Afro-Indigenous mappings, constellations of caring, the music of ricethese are elements of just a few of the wide-ranging projects to receive grants through a new initiative from the Hopkins Center for the Arts and the Office of the Vice Provost for Research, with additional support from the Tuck School of Business.
The , launched as a pilot program last fall, has three central goals: to support research with the arts at its core, foster interdisciplinary projects, and promote faculty-student mentorship. In December, five faculty-led and four student-led projects were awarded more than $110,000.
Currently, the Hop is preparing for an extensive renovation and expansion designed, in part, to support greater and more ambitious creation of cross-disciplinary work. The inaugural grant-winning research projects exemplify the spirit of the future Hop, says Mary Lou Aleskie, the Howard L. Gilman 44 Director of the Hopkins Center for the Arts.
These arts-centric projects reflect innovative approaches to cultivating connections among disciplines and within the community, effectively harnessing the transformative power of the arts, Aleskie says.
The projects include Black COVID Care, a website being created by Alison Martin, a Mellon Faculty Fellow in the Department of Music, and Armond Dorsey 20, Guarini 23,
Martin says the site is an exciting start for the , a newly formed research environment dedicated to the intersections of Black sonic life and digital work, and pulls together a number of disciplines in order to imagine the infinite ways that Black people have cared for each other both during and preceding the pandemic.
With Resonant Healing, a sound installation, Geisel School of Medicine student and Health and Humanities Scholar Sage Palmedo plans to share the healing power of music.
This project is a fusion of artistic and neuroscientific knowledge, Palmedo says. I hope it can foster more conversations around the therapeutic potential of sensory experience.
Another projectFlesh, Fiber, and Informationaims to propose new transdisciplinary creative works. The process will involve exploring such questions as what kind of information is encoded, transmitted, and understood through fibers, and how can movement and embodied practices activate that information?
Theres so much knowledge, both basic and applied, embedded and created in artistic works, says Jacqueline Wernimont, an associate professor in the Department of Film and Media Studies whose project partners represent fields ranging from information theory to dance and choreography. Were really excited to be able to place that knowledge at the center of a multidisciplinary exploration of our non-digital networks of information.
The projects that received grants are:
- Black COVID Care
Allie Martin, a Mellon Faculty Fellow in the Department of Music, and Armond Dorsey 20, Guarini 23, who is studying digital musics, shift the focus from disproportionately negative narratives about Black life during the COVID-19 pandemic to stories of care and community, with a website that allows users to build interactive, sonic constellations exploring individual stories and interconnected lineages of care.
- Blackness in Green: Afro-Indigenous Mappings of the Natural Environment
Through artistic and academic analyses of Black ecologies and Afro-Indigenous environmental studies, Darius Scott, assistant professor of geography, aims to unsettle the cultural dominance of European understandings of the environment.
- Data as a Found Object
Using data as a found object in digitally created sculptures and integrating digital work into physical reality, Carson Grace Levine 21, Guarini 22who is studying computer science with a digital arts concentrationexplores computational methods as a means of artistic practice.
- Flesh, Fiber, and Information
Jacqueline Wernimont, an associate professor in the Department of Film and Media Studies, and her project partners explore the nature of information transmitted through fibers in order to understand historically marginalized knowledge and communication practices and propose new transdisciplinary and pathbreaking creative works.
- GLITCHLAB
Mary Flanagan, the Sherman Fairchild Distinguished Professor in Digital Humanities; Tiffany Chang 23; Haowen Liu, Guarini 22; Clara Pakman 23; Egemen Sahin 23; and Camille Yang 25 use feminist artificial intelligence to explore gender bias in the context of art and science and to create new works from female artists based on specific training data and algorithms.
- Hacking Grains: An Installation and Performance Project
Digital Musics student Trevor Van de Velde, Guarini 22, combines his yearning for live music and social eating during the pandemic with his penchant for repurposing old appliances in a production featuring Asian-identifying performers that bridges technology, ritual, community, and Asian identityto the sound of 18 semi-working rice cookers.
- Merely Players
Emily Finn, an assistant professor of psychological and brain sciences; Peter Hackett, Avalon Foundation Chair of the Humanities; and Kathryn ONell, a PhD candidate in the Functional Imaging and Naturalistic Neuroscience Lab, employ expertise from theater professionals and cognitive neuroscientists to study how people make sense of everyday ambiguous social cues with minimal information.
- Resonant Healing
With rates of mental health issues soaring during the pandemic, musician Sage Palmedo, a Geisel School of Medicine student and Health and Humanities Scholar, is creating an
immersive, healing sound installation to connect 窪做惇蹋厙s medical and arts communities through experiential research in collaboration with faculty, students, and visiting artists.
- You Are Here?
Landon Armstrong 23; Eammon Littler, Guarini 22; and Carson Grace Levine 21, Guarini 22, will invite viewers to contemplate transient presence, geography, and community during the pandemic with art installation that will change with every interaction.