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An Evening of Solo Performances

March 24 - March 25, 2014
7:00PM - 7:00PM
Drake 2060 (New Works Lab)

Date Range
Add to Calendar 2014-03-24 19:00:00 2014-03-25 19:00:00 An Evening of Solo Performances An Evening of Solo PerformancesScience of a Story by Julia Langholt (BA Theatre Student)Feeling Galaxies by Rachel Seiger (BA Theatre Student) Feeling Galaxies was written and will be performed by Rachel Seiger (B.A Theatre). The show explores connections through disconnect, the joy in discovery, and the absence of a presence. As the piece invites you to explore thoughts that spout from different lights, we slip into testing the waters of vulnerability. Feeling Galaxies is a work in progress that invites you to experience relations within yourself and the world around you, moment by moment.Science of a Story, a new work-in-progress by Julia Langholt explores what contributes to our stories the only way she knows how: Like a a Mechanical Engineering and Theatre major. How do our experiences, relationships, knowledge, and the of the laws of the universe inform our choices? Looking at things from a STEAM-y perspective (Science, Technology, Engineering, Art, Mathematics... get your minds out of the gutter ;p), how can we make sense of the complex? Of the unknown? Drake 2060 (New Works Lab) Department of Theatre, Film, and Media Arts theatreandfilm@osu.edu America/New_York public
An Evening of Solo Performances
Science of a Story by Julia Langholt (BA Theatre Student)
Feeling Galaxies by Rachel Seiger (BA Theatre Student)
 
Feeling Galaxies was written and will be performed by Rachel Seiger (B.A Theatre). The show explores connections through disconnect, the joy in discovery, and the absence of a presence. As the piece invites you to explore thoughts that spout from different lights, we slip into testing the waters of vulnerability. Feeling Galaxies is a work in progress that invites you to experience relations within yourself and the world around you, moment by moment.

Science of a Story, a new work-in-progress by Julia Langholt explores what contributes to our stories the only way she knows how: Like a a Mechanical Engineering and Theatre major. How do our experiences, relationships, knowledge, and the of the laws of the universe inform our choices? Looking at things from a STEAM-y perspective (Science, Technology, Engineering, Art, Mathematics... get your minds out of the gutter ;p), how can we make sense of the complex? Of the unknown?