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The Art Monastic Laboratory program is an intensive development period in which invited artists come together to collaborate towards an artistic goal. The Art Monastic Laboratory program values experimenting with creative process and collaborative art-making with a high standard for artistic quality of the final product. This program kicked off in summer 2012 and continues to be a central part of Art Monastery programming.


Summer 2017: None (3pm)

The 2017 Art Monastic Laboratory will take place from June 20 to August 30 on the verdant shores of the Connecticut River, near Springfield, Vermont and will investigate Practice — meditation, high-level artmaking, and community living. Check out the Call for Artmonks for more info. Sign up for our newsletter to receive future calls for artists.

Artmonks-in-Residence 2017

Core Team

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Betsy McCall, Co-Founder and Abbess of the Art Monastery, is a social sculptor with degrees from Yale and San Francisco Art Institute. Betsy’s visual work (drawing, painting, videomaking) has been exhibited from San Francisco and New York to Rome and Amsterdam.  Bringing together her painting, editing, and facilitation skills, she has published the books Hosting Transformation: Stories from the Edge of Changemaking and most recently, Live Your Dream: Start Here, Start Now, available in Arabic, English, German, Italian, and Polish. She is currently developing a social sculpture-contemplative film collaboration with Gerry McCulloch, founder of the Cinematography Department at Goldsmiths College, University of London, asking people of disparate ethnicity, age, socio-political backgrounds to sustain eye contact.

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Neva Cockrell, Art Monastery Core Team Member, Board Member, is a dancer, choreographer and director. She spent the beginning of 2017 on a 3-month European Tour performing with Pilobolus, and the spring in residency in Dubai directing a new dance-theater performance. She has been developing a new style of dance-theater performance training over the past 5 years, recently branded as Catalyst Training, and is passionate about the overlap of art-making, contemplative practice, and communal living. She has been working with the Art Monastery Project since 2012, is a co-founder of NYC theater company Loom Ensemble, and has been performing and directing across the US and internationally in Italy, Ireland, Belgium, Germany, Sweden, UAE, and India since 2011. This summer she will be the Assistant Director of the show and Director of Training.

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Raphael Sacks, Art Monastery Core Team Member, is a singer, dancer, and theater maker. He has sung, danced, made theater and taught yoga in New York, Colorado, Italy, Belgium, Netherlands, Berlin, Stockholm, Dubai. He has been deeply involved with the Art Monastery Project since 2012, is a co-founder of NYC theater company Loom Ensemble, and has been performing and directing across the US and internationally in Italy, Ireland, Belgium, Germany, Sweden, UAE, and India since 2011. NYC credits include performances at BAM with Meredith Monk; Lincoln Center with Urban Research Theater; and La MaMa with Loom Ensemble. This summer he will be Director of Gardens & Facilities and a performer/co-creator of the show.

Anaya Cullen, Art Monastery Core Team Member, is a costume designer, fabric dyer and collaborative artist who creates costumes and work for dance, theater and independent film. Her clients and projects from California to New York and France to Turkey, including State Street Ballet, Chautauqua Dance, Charlotte Ballet, Robin Bisio Films, Wonderbound, Keigwin + Company, AMDA LA, Josie Walsh, SB Art Museum Nights!, SB Contemporary Art Forum, and Catsi Dans. Amongst her artistic residencies are Aldo Leopold Project 2013, Art Monastery Project Italy 2012, and Parsons Paris 2010. Anaya is a Board Member of the Future Traditions Foundation. This summer she diving further into design inspired by nature and exploring the intersection of contemplative practice and the creative process. Anaya is delighted to join the Art Monastery Project as a Core Team Member and Art Monastery Cruise Director.

Summer Artmonks

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Gerry McCulloch, returning Summer Artmonk, is an award-winning cinematographer, photographer and visual artist with broadcast and exhibition credits in film drama, documentary, television advertising commercials and promotional music videos. He is Head of Cinematography, Film Editing and Sound Design of the MA in Filmmaking at Goldsmiths, University of London. Gerry currently operates Darshana Photo Art and was previously Director of Untold Productions and film editor at the BBC. This summer, Gerry will be collaborating with Betsy McCall on their experiential interactive film project called “Mirror”.

