Sandra Fiona Long
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Writing Workshops

5/6/2014

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Ok, so I am starting to develop writing workshops,  based on my daily practice of writing, and also my experience directing, facilitating and creating movement and text based performances with community and independent theatre. I am looking seriously at the different stimulus which inspires me to write, and learning how to capture some of these things and share them, so they may be of use to others.  
What creates the transition between a completely uninspired and unengaged space, where one is forcing themselves to write, into one that is inspired, limitless and free? Where the structure becomes effortless and natural, indeed the structure can write itself, emerging from the writing. Why is it that this can happen so suddenly and surprisingly? What is it that causes this shift? 



This is what I want to explore in my workshops; ways to access inspiration. I want to create a space where people can explore different approaches to writing (or in fact any creative act) and free up their thinking about what works for them and why. 

I attended a couple of Jenny Kemp's generative writing workshops years ago. It was around the same time that I was involved as a mentoree in a creative development she was undertaking- where she was turning a script she had written onto the floor with actors, dancers, a composer, filmmaker and designers. I had just finished studying theatre making, and I felt very blessed to be able to observe her creating theatre from her own text, and to take part in her writing workshops. I found her process for generating text fascinating and so much fun. She created a space where writing can be a mediation, connecting with our inner impulse, but yet gave constant interruptions to this meditative space, pushing us into different realms with our material and never letting us get too comfortable or stuck. Her workshops almost provided a structure for a complete work. 

I also attended a Sue Ingleton's shamanic writing workshop when I was at the VCA, and that was really cool. We warmed up through exercising our chakras, removing ourselves completely from the idea of writing at all, turning ourselves into empty vessels, and then at just the right moment, Sue opened us up to other stimulus, and we went for it. I wrote a piece of writing in this workshop which later was reworked to become a duet performed by Helen Morse and dancer Matt Cornell in 'Duets for Lovers and Dreamers' at fortyfivedownstairs in 2010. 

Both of these writing workshop experiences had a profound effect on me, alongside my experience training in theatre, mediation and movement in Indonesia with Bengkel Teater Rendra, and from other great teachers in improvisation such as Al Wonder, and many years of yoga training and teaching.  From these diverse yet connected lineages, it feels natural to develop a process for writing from the mysterious, inner space; the same space that dance, painting, music or any creativity comes from. There is structure, certainly that is important, but more essentially, and before structure, there is inspiration, a connection with something wide and vast, which moves us to create free of any judgement. And in approaching text in this way, we create more and more interesting and relevant forms of writing- Yay!

So how do we get there? 
A couple of things which I think help prepare us for the inspired writing space are: 
a) writing every day- this is really important, if you are serious, write everyday, even if it is just a short time. And not just creative writing or work writing but also anything else which comes up- to do lists, shopping lists, lists of swear words, sexual fantasies, and even better, connecting with your deepest motivations and writing freely from there. This is writing for no one else to see, just for you, unless you want to show someone. There are some great books around about this, to help you establish writing as a practice-  try Julia Cameron (e.g. the artists way) and Natalie Goldberg (writing down the bones).
b) Let yourself write badly- yep, bad writing is fine and good and important. Let yourself write badly because it releases your from the burden of expectation. Who cares if you have a deadline and all you can write is crap. Just keep going and don't listen to the nagging voices of doubt. Write badly. And then write even worse. Make a point of it. You might be surprised to find that some of your best writing comes from your worst. 
c) Remember your body. Writing is a physical act. Move, take breaks, walk, dance and keep your attention connected with your body, or parts of your body as you write. 
Try this exercise: Bring your attention to your toes. Wiggle them. stretch them, luxuriate in the feeling of them, let yourself get turned on by them. Take your pen in your hand, and listen carefully to what your toes have to say. Start writing, keeping your attention with your toes. See where it takes you- let yourself leave your toes completely if you wish- just write, but as soon as you come to a stop, come back to your toes- listen again. What do your toes have to tell you? Let it be bad. 

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Hades Fading Interview with Ruth Sancho Huerga

8/27/2013

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I have here one more interview with a Hades Fading artist. This time with actress Ruth Sancho Huerga. 


