Friday, April 11, 2014

Summer Conference in Fair Oaks, California


Presented By: 
Christian Hitsch and many others
Days: 3
August 1st - August 3rd
Time: 
Friday, 7pm–8:45pm; Opening Session; Saturday, 8:30am–9pm; Sunday, 8:30am–12:30pm
Price: 
$135 through July 3; $145 July 4–25; $160 at the door. Online registration closes July 25.
Meal Options: 
Pre-register to guarantee meals. Breakfasts (Sat–Sun) two: $17.00; Lunch (Sat only): $14.75; Dinner (Fri Only) $14.75; (Sat Only) $14.75; Boxed lunch to go (Sun): $10.00.
Registration Notes: 
Online registration closes July 25, Registration check-in: Friday, August 1, 5:30–7pm


MERCURY STANDING IN THE BALANCE
T​
he Genesis and Task of the Anthroposophical Art Impulse
Co-Sponsored by the Art Section of the School of Spiritual Science
 Christian Hitsch​, keynote lecturer

Workshop presenters:
   David Adams,  Bert Chase, Patricia Dickson, Carrie Gibbons, Brian Gray, Christopher Guilfoil, Michael Howard,  Van James, Ted Mahle, Patrick Stolfo​

Dear Fellow Artists
There are many things happening in the world of art . As anthroposophists and artists we have a responsibility to explore together how we can hold the core of what Rudolf Steiner brought as the  anthroposopohical artistic initiative and bring it forward to the 21st Century. This event will allow us time to explore together artistically and hold conversations in smaller groups  to see how each of us can play a role in bringing these impulses to life. 

“I have therefore come to believe that the world’s ecological balance depends on more than just our ability to restore balance between civilization’s ravenous appetite for resources and the fragile equilibrium of the earth’s environment...In the end, we must restore a balance within ourselves…”  Al Gore, Earth in the Balance, 1992
As the pace of global civilization only accelerates, our human capacity to maintain inner and outer balance, harmony and wholeness seems ever harder to achieve. Already in 1907, Rudolf Steiner introduced practical examples of a new direction in the visual arts that serve the contemporary human need to develop our capacity to live in balance with all people and the living earth as a whole.
With reference to Rudolf Steiner’s phrase, “Mercury standing in the balance,” Christian Hitsch will describe Steiner’s own artistic accomplishments as the basis for elaborating Steiner’s vision for ways the arts can serve the spiritual needs of our time.
For it is humanity’s mission on earth to transform the planet artistically."  Rudolf Steiner, The Royal Art in a New Form, January 2, 1906
 

Christian Hitsch, Master artist, craftsman and architect, adept in many mediums; his masterworks are inspired by his deep connection to anthroposophy; co-founder of the school for Goethean Studies in Anthroposophy, Sculpture, and Pedagogy in Vienna; among his outstanding achievements are 16 years as leader of the Art Section for the School of Spiritual Science and the task to redesign and renovate the main hall of the Goetheanum according to the indications of Rudolf Steiner. Currently on staff at GMBH Architects, Switzerland.

Time: Friday,
​ August 1​
 7pm–8:45pm; Opening Session; Saturday, 
​ August 2nd​
8:30am–9pm; Sunday, 
​August 3rd ​
8:30am–12:30pm


.
Registration 

For more information: conferenceregistration@steinercollege.edu  or (916)  864-4815
Please note:
4:00pm Friday, August 1, Class Lesson #5 for Members of the School of Spiritual Science. Blue Cards required.
7:00pm Sunday, August 3, presentation by Christian Hitsch on the Genesis and Task of the Art Section for any Section Member of the School for Spiritual Science. No Blue Cards required.


Workshops: 2:30–3:45pm and 4:00–5:30pm
1) An Experience with Social Sculpture  
Working with this relatively new approach to a "social art," we will engage in a number of artistic, aesthetic, and social exercises including practices to enhance perception, gather or transform substances, and consider movement and archetypal forces, ideally leading to performance of an improvised group social-sculpture art work.
David Adams, PhD, taught art history at Sierra College since 1996 ; former Waldorf teacher; occasional performance artist; edits and writes for the Art Section Newsletter; Secretary/Treasurer of the Council of the Art Section in North America.
Carrie Gibbons, MA, Social Sculpture, Oxford Brookes University, U.K.; currently a doctoral candidate in Transpersonal Psychology, Sophia University, CA; researcher in social sculpture; and faculty member of the Social Therapy Program, Camphill California.
  
