This is a global dance community that provides an inclusive and nonjudgmental place for people to
explore all things movement, exercise, fitness, and dance without the glaring light of day or onlookers!
Not exact matches
Sensory play often involves using and building fine motor skills by
exploring things using pinching, pouring, and lacing
movements.
As they become stronger and start to try
things on their own, it's only natural that they will want to
explore that independence further, every little
movement is a new experience and it becomes something they crave to
explore further each day until they finally learn how to get those little knees underneath them and get crawling.
The first
thing you should do is just
explore the
movement.
Artists, architects, researchers and filmmakers
explore global infrastructure and the
movement of people,
things and information.
Artists, architects, researchers and filmmakers
explored global infrastructure and the
movement of people,
things and information during An Evening on the Great Pacific Garbage Patch.
is a collaborative research project in collaboration with Marissa Benedict that
explored, among other
things, Joseph Beuys, the material
movement of Chicago and its history, the lifestyle of urban coyotes, diving for anaerobic microbes and much more
On the occasion of the exhibition Some
Things Hidden at Framer Framed (on show from 19 January — 11 March 2018), artist Alexis Blake presents the first phase of her new performance, Anthology of Anger, which
explores how culture, history and DNA influence one's expression or suppression of anger and empathy, verses the body's authentic
movements of these emotions.
Finding parallels between the tactility of a drip of paint and a body's reflexive
movements, Elise Archias argues that Yvonne Rainer (b. 1934), Carolee Schneemann (b. 1939), and Vito Acconci (b. 1940) forged a dialogue between modernist aesthetics and their own artistic community's embrace of all
things ordinary through work that
explored the abstraction born of the body's materiality.
A founding member of the legendary collective Hi Red Center and key figure of the Mono - ha (School of
Things)
movement, Takamatsu, over the four decades of his career, sought to
explore the boundaries of reality and relationships with the physical world through a diverse body of work including sculpture, photography, painting, drawing and performance art.
Hear more about the spread of the Transition
movement internationally, gain inspiration from the action communities are taking to help create a low carbon, socially - just, healthier and happier future and
explore how you might get
things started in your neighbourhood.
They
explore values such as universality (for example they consider when it is ok to curtail particular rights of individuals or groups of individuals, such as prisoners freedom of
movement) and
explore equality and non-discrimination (for example understanding that equal treatment and equality are not always the same
thing such as in situations where it is necessary to put in place affirmative action or quotas to bring about equality between men and women).