Ruth Sancho Huerga is an actress, originally from Spain, who has lived and worked in Melbourne over the past 3 years. She was nominated for a greenroom award for best actress in 2012 for her role in Blood Wedding at the Malthouse. Ruth and I met at a multilingual poetry reading at Federation Square which we both performed in last year, and I was really struck by how powerful her performance was, and also her poetry. She is a poet, visual artist and a performer and specialises in digital theatre and poetry which she is doing her Phd in. We have been talking a lot about the potential of Hades Fading to utilise digital technology to create the fading world of the gods, but that is for later. Now, to Ruth: 

-        What draws you as a performer to working with film and sound?

As a performer and visual artist I’ve always been very attracted to new forms that give me the possibility to express, improvise and interact with the audience in a different way. Platforms as film and sound create a different imaginary world to react to and demand not only the use of different acting skills such as singing or acting for the camera but also a deep exploration of new ways of developing theatre.  

-        What elements of a production do you most connect with when collaborating on a project? (ie. sound, text, other performers, visual, etc)

Each project is a different ‘baby’ to nurture. Sometimes there is no text and it is a show based on movement and sounds; other times it relies on visuals and multimedia. As a performer I always face and embrace projects from their ‘uniqueness’. Nevertheless, I really love working with poetic texts because they live on the metaphor and therefore create multiple aesthetics and multiple feeling connections at the same time. This is also achieved by the interaction of visuals and sounds. Any element that enriches the textual world(s) is also interesting and appealing to me.

-        What is the most important thing about theatre for you?

The audience. I learn that during my career. The magic of theatre is that there is an audience travelling and experiencing with you an alive journey in real time.  An audience that experiences emotions and feelings with you.  Every time I jump on the stage I dream with the ‘love’ connection between audience and myself as a character. Theatre is an act of pure giving, an act of pure and immediate love between the stage and the auditory, and every night is different and special.

-        Why are you working on hades fading?

 First of all, I love the text. It is truly poetry and the theme is very attracting to me, the myth of Orpheo and Euridice, but a myth that is fading. For me Hades Fading not only questions the loss of historical memory and its consequences, individually and socially speaking, but it also questions the way history has been told or passed to society and what that implies in the present and what that will lead to the future. The text is full of humour with touches of feminism. Also, I feel very lucky of being surrounded by such a professional and talented team.

Direct link to donate is:
https://www.creativepartnershipsaustralia.org.au/donors/about-giving/donate.html?artistId=856a1811-491a-4a19-a4b7-0de977d08642



Many thanks again,

Sandra



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Hades Fading update and interview with Designer Emily Barrie

8/15/2013

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Below is another little interview, this time with Hades Fading
designer Emily Barrie, who is a wonderful collaborative and in-genius designer who is able to somehow weave together everyones input into the best design. She has worked with some of the most interesting companies in Melbourne and interstate, and her body of work with RAWCUS and Ilbijerri over the past decade has been astounding. Here are 3 Questions:

1: As a designer, what draws you to working with live performance?
As an artist i am drawn to work in live performance by the wonderful, ever changing and evolving nature of live work. I enjoy the pre-production as you explore the possibilities of what could happen, but without doubt, the inclusion of an audience will shift the performance. We can only pre empt the outcome, even throughout a season of a production, the work will continue its own journey. 

2: What element (s) of live performance do you most tune into when you are collaborating as a designer?
As a designer, i am drawn in by the experience of creating worlds. I enjoy the collaboration with other Theatre makers and the merging of ideas and departments to create a space or a costume that is comfortably inhabited and supporting of the environment the work desires. Personally i begin with a instinctual ideas sparked by either a concept or a script, and then i reflect mostly on the responses of the performers. I study how they work in the world i have imagined.

3: Why are you working on Hades Fading?
I have worked with both Sandra Long and Nick Verso many times over the past 10 years. I am excited to make work with like minded artists. Hades Fading will give us the opportunity to merge words, music and visuals beautifully. Sandra's choice to involve the use of film really interests me too. I have designed many sets supporting a film element in theatre, however I feel that in this particular context the film and set design have the potential of becoming one, and this is very exciting.