2) Looking Forward, Looking Back: An Exploration of the Architrave of the 1St Goetheanum
A collaborative working on the conference theme of “Balance”  through entering into the world of formative forces in modeling the movements of the architrave and utilizing imaginative exercises.
Bert Chase, MA, Architect, joined the Emerson College Architect’s Group in 1973;  teacher,  lecturer,  and writer on Rudolf Steiner’s impulse for the arts; architect practice based in Vancouver, Canada.
Patricia Dickson, MA, Art and Psychology, Director of Visual Arts, RSC; two decades as an arts faculty member with an emphasis on clay sculpture.

3) Drawing Rudolf Steiner’s Planetary Seals
As one draws the planetary seals it is possible to experience artistic metamorphosis as the creative deeds of Spiritual Beings. Transforming the Mars Seal into the Mercury and Jupiter Seals are explored as seeds of future impulses for anthroposophical art.
Brian Gray, BArch and MLArch, Director of Foundation Program in Anthroposophy, RSC, faculty member for 33 years; research includes sacred architecture, star wisdom, music, cosmic evolution, spiritual streams, and esoteric Christianity; author, Discovering the Zodiac in the Raphael Madonna Series.

4) The So-Called Slanted Drawing Technique
An exploration of the artist’s creative freedom in relationship to the fullness of qualities found within light and dark drawing. The intention is to focus upon the intensification of one's own activity of drawing.
Christopher Guilfoil , Waldorf class teacher, high school teacher, art teacher, adult educator, mentor and public speaker; international teacher and mentor in Waldorf schools and teacher training programs, especially in China, Taiwan and Malaysia, and conducts seminars and visual arts workshops.

5) An Introduction to Light Art
A consideration of what Rudolf Steiner had to say about light as an artistic medium. There will be a demonstration of how light can be used to make Light Music, as well as the opportunity for participants to try it out for themselves.
Michael Howard,  sculptor,  painter and  artistic researcher; explores themes such as creating visible speech and visible music, most recently with the medium of light to create Light Music;  editor, Art as Spiritual Activity, and author, Educating the Will; currently researching a new book with the working title, In Metamorphosis, on the role art has played in shaping human consciousness. 

6)  Polarity, Metamorphosis, and Balance: Color Dynamics in the Goetheanum Cupola Paintings
The 1st and 2nd Goetheanum ceiling paintings exhibit a unique presentation in color contrasts, mediations, and harmonies that we will explore by way of observation, conversation, and artistic practice with pastels.
Van James, graduate San Francisco Art Institute, Emerson College, and Goetheanum Wagner School of Painting; Honolulu Waldorf High School art teacher; editor, Pacifica Journal; chairman, Anthroposophical Society, Hawai’i;  award winning author, including Spirit and Art and The Secret Language of Form, and most recently,  Drawing with Hand, Head and Heart: Learning the Natural Way to Draw.

7) Pastel Drawing: The Four Elements
Rudolf Steiner suggested a threefold path for the color artist: color, form and motif–working “out of the color” and then as the colors deepen and overlap,  form flows out, and culminates in the motif. We will apply these principles with pastels in a dynamic scene of  Earth, Water, Air and Fire.
Ted Mahle, BS, Art Education; graduate Beppe Assenza Painting School at the Goetheanum; 3 years painting therapist, Sonnhalde Schulheim Curative Home; Director of the Arts Program at the Rudolf Steiner College for 20 years; currently teaching painting and drawing at Rudolf Steiner College.

8)  From Intention, to Gesture, to Form
An exploration, in clay sculpture, of how an invisible, essential motif or quality can become the impetus for movement, and brought to rest again in tangible expression by the artist. Inspired by Rudolf Steiner’s Representative of Man, we will practice the aesthetic intensification of what lies enchanted within the natural human form.  
Patrick Stolfo, BFA, graduate sculpture training at Emerson College under A. John Wilkes, and MA in Waldorf Ed.;  Waldorf School educator since 1978 in sculptural arts, art history, and architecture; and currently faculty member at Alkion Center, Hawthorne Valley and at Antioch University and the Center for Anthroposophy.

Please note:
4:00pm Friday, August 1, Class Lesson #5 for Members of the School of Spiritual Science. Blue Cards required.
7:00pm Sunday, August 3, presentation by Christian Hitsch on the Genesis and Task of the Art Section for any Section Member of the School for Spiritual Science. No Blue Cards required.

