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William ForsythePhoto: Copyright Stephan Floss Photo
Synchronous Objects for One Flat Thing, reproduced alignments
William Forsythe, Suspense, 2008
William Forsythe, Antipodes I / II


William ForsythePhoto: Copyright Stephan Floss PhotoSynchronous Objects for One Flat Thing, reproduced alignmentsWilliam Forsythe, Suspense, 2008 William Forsythe, Antipodes I / II
William ForsythePhoto: Copyright Stephan Floss PhotoSynchronous Objects for One Flat Thing, reproduced alignmentsWilliam Forsythe, Suspense, 2008 William Forsythe, Antipodes I / II

William Forsythe Symposium:
Choreographic Objects


Wed, Apr 1, 2009  |  2:00 - 5:00PM
Wexner Center for the Arts

William Forsythe, his collaborators, and other authorities gather to discuss his concept of "choreographic objects."

Exhibition preview | 2 PM
Performances of Monster Partitur | 2:30 & 5:30 PM**
Gallery D

Symposium Discussions | 3–5 PM
Film/Video Theater

[Watch a live stream of the symposium here]

You'll hear about how this idea takes form in the works on view in the exhibition William Forsythe: Transfigurations and in Synchronous Objects for One Flat Thing, reproduced by William Forsythe, an ambitious new web project created by Forsythe with Ohio State’s Maria Palazzi (Advanced Computing Center for the Arts and Design and Department of Design) and Norah Zuniga Shaw (Department of Dance) and an interdisciplinary team of collaborators from across the arts and sciences. To celebrate the launch of the web project, invited outside experts contextualize the project in terms of its relevance to current trends in the philosophy of cognition and architecture.

A celebrated roster of special guests joins Forsythe for these talks: Mark Goulthorpe of MIT's School of Architecture; Alva Noë, professor of philosophy at the University of California Berkeley; Synchronous Objects creative directors Maria Palazzi, director of ACCAD and associate professor in the Department of Industrial, Interior, and Visual Communication Design, and Norah Zuniga Shaw, the director of the dance and technology program and assistant professor in the Department of Dance; and Charles Helm, the Wexner Center's director of performing arts and curator for the Forsythe exhibition.

See below (under "more information") for more information on those presenting at the symposium.

**Please arrive early to see the Monster Partitur performance. Each performance is free, but audience size is limited to approximately 50-60 viewers per performance, who will be admitted on a first-come, first-served basis. The performance is approximately 20-25 mins. in length (and seating is not provided). If you are unable to attend Monster Partitur today, additional performances are schedule from April 1 to April 5. Click here for details.

At the conclusion of today’s program, audience members will have an opportunity to engage in an open dialogue with the artists and scientists who created Synchronous Objects and their invited guests.

Following today’s program, please go to the Synchronous Objects blog (synchronousobjects.osu.edu/blog), which includes posts from the symposium participants and allows for ongoing discussion and public comment.

Attending this event? Let your friends know and RSVP on Facebook.

This symposium is presented collaboratively by Ohio State’s Department of Dance, Advanced Computing Center for the Arts and Design, and Wexner Center for the Arts, with additional support from the Knowlton School of Architecture. Funding has been provided by the Battelle Endowment for Technology and Human Affairs.

It is planned in conjunction with exhibition William Forsythe: Transfigurations, which is made possible at the Wexner Center with support from the National Endowment for the Arts as part of American Masterpieces: Three Centuries of Artistic Genius and from the Contemporary Art Centers network, administered by the New England Foundation for the Arts (NEFA), with major support from the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts and additional support from the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation. Additional support is provided by the Battelle Endowment for Technology and Human Affairs. The exhibition is also made possible through the Wexner Center Residency Award program.

The symposium is also planned in conjunction with the launch of the web project Synchronous Objects for One Flat Thing, reproduced by William Forsythe is coproduced by The Forsythe Company with the Advanced Computing Center for the Arts and Design and the Department of Dance at The Ohio State University. Funding is provided by The Forsythe Company, The Forsythe Foundation, The Ohio State University Office of Research, Rotterdamse Dansacademie/Codarts, and Tanzplan Deutschland, an initiative created by the German Federal Cultural Foundation.

The Forsythe Company is supported by the city of
Dresden and the state of Saxony as well as the city of Frankfurt am Main and the state of Hesse. The Forsythe Company is also supported by Mrs. Susanne Klatten. Additional support is provided by Ernst & Young.



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