday at the John Natsoulas Gallery, 521 First St. in downtown Davis.

Love in all its grandeur and messiness is the theme of the night. Artists, most of them local, will address the subject through dance, poetry or prose.

The seed of the idea came from the reunion of Linda Bair, artistic director of the Linda Bair Dance Company, and Jorge Luis Morejon, dancer, actor and opera singer currently teaching at the University of the West Indies in Trinidad.

Two years ago, the dancers met while Morejon was finishing his Ph.D. in performance at UC Davis and they decided to work together. Over the course of many months of exploration in the dance studio, “My Hands/Tus Brazos” was created. The dance is a passionate exploration of love in a long-term relationship.

Morejon will be back in Davis this weekend and so the two will again be able to present their piece.

“So many people have come up to speak to me each time we perform it, sharing their own story about love or guessing at ours,” Bair said in a news release.

Wanting to see more cross-pollination between artists, they have invited other local artists to join them in sharing work about love.

“My Hands/Tus Brazos” opens the evening, followed by poetry from Davis’ poet laureate Allegra Silberstein; renowned poet and mom of three Jill Stengel; and UC Davis student, poet and painter Corey LaRue.

Ann Murray Paige, an award-winning journalist, writer, founder of Project Pink, a nonprofit organization supporting young women with breast cancer, and star of ‘The Breast Cancer Diaries,” will read a new piece.

Dave Griffin, actor, writer and creator of the radio series “Bunker 21,” will do a scene reading. Lastly, Cassie Gardner will give a sneak preview of a new one-woman show titled “The Break Up Letters,” a hilarious look at leaving, and leaving and leaving.

The performance is a free event and runs about an hour.

Details

What: "A Small Evening About Love," a
performance of dance,
poetry and prose

When: 7 tonight

Where: John Natsoulas
Gallery, 521 First Street, in
downtown Davis

Cost: Free


Short URL: http://www.davisenterprise.com/?p=177278



























Friday, May 18, 2012

II Congreso de Estudios Teatrales.


In-Disponer la Escena: Una reflexión sobre la puesta en escena ayer y hoy.


Paper Title: Escuela de Teatro Cubano-Exiliada: el cultivo del absurdo como técnica teatral. (Cuban Exile Theatre School: The Cultivation of the Absurd as Theatre Technique).

Universidad de Antioquia. Facultad de Artes. Auditorium Alfonso Restrepo Moreno. Edificio Comfama, San Ignacio, calle 48 # 43 – 87, Piso 4, Medellín, Colombia. May 16 to 18th, 2012.

LINK: http://www.udea.edu.co/portal/page/portal/bActualidad/Principal_UdeA

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Conference: Trinidad and Tobago at 50: a Model Nation



Faculty of Social Sciences. The University of the West Indies.

Paper Title: “Trinidad and Tobago: Redefining the Carnival Model.”

St. Augustine. Trinidad and Tobago, West Indies. April 25th to 27th, 2012.

Friday, April 20, 2012

Conference: Th?nk 2 - ‘The Value of Culture’.



Department of Creative and Festival Arts – DCFA.

Paper Title: “Caribbean Carnival: Harvesting Future Citizens.”

University of the West Indies. St. Augustine. Trinidad and Tobago. West Indies. April 20th, 2012.

Sunday, March 25, 2012

Re-awakening the Caribbean Spirit at Sherzando Panyard!


"I must say that no one who attended the Commonsense Convois yesterday would have missed a tall man in white wearing a fedora who was in the middle of other dancers in white! Certainly, an impressive and memorable sight! Congratulations on your involvement in the successful enterprise that was the Convois yesterday – the gateway to a week of celebration for the Lloyd Best Insitute.  Kindly extend the Department’s congratulations to all of the students who participated in such a grand way."

Jessel Murray

* Mr. Jessel Murray is the Senior Lecturer and Head of the Department of Creative and Festival Arts, Faculty of Humanities and Education in the The University of the West Indies, St. Augustine, Trinidad, W.I.  Quote from an e ail sent to Dr. Morejon on March 19, 2012 in recognition for his participation in the Reawakeing of the Spirit of the Caribbean project.