Saturday, March 15, 2014

Upcoming Art Lectures and Workshops in New Zealand with Van James

The Dynamic Language
of Linear Design:
Meander, Koru, Knot, and Braid


A Drawing Workshop at Taruna College
Friday 4th April (7-9.00pm)
Saturday 5th April (9.00am – 5.00pm)

Linear designs such as meanders, korus, knots and braids have held deep significance since prehistoric times.  Their rhythmic forms and patterns indicate a journey of transformation and empowerment for the one who successfully masters the secret language of their design.  Labyrinths, mazes, and encircling mandalas, all are iconography of artistic and spiritual power, used for concentration, visualization, meditation and the journey of self-realization.  In this workshop we will practice simple knot and meander form drawings as a basis for creating more complex interwoven patterns and designs. In this way we will explore the wonderous visual language of dynamic linear form drawing. No drawing experience necessary.

Van James, an experienced international art educator based at the Honolulu Waldorf School in Hawaii, will lead this workshop. He is the author of several books on art including Drawing with Hand, Head and Heart.

This is a course for non-artists as well as those who have artistic experience. No prior skills are needed.

For booking ring: 06 8777174
                                                    Course Fee: $120+GST
                                                   33 Te Mata Peak Road


Havelock North 4157
Programme:

Friday 4th April

7.00-9.00 pm

Introductory Talk
with practical exercises


Saturday 5th April

9.00-10.30 am

Workshop 1

Morning Tea

11.00-12.30 am

Workshop 2

                                                                                            Lunch
(Bring your own)


1.30-3.00 pm

Workshop 3

Afternoon Tea

3.30-5.00 pm

Workshop 4




Drawing materials: crayons, pastels and paper will be provided



The Origins and Mysteries of Art



Lecture and Workshop
with Van James
11th and 12th April
Friday 7.30 pm, Saturday 1pm-5pm

How and why did people first make pictorial representations? What can we learn about ourselves as contemporary individuals from prehistoric and even ancient Egyptian art? The beginnings of art are a mystery that lies at the very foundation of who we are as human beings and the capacities, such as memory and mental picturing, that we take for granted. The lecture will survey Palaeolithic to ancient Egyptian art while the workshop will explore the art of these periods through pastel drawing.
 
Van James is a Hawai’i based artist, author and teacher with a degree in painting and drawing from the San Francisco Art Institute, USA, and diplomas from Emerson College in England, and the Goetheanum Painting School in Switzerland.  He has been an art instructor at the Honolulu Waldorf School for 30 years and is a guest instructor at Taruna College in New Zealand, and Rudolf Steiner College in California. He is chairman of the Anthroposophical Society in Hawai’i and editor of Pacifica Journal. He is also the author of several books on art and culture including Spirit and Art and The Secret Language of Form. His latest book is Drawing with Hand, Head and Heart.

Rudolf Steiner House, 104 Michaels Ave, Ellerslie
Lecture $20, Saturday workshop $50, $60 for both
As places are limited please call Bernadette on 3611368 to register

Mandala
The Art of Centering the Self

Lecture and Workshop
with Van James
28th and 29th March
Friday 7.30 pm, Saturday 9am- 1pm

Mandalas are an artistic expression in both East and West, used for visualization, meditation and initiation. The mandala creates an enclosed sacred space, a cosmogram, which represents the Self within the universe. Hildegard von Bingen, Rudolf Steiner, Carl Jung, and the fourteenth Dalai Lama, all created mandalas and worked with their power to fashion a center of energy within the great, universal periphery.  Carl Jung said of mandalas: "In accord with the Eastern conception, the mandala symbol is not only a means of expression, but works an effect.  It reacts upon its maker. Very ancient magical effects lie hidden in this symbol…the magic of which has been preserved in countless folk customs." The evening lecture will consider the worldwide phenomena of historic mandalas and the workshop will explore the practical-artistic aspects of this sacred form, culminating in the creation of our own individual mandala. The lecture and workshop may be attended separately, but both together are recommended. No artistic experience is necessary. All materials are included.
 
Van James is a Hawai’i based artist, author and teacher with a degree in painting and drawing from the San Francisco Art Institute, USA, and diplomas from Emerson College in England, and the Goetheanum Painting School in Switzerland.  He has been an art instructor at the Honolulu Waldorf School for 30 years and is a guest teacher at Taruna College in New Zealand, and Rudolf Steiner College in California. He is chairman of the Anthroposophical Society in Hawai’i and editor of Pacifica Journal. He is also the author of several books on art and culture including Spirit and Art and The Secret Language of Form. His latest book is Drawing with Hand, Head and Heart.

