A studio practice focuses on nurturing the artist and is not dependent on developing a performance or public-facing outcome, though often performances and projects are born out of studio work. Developing a studio practice is also different than taking a workshop. Workshops are often temporary or finite, while a studio practice is continual and serves an artist throughout their creative lives.
SoulWork is a progressive but not a linear method. SoulWork Studio empowers artists to nurture, deepen, expand and/or reinvigorate their creativity at any point in their career or educational journey by offering training and artistic cultivation that is ongoing vs. project-based. For project-based work, SoulWork is best realized and understood when artists first learn the methodology as a studio practice so that it can be applied with embodied knowledge and depth.
Generally speaking, we are thinking of Performers/Performing Artists to include Actors, Dancers, Singers, etc.
Performance Practitioners include Performance Artists, Devising/Generative Artists, Performance/Performed Ethnography, Storytellers, Performance Poets, etc.
Practitioners include Culture Workers, Community Organizers, Researchers, Writers, Musicians, Visual Artists, Multi-Media Artists, Educators, Choreographers, Directors, etc.
SoulWork is rooted Black American performance traditions which center embodied practices of oral tradition (vs. written text) to communicate and preserve knowledge, arts, ideas, and culture through live, in-person, and embodied transmission. Embodied and oral traditions prioritize and require learning directly from experts, knowledge-bearers, and practitioners.
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