Shawn Shafner is an artist, educator and activist. Creator of The People’s Own Organic Power Project (www.thePOOPproject.org), he has catalyzed conversation about sustainable sanitation from the top of NYC’s largest wastewater treatment plant to the floor of the United Nations. Major works include: An Inconvenient PoopFlush: The Documentary, family musical Innie / Outie, and ongoing monthly episodes of SHHH: The Poopcast (aka Sh*t and Shame with Shawn). He has a whole life outside of POOP, too, with performances in other people’s work, composing and singing, teaching in NYC schools, creating community-based projects, and making lots of pickles. Shawn will be joining the Art Monastery after 10 days in Nicaragua, where he will be a 2017 fellow to the Global Social Impact House through U Penn’s Center for Social Impact Strategy. Shawn will be Director of the show and Assistant Director of Training.

Kaitlin June is a voice-doula and a lover of sun, soil, and song. She has been receiving music her whole life from whatever land she stands on and loves to offer it back. Kaitlin is passionate about the role of Expressive Arts in the transformation of our world and helping to cultivate each individual’s unique voice in creating the new paradigm. This will be her first summer with the Art Monastery and she will be a performer/co-creator of the show.While Kaitlin’s role in the show will be primarily musical, she also has a passion for mindful movement and has trained with Pilobolus Dance Theater and performed original work at The Durham Arts Council, The Triangle Dance Festival for AIDS, the Greensboro Fringe Festival, The ArtsCenter, Earthdance, and The European Graduate School in Switzerland. She has taught acrobatic-based movement in Tanzania, Malawi, Bolivia, and the United Kingdom. For more on her life and work visit www.kaitlinjune.com.


Summer 2016: Sext (Noontide)

This year’s Art Monastic Laboratory will differ from years’ past in a few ways.

One difference is that this year’s program will be more like a traditional artist’s residency, hosting a variety of artists for varying lengths of time. Much more open than in years past, each artist or collaborative group will work on their own projects and have swaths of time free to use at their discretion. The larger community will come together for daily meals and weekly creative shares & feedback sessions, as well as being held by the through-lines of daily meditation and meal preparation.

Another difference is that this summer’s program will take place, for the first time ever, in the United States. Our location is Springfield, Vermont, on six acres of land along the Connecticut River.

Call for dancers and physical-theater performers

The Schedule

This summer’s schedule will follow the daily and weekly rhythms such as

7:30-8:00 Breakfast
8:00-8:30 Silent Meditation
8:30-9:00 Guided Meditation or Break
9:00-11:00 Training
11:00-11:15 Break
11:15-1:30 Rehearsal
1:30-2:30 Lunch
1:30-6:30 Personal time/Artistic Time/Outside Work
6:30-7:30 Dinner
7:30-9:30  Optional Evening Activity

 

Optional Evening Activities may include

Thursday night shares and critiques

Friday night or Saturday morning ceremony

Contact Improv

Open Arts Jam

Teaching/Skill Share

Book Club/Group Reading and Discussion

Movies

Walks

Call for dancers and physical-theater performers

 

Artmonks-in-Residence 2016

 

 

Betsy McCall, Co-Founder and Abbess of the Art Monastery, will be developing her visual work (drawing, painting, and videomaking).  You can see her work at her portfolio site: betsymccallworks.com.

Neva Cockrell, Founder of Catalyst Physical Theater Company and member of the Board of Directors of the Art Monastery, will be developing a physical training technique as well as a show to be presented to the public at the end of the program.

 


Summer 2015: Terce (9am, midmorning)

Returning to the mountains of Abruzzo, the Art Monastery continued our collaboration withReTe in Caramanico. With a robust community of 18, we devised an all-original evening-length show called Si Quis Sitit.

