Push Me, Pull You: Krithika Rajagopalan
Rajagopalan, associate artistic director and principal dancer of Chicago's Natya Dance Theatre, discusses her perspective on co-authorship—one that stands in relation to a time-honored form.
How are audience expectations and public participation changing?
Rajagopalan, associate artistic director and principal dancer of Chicago's Natya Dance Theatre, discusses her perspective on co-authorship—one that stands in relation to a time-honored form.
Chinn, deputy executive director of the Wing Luke Museum of the Asian Pacific American Experience, reflects on what it means to co-author someone else's story.
A writer known for her thoughtful and revealing pieces on everything from social privilege to *Fifty Shades of Grey*, Roxane Gay brings her knowledge of the literary world to our questions on authorship.
The founding artistic director of Portland, Oregon's ensemble-based Sojourn Theatre, Rohd explains that some of his greatest artistic satisfactions result from an intentional "collision of brains."
We posed our questions of (co-)authorship to Goldsmith, a visual artist-turned-writer whose prose consists simply of re-typing existing information.
*Theater* magazine editor Tom Sellar talked with legendary avant-garde performer Kate Valk on the exciting challenges presented by the Wooster Group's 2011–12 theater season.
Nina Simon conducts a discussion and interactive workshop with local arts and culture practitioners from the Philadelphia area, and shared her vision for the future of cultural institutions as personal, dynamic, and collaborative places for visitor engagement.
Allen and Lerner visited the Center in August 2010 to share examples of their innovations and to discuss collaboration, the impact of institutional creativity, and the utmost seriousness of humor.