Help us reach our target by the end of August!! 
The money we are raising is going towards artist fees, oncosts, documentation and materials. Our aim is to fund a larger creative development out of this, with good support material from this development.
More information is here:
http://www.creativepartnershipsaustralia.org.au/donors/artist-projects/sandra-fiona-long.html

And a direct link to the online donation page is here

https://www.creativepartnershipsaustralia.org.au/donors/about-giving/donate.html?artistId=856a1811-491a-4a19-a4b7-0de977d08642

Don't forget that donations are tax deductible over $2.
Thank you again for reading this far!!

Sandra 


http://www.creativepartnershipsaustralia.org.au/donors/artist-projects/sandra-fiona-long.html
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Hades Fading Creative Development and Film Maker Nicholas Verso- crowd funding!!!!

7/31/2013

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My first ever crowd funding attempt! It's for the first stage development of a theatre project Hades Fading, in collaboration with Designer Emily Barrie, Film Maker Nicholas Verso, Composer Biddy Connor and Performers Dan Witton and Ruth Sancho Huerga. This work, based in music and visual theatre, unfolds in the library of Hades -You can find more information about the project and artists involved at the link below.
We are registered with the Australia Cultural Fund, so supporters receive a tax-deduction for donations to the project. 
The project is supported by the Northcote Town Hall and City of Darebin, who are providing a venue, a contribution towards materials and paying for a mentor for the project (a surprise to be revealed). Hades Fading is Auspiced by Auspicious Arts, who are also providing public liability insurance. 
To bring together the core team of artists in September for a week's creative development we need to raise a minimum of $4,050. This money will contribute towards the costs of fees, oncosts and other associated costs. This is an important step to getting this new and complex work up, and will lead to further development and eventual presentation of the work. Any money we raise above this amount will go towards further development of the work. All donations above $2 are tax deductible and can me made online by clicking here, and you can also download a form if you prefer to do it by post.  

< http://www.creativepartnershipsaustralia.org.au/donors/artist-projects/sandra-fiona-long.html> 

Hades Fading Collaborator Nicholas Verso:
Below is a little chat I had with film maker/AV designer Nicholas Verso about his work. Nicholas is a film maker who has made some extraordinary work- his short film 'Last time I saw Richard' is showing at the Melbourne International Film Festival in the Australian Showcase this year. This follows being part of the accelerator program in 2012. He recently directed the music video for Cat Empire, and has worked on installations, including at Signal with young people, is a DJ and a pretty all round amazing guy. I loved working with Nick on Duets for Lovers and Dreamers so I am wrapt to be collaborating again, and to be doing it right from the start of the project. Over to Nicholas:

As a film maker, what draws you to working with Live performance?

Film production can be very calculated.  Scripts go through draft after draft.  Filming is very tight.  Editing is prolonged.  So everything is very precise and careful.  I like with live performance the fact that 2 performances are never the same; things can always change and shift.  There’s also a wonderful immediacy between the work and the audience that you often miss with film so I love keeping one foot in that world.

 What element(s) of live performance do you connect with most when working on a performance as a film maker/AV designer?

I never want the film to overpower the performers.  That’s the most crucial part I guess as that’s what the audience are truly there to see.  So I want to serve their performance of the script and find ways to bring in images or emotions that the other elements are unable to do.

Why Hades Fading?

Well working with the above, normally film comes in last to contribute where the other areas couldn’t.  But with Hades Fading, the film projection is actually much more central and present than it is normally which will be exciting to explore.  Having worked with Sandra before on Duets For Lovers & Dreamers (which I came on to quite late), I admire the poetic and very unique nature of the theatre she creates so I’m drawn to its beauty and serving that.  Plus, I’ve worked with Emily Barrie many times before and I enjoy making her life difficult during bump-ins so I wasn’t about to miss that opportunity.