 


Summer 2014: Prime (6am, sunrise)

In the mountains of Abruzzo, a newly formed Italian theater organization called ReTe took over an ancient monastery, tucked away in the middle of one of Italy’s largest national parks. From August 15 to September 15, 2014, we convened our secular, intentional community of Artmonks, applying monastic principles to art-making and creativity — a first encounter with a new Italian host organization. In our 8-year Art Monastic Cycle cycle, we worked with Lauds — the ritual of the Dawn — a fitting time to be starting with a new Italian partner, our eyes on the horizon, towards the possibility of future growth. It was a month of sunrise contemplative practice, collaborative theater-making, and public workshops to engage with our new community.

The work that resulted was what Art Monastery Co-Founder Betsy McCall deems the most riveting original work to come from the Art Monastery thus far: PrimeThe highly physical two-person show went on to tour all over Europe, Dubai, and the USA.

 


Spring 2013: Lauds (3am, liminality)

In spring 2013, the core Artmonk team entered an intensive three-month development period in Puglia, Italy, thanks to a new collaboration with the Accademia del Rinascimento Mediterraneo (Academy of the Mediterranean Renaissance). This collaboration  resulted in a 20-minute video piece with all original music, visuals, and text: Acaya: Sea & Stone.


Summer 2012: Vigils (midnight, death)

The Art Monastery kicked off the Art Monastic Laboratory program in summer 2012, inviting five Artmonks-in-Residence to join the long-term team members in Labro, Italy for a 90-day art-monastic retreat. The purpose was to create a full-length collaborative, devised, multi-disciplinary theater piece that came to be known as Ad Mortem. The piece was co-created by the group (directed by Artistic Director Liz Maxwell and composed by Music Director Charles Darius) during the first eight weeks of the summer and subsequently performed regionally during the final four weeks.

About the Program

The goal of the summer 2012 Art Monastic Laboratory was explicitly stated to be 1) to develop and perform an original theater piece and 2) to live together as an intentional monastic community that supported the artist as a whole person. With these two goals hand in hand, the Artmonks engaged in a daily balance between process and product, work and play, individual time for reflection and collective rehearsal and community engagement. The daily schedule reflected this balance, attempting to carve out time for myriad goals, intentions, and needs.

How It Worked

A stable community of 10 artists lived together in Labro from June 1, 2012 to August 30, 2012. For the duration of the 90-day retreat, additional volunteers would join for various periods of time, also contributing to the community and show in invaluable ways. Three artists were housed at the monastery, which is situated approximately a five-minute drive away from the house where the rest of the community slept. Accommodation is in modest, shared rooms, following in the tradition of simple, monastic life. Every day our wonderful chef, Emma, prepared beautiful, delicious meals (highlights include home-made yogurt at breakfast and the use of local ingredients for healthy, sustainable lunches and dinners). The entire community participated in daily community chores and weekly community activities, where we experimented with various intentional and monastic practices. Artists were encouraged to seek individual grants, private contributions, or frequent flyer mile donations to cover their own travel to and from Italy. Unfortunately, the AMP presently can not offer stipends to artists for their time and talents.

Daily Schedule

For the majority of the summer, the community followed this schedule template to organize our days:

  • 8am – Meditation (optional)
  • 9am – Breakfast
  • 10am – Check-in
  • 10:30am – Morning training (dance, voice, theater)
  • 1pm – Lunch
  • 3-6pm – Rehearsal for Ad Mortem
  • 8pm – Dinner
  • 10pm – Gregorian chant in the temple

No prior experience with meditation was necessary, and Artmonks of varied spiritual backgrounds partook in this optional daily practice that took place in a vast sunlit field next to our property. To end each day, we gathered in our roofless temple, which we built from materials found around our property, to sing a shortened version of the Requiem mass under the stars. For the second half of the summer, the community also began performing nightly for Calici Sotto Le Stelle, a local wine, food, and entertainment festival. Each evening, a group of Artmonks would drive over to the local town to perform this 15-minute opening act. Our daily schedule shifted accordingly in order to accommodate this new activity.