Monday, March 19, 2012

Conference Surveying the Past, Mapping the Future.



The University College of the Cayman Islands and the Sir Arthur Lewis Institute of Social and Economic Studies.

Paper title: “Caribbean Carnivals: The Distinct Performances of Non-independence and Emancipation.”

LINK: http://www.ucciconference.ky/

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Re-awakening the Caribbean Spirit

________________________________________
Rhythms to
revive the spirit
_______________________
Music from cultures across the Caribbean, mixed with Three Canal, Steelpan, Mungal Patasar, and the voices of the Freetown Collective will come together in a single production designed to lift the Caribbean and launch the Common Sense Convois later this month. 

"Re-awakening the Caribbean spirit" is the title of an original production that will also feature original music by Raff Robertson with choreography and management by Cuban dance lecturer  Jorge Morejon and artistic direction by Rawle Gibbons.  It takes place on Sunday March 18 at 6:00 pm in the Scherzando panyard in Curepe. 

The "Re-awakening" is a unique event designed to evoke the fullness of the Caribbean cultural experience and display the richness of the tapestry of its many strands.  It will represent the many languages of the Caribbean as well as the variety of rhythms in a broad sweep that will include the expressions of the First Peoples right across to that of today's youth.

Tickets are priced at $150 and are available at 663 5463; 662 9023.  For further information on the Common Sense Convois, please go to www.lloydbestinstitute.org

Fragments / Dance Plethora

UWI 8 Ensemble in the Coco Dance Festival

UWI 8 Ensemble.
Jeannine Jones (right), Nikeisha Benjamin-Richardson (left) and Judy-Ann LeMaitre (back)


UWI 8 Ensemble’s collaborative choreography, born out of ideas posed by Dance Lecturer Jorge Luis Morejón and and movement propositions developed by the dancers, turned into a dance piece they titled Fragments. The Contemporary Choreographers’ Collective (nicknamed COCO ), a group of independent choreographers that offers performance support for choreographers working in unconventional ways in Trinidad and Tobago, saw the UWI 8’s work and invited the Ensemble to participate in COCO 2011’s celebration of “national, regional and international dance communities” (Creative Caribbean Network). This is how UWI 8 Ensemble, a group of dance students from the Creative and Festival Arts Center at the University of the West Indies in Trinidad and Tobago, became part of COCO, the host of “multidisciplinary and culturally diverse programs,” which establish “a contemporary artists’ network” at the same time that pushes “the boundaries of dance practice.” All the students who were involved in the production of Fragments at the Little Carib Theatre in Port of Spain express their appreciation and gratitude to Dave Williams, Nicole Wesley, Nancy Herrera and Sonja Dumas, the organizers of the festival, for their vision and uninterrupted commitment with the development of the art of dance in the Caribbean.

LINKS:

http://www.creativecaribbeannetwork.com/person/19319/en

http://www.facebook.com/pages/COCO-Dance-Festival/182281215175384


Jeannine Jones

Jeannine Jones

 Judy-Ann LeMaitre

Hilary Pierre

Jeannine Jones (back) and Joanna Charles


Crystal Letren


UWI 8 Ensemble

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

2nd International Tourist Conference. Tourism, Culture and the Creative Industries: Exploring the Linkages.




Paper title: “Pan-Caribbean Cultural Legacies: Carnival Itinerant Route.” University of the West Indies.

LINK: http://sta.uwi.edu/conferences/12/tourism/

Thursday, January 12, 2012

Conference of Dramaturgy and the Performing Arts: Celebrating Virgilio




Congreso de Dramaturgia y Artes Escénicas: Celebrando a Virgilio (Conference of Dramaturgy and the Performing Arts: Celebrating Virgilio).  Paper title:  “Electra Garrigó, Una caja de zapatos vacía y Aire frio: de esta orilla” (Electra Garrigó, An Empty Shoe Box, and Cold Air: from this edge). Wesley Center, College of the Arts and Science; 12190 Stanford Dr., Universidad de Miami.  January 12 – 15, 2012. Miami, Florida.