The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, April 2, 2009 - 3B . Michigan's most creative major A new interdisciplinary performance art program to form at the University By SARAH CHAVEY Daily Arts Writer It's a rainy Sunday evening and libraries all over campus are filling with students getting ready to hit the books. But in a hallway tucked away somewhere on North Campus, a different kind of study group is forming. Four students stand behind a table with miniature costumes draped around their necks, their hands in shoes placed flat across the tabletop. Partners duck behind them, lending their arms to the characters as a woman sits in front of them all, guiding their improvisational comedic conversa- tions. These students are participants in a performance art workshop, and, beginning next semester, people interested in this art form will have a home in the University. This fall, Interarts will join the Univer- sity's roster of majors, creating an area of study for students interested in perfor- mance art. The program will be a joint venture between the University's School of Art & Design and the School of Music, The- atre & Dance, and it will grant graduates a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Interarts Perfor- mance. The collaboration between schools will allow students to take advantage of both theater and dance training in move- ment, narrative, set and lighting design as well as art and design training in visual language vocabulary, experimental art and new media technologies. University professors and members of the Interarts board Holly Hughes and Mal- * colm Tulip were inspired to create a pro- 0 gram in which students could feel free to develop their artistic voices in new, time- based work without the constraints of the more narrowly focused tracts offered by the two schools. "A program like this is for those people who don't want to be forced to decide on a discipline, but know that they are an artist and want to use all the skills that they have at their disposal," Tulip said. Until now, most performance art cur- ricula have been limited to graduate pro- grams, making the new program at the University one of the first of its kind. Not only will the major be rare for an under- graduate program, but it will also follow a uniquely individualistic approach to educa- tion. Students will choose from what Tulip dubbed a "smorgasbord" of classes (like playwriting, digital studio, costume design, movement, drawing and acting classes), and take responsibility for shaping their own educational experience. Such broad experience is needed in what is a truly varied art form. Performance art can range from monologue performances to body art and puppetry to flash mobs. Artists also come from a wide variety of art backgrounds. Still, Hughes and Tulip wel- come these challenges. The smallsize of the program will engen- der cohesion and allow advisors to keep a watchful eye on each student's progress through discussion groups like the weekly Interarts forum. "We'll talk about topics related to per- formance to give people sort of a sense of, you know, our own little clubhouse, and to build a sense of community," Hughes said. Students can also benefit from visiting performers and University alumni. Pat Olesko studied sculpture at the University in the late '64s and came to performance art after one particular project made her The University's Interarts program is one of the few undergraduate performance art concentrations in the country. realize how useful her body could be in conveying her ideas. "I started hanging things on myself and using that as a way to expand and comment on things not only'that I was attending but things that I was creating, as the work itself would create a performance," Olesko said. Olesko aims to shed light on what she perceives as absurd elements of society using vivid, visual structures and verbal performances. "I think that art is a fool's tool to ... not change society, but to illuminate it, and, so, art is actually the expression that words ignore and can't reach," she said. These qualities extend into most art forms, but it's the "live" aspect of perfor- mance art that makes it such a dynamic, interactive art, and one that will no, doubt make its mark around campus. "For this kind of program, everywhere is (a performance space)," Tulip said. Which means you can expect artistic performers to become a mainstay around town. "You know, we'll be invading - through the correct channels of course!" Tulip said. "We'll be fighting for space, you know, like all performance. Once you introduce per- formance then you're fighting for space ... but we're tough fighters." Not only must they toil for physical loca- tion, but performance artists must also vie for space in the general public discourse. Though little is known about I I it, the art form goes back almost a century. "I'd be very sur- prised if anyone gets taught the history of this kind of work," Tulip said. In order to address the obscure history of performance art, the new major will also be accompanied by a lecture series discussing the development of the art form's history. "There are very established people work- ing and have been working a long time," Tulip said. "And I think when they see that See INTERARTS, Page 4B HOLY WEEKAT CANTERBURY HOUSE Sunday, April 5th - The Palm Sunday Jazz Mass 5:00 p.m. A festive re- creation of the triumphal entry of Christ into Jerusalem. We'll have a Jazz parade! Thursday, April 9th - Agape Supper 5:30 p.m. A simple Mediterranean meal in conmemoration of The Last Supper. Thursday, April 9th - For the Bible Tells Me So 7:30 p.m. Screening of Daniel Karslake's 2007 documentary that explores the intersection between religion and homosexuality in America. Friday, April 10th -Good Fiday Litury 5:30 p.m. Featuring a reading of the Passion Gospel by the women of Canterbury House. Saturday, April l1th - The Easter Jazz Vigil 8:00 p.m. A culmination of the Holy Week celebration, with fire-juggling and the re-telling in scripture and music of the whole salvation story. ; , i