Social Sculpture and Community Life

All artists, along with interns, volunteers, and staff, were part of the monastic intentional community for the entire summer. The community shared lunch and dinner every day, participated in cooking, cleaning, other chores, and additional community activities, and explored elements of contemporary monasticism as a group (meditation, ritual, etc.). In summer 2012, the Artmonks took temporary Artmonk vows, created a summer solstice ritual, and held a shadow ceremony to explore the dark side of our individual natures. Although we are a secular community, the Artmonks are deeply interested in alternative spiritual practices and we seek others ready to engage art and spirit in similarly profound ways. We seek participants for our programs who are also actively lit up by all of these elements. Our vision is that the laboratory program challenge each individual creatively, spiritually, and inter-personally; that the community deeply investigate art monasticism; and that this process yield a professional, high-quality product.

Daily Technique Training

Every morning of the development period, the Artmonks-in-Residence trained for two and half hours together in skill-sharing master classes. These sessions increased our individual and collective skills, improved our technique, and created a shared vocabulary that carried forth into rehearsals and performances. Each day, the company trained in dance and strength building, music and vocal skills, and Viewpoints-Suzuki stage techniques. Each session was led by a different company member and built cumulatively throughout the summer.

Artistic Concept for the Show

Building on the strength from morning training, afternoons were devoted to devising and rehearsing the original piece. Following the SITI Company model of devising original work based around a Question-Anchor-Structure, the Artmonks-in-Residence devised the piece based on these three pillars:

  • Question: How do I live when I know that I’m going to die?
  • Anchor: personal and cultural reflections on death and dying
  • Structure: a deconstructed Requiem mass

The concept for the piece explored general themes of death and transformation (how do these themes on an individual level cause to spring forth metaphors for the death and transformation of a society, culture, and world?) and drew inspiration from ancient Italian culture and mythology (what do rites of the underworld mean in our particular time and place today? How many ways have human beings come up with to cope with the concept of dying?). The artists actively engaged in the question of language (how do you communicate in a place where no one understands your words? What do these problems mean symbolically? Could we create our own language for the play world?), ultimately performing text in both Italian and English for a mixed audience. The text was layered over what developed to be an extremely physical dance-based work, although the piece also incorporated shadow play, a completely original score, and abstract characters and story-telling to tie the piece together. Photos and video from the show are available in our portfolio. See more rehearsal photos and read reflections from Liz on what it was like to perform the work. *Note: The show created from the summer experience is called Ad Mortem, but it was originally called L’Eterno Smascherato for the local premiere. These titles refer to the same final work.

Documenting the Process

It was challenging to document the process while experiencing it, to reflect on the successes and challenges while still in the midst of them. For snippets of the experience of the summer, see the following blogs that document the process throughout:

Additionally, a private blog documented the process more in depth throughout the summer; access to this blog was reserved for high-level donors, select advisors, and Board of Directors.

A Co-Created Magical Summer

The Art Monastery Project is a unique place, an idealistic start-up that is an exciting experiment. The ideal Artmonk-in-Residence to join us for a laboratory is open-minded, kind-hearted, and enthusiastic about the adventure of living with a bunch of creative, big-spirited, hard-working Americans in the Italian countryside. The summer 2012 Art Monastic Laboratory was a huge success; please check back on this page for updates about future upcoming laboratories.

Executive Director: Betsy McCall Artistic Director: Liz Maxwell Music Director and CFO: Charles Darius Community Production Manager: Molly Freedenberg Assistant to the Executive Director and Language Artist: Christina Vani Culinary Artist: Emma Sanchez Artmonks-in-Residence: Neva Cockrell, Anaya Cullen, Ryan Hazelbaker, Andi Hemmenway, Raphael Sacks Stage Managers: Marko Grunz, Kelly Jenkins Worktrade Volunteers(with us for one- to three-week periods throughout the summer): Tom Sharp, Luelle Llorens, Jordan Aragon, Traci Longacre, Tina Grandinetti, Sean Yoro

Additional pictures from the summer 2012 Art Monastic Laboratory can be found in the social sculpture section of our portfolio