Thank you for reading this far!!
< http://www.creativepartnershipsaustralia.org.au/donors/artist-projects/sandra-fiona-long.html> 

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Small Things

12/9/2012

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 It has been the fortnight of small things. Even longer. It has been weeks since I was in a big theatre, or a big gallery. Probably October. Even then it was the small space of the big theatre. It was a small show in the big festival. And as the year gets more celebratory and big and crazy, I care less to put myself in a big space, and more shy of spectacle. But how powerful the small works can be. How rousing is intimacy. How engaging and absolutely natural. The interaction between the humans of the audience and the space are part of the theatre, the exhibit. Some examples? Today I went to a photographic exhibition by Mara Ripani- 'Girl Portrait'- in her loungeroom. Yes, my daughter was one of the subjects in Mara's beautiful works. But the work of Mara extends into her garden, her cooking, her invitation into her home where film crews have visited (her garden has featured in gardening Australia). It is more about life than art. It is about welcome. And the diverse and surprising elements which surfaced in the photos of the girls that formed this exhibition are a testimony to Mara's invitation to be natural in it's wildest sense. 

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Another example, Pigeon Hole- a theatre installation (pictured above), in the narrow laneway of Union Lane, which runs between Bourke st and Little Collins. I had the pleasure of spending the day with brilliant performer/creators Jodee Mundy and Dan Goronszy, on Thursday, before Pigeon Hole opened on Friday. Ah, to see a piece of theatre the audience can walk around. Set in a tiny box like set which contains the performers, trying to go about their daily business without disrupting each other, but inevitably doing just that. The piece reflects on sharing small spaces, on urban environments, on the pressure of not having our feet on the ground, and the tiny dwelling set within the towering walls of the city laneway reflected also on power imbalance, on wealth, and on homelessness, just by virtue of being within such a dominating frame. 

And one more thought about small things, in the light of Dame Elizabeth Murdoch's passing last week. What a generous woman she was, an absolute inspiration. Yet generosity can not be measured just by the amount of money, time or energy someone gives. Because everyone has different capacities to give at any given moment. There are many who give of themselves in their fullest capacity, yet sometimes that capacity may not be so large for any number of reasons. Perhaps one of Dame Elizabeth's greatest generosities was her willingness to go against the social strata, to break convention, in order to follow her vision. And so here's to the memory of Elizabeth, and the many others who also dedicate themselves to giving, in sometimes small and sometimes visionary ways. 












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This week

11/11/2012

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Some things to mention.

1 million stars project: Yesterday I helped out on a project which has been instigated by artist and weaver extraordinaire Maryanne Talia Pau - she aims, with a whole lot of others who may want to join in, to weave 1 million stars for peace. Her work is beautiful, you can see some of it up at the NGV in the Pacific Arts Section. If you want to join this project, here is an instructional video and her website is on this too. We wove stars through the day at Thornbury Primary Schools Art Fair and taught lots of big and small people how to make them. Thank you Maryanne for sharing this wonderful gift with us.

Then yesterday evening I caught up with writer and theatre producer Faiza Mardzoeki, and some of her friends. Faiza is a writer to look out for. She researches her theatre projects for over a year sometimes, and deals with some very tough issues in her work. Her next piece is about women who were jailed for apparently being 'communist' in Indonesia in 1965, which is a really sad history and involved a lot of abuse. This performance work will hopefully get off the ground next year- all the best Faiza! I also met some new friends, Lily Yulianti Farid who is directing the Makassar International Writers Festival in Suleweisi! What a treat! This is a relatively new festival but it looks really interesting. Also I met Khairani Barokka, a young writer and performer, wow, what a force of nature! I look forward to seeing your work Khairani on Thursday, at Slamalamdingdong. And also, another really interesting artist, Tintin Wulia who showed me her awesome film installation which involved her making over 140 passports .  You can see this video on her blog 
I left Faiza's house with my brain spinning, and Faiza, Tintin and Khairani kept going! 
yay to another weekend with lots of art

Also, going to LaMama's explorations season tomorrow, with my friend Lou, to see 'Too' performed by one of my favourite performers Carolyn Connors, and written by Cynthia Troup. I am so excited about this. Called a 'sound work for theatre' this sounds just up my alley, and I can't wait to see how Carolyn will work with Cynthia's text. Oh, also there is another artist involved, Ben Byrne, composer






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    Sandra Fiona Long





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