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Announcement:
The LCI National Educator Workshop, hosted by The Capital
Region Center for Arts in Education and Capital Area School
Development Association (C.A.S.D.A.), scheduled for August
3-7, 2009 has been cancelled.
Interested participants are encouraged to register for the
LCI National Educator Workshop in New York City on July 6-10
or July 13-17.
August 3–7, 2009
Introductory Workshop
The Capital Region Center for Arts in Education hosts a
Lincoln Center National Educator Workshop August 3-7, in
beautiful Saratoga Springs at Skidmore College. Educators
can discover how to unlock imaginative learning through
engaging with works of art in this five-day workshop.
PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT WORKSHOP FOR
TEACHERS, PRE-PROFESSIONALS AND ANYONE WHO LOVES THE ARTS!
Information and registration
click here
Click
here to watch the National Educator Workshop Power Point
presentation
To learn more about The Lincoln Center Institute National
Educator’s Workshop click here
Click here for more information
2009 Works of Art
Below are the works of art that will be studied at this site
this year:
Dance
Suddenly Summer Somewhere: choreographed by Monica Bill
Barnes and performed by Monica Bill Barnes & Company
http://www.monicabillbarnes.com/company/company.html
Length:
50 minutes

View larger
Two small women stand on top of a dining room table. In
silence, carefully navigating the table top, they send
silverware crashing to the floor. Simultaneously hilarious
and painful, Suddenly Summer Somewhere explores how the
passage of time affects the collective lives of two people.
Visual Arts
Works from the exhibition Lives of the Hudson,
Displayed at
the Frances Young Tang Teaching Museum and Art Gallery at
Skidmore College
http://tang.skidmore.edu/4/exhibitions/doc/850/

View larger
The exhibition will be a unique exploration
of several themes that trace their way through the history
of the Hudson River with sections dedicated to the natural
river, imagined river, human river, and working river. This
continent’s great rivers have in large measure defined and
shaped American history and culture. Far more than a short
river flowing through New York State, the Hudson is a thread
that runs through the fabric of four centuries of American
history, through the development of American
civilization--its culture, its community, and its
consciousness.
Special
Guests and Workshop Leaders
To Be Announced
For information regarding the
Lincoln Center Institute visit
www.lcinstitute.org
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