Rudolf Steiner House, 104 Michaels Ave, Ellerslie
Lecture $20, Saturday workshop $50, $60 for both
As places are limited please call Bernadette on 3611368 to register



Enlivening Our Work through the Arts

An evening with VAN JAMES

Wednesday 2nd April, 2014

Michael Park Steiner School, Auckland


In our time when technology increasingly pervades the home and school it is important to be aware of and to help foster the healthy human capacities that children will need for their challenging future.
This hands-on lecture-demonstration is for parents, care givers, teachers, and those interested in how learning is supported through the development of creative faculties by means of the arts.
We will explore the importance of children’s drawings and how they lay the groundwork for skills and faculties such as visual thinking, cognitive feeling (emotional intelligence), and moral imagination. We will focus on basic artistic principles that enhance the learning experience in the early classes and provide a basis for confident and skillful work in the upper school.

Van James is a Hawai’i based artist, author and educator; a graduate of the San Francisco Art Institute, Emerson College in England, and the Goetheanum School of Painting in Switzerland. He teaches art at the Honolulu Waldorf High School and is a regular guest instructor at Taruna College in New Zealand, Rudolf Steiner College in California, and numerous schools and trainings in Asia. He is editor of Pacifica Journal and chairman of the Anthroposophical Society in Hawai’i, as well as the author of several books on art and culture including Drawing with Hand, Head and Heart: Learning the Natural Way to Draw.

THE ROLE OF ART
IN EDUCATION

An EVENING WITH VAN JAMES

Wednesday 9th April, 7.30 p.m.

Titirangi Rudolf Steiner School-- Eurythmy Hall

~Koha requested~

                
                    

In our time when technology increasingly pervades the home and school it is important to be aware of and to help foster the healthy human capacities that children will need for their challenging future.

This hands-on lecture-demonstration is for parents, educators and those interested in how learning is supported through the development of creative faculties.

We will explore the importance of children’s drawings and how they lay the groundwork for skills and faculties such as visual thinking, cognitive feeling (emotional intelligence), and moral imagination. We will focus on basic artistic principles that enhance the learning experience in the early classes and provide a basis for confident and skillful work in the upper school.


Van James is a Hawai’i based artist, author and educator; a graduate of the San Francisco Art Institute, Emerson College in England, and the Goetheanum School of Painting in Switzerland. He teaches art at the Honolulu Waldorf High School and is a regular guest instructor at Taruna College in New Zealand, Rudolf Steiner College in California, and numerous schools and trainings in Asia. He is editor of Pacifica Journal and chairman of the Anthroposophical Society in Hawai’i, as well as the author of several books on art and culture including Drawing with Hand, Head and Heart: Learning the Natural Way to Draw.

Wednesday, February 26, 2014

Upcoming Conference at the Goetheanum

Ascension Conference

Finding Creative Will between Life and Death
Thursday,  May 29th until Sunday, Jun 1st , 2014
The Visual Art Section warmly invites you to our Ascension Conference. For the last few years we have focussed our attention on the Will. This year we will concern ourselves with questions related to the forces of life and death in the Will. What is our connection to the phases of life and death, and how does that affect our activity and work as artists? Do we have sovereign Will in our artistic activity? In what way are we led by the laws of the world and by the rules of life?
With these questions in mind we want to connect with our contemporaries. How can we connect with young artists and enter into a healthy exchange? What can we experience and learn from them, and what does the anthroposophical art impulse have to offer the present art scene? What is our relationship with new media like performance art, video, photo, film and other emerging digital technologies?
To introduce such research questions, we have invited a number of capable philosophers, doctors, art teachers and art students. Most especially, we wish to invite young artists and interested people to work with us. Therefore we ask every ‘older’ participant (over 40 years old) to invite and bring along a younger colleague (under 40) artists, art students, and those interested in art. Every ‘older’ colleague is asked to support his young colleague where possible so that no one is prevented from attending the conference because of financial reasons. Where this is not possible the Visual Art Section will try to help as well. So no one is prevented from coming for lack of finances, we urge everyone to donate what they can towards helping others.
More information in the programm.

Wednesday, February 12, 2014

Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Workshop with Van James in Honolulu

The Role of Art in Education:
Practical Examples and Current Research
A half-day drawing workshop with Van James














Saturday, January 18, 2014  
9 a.m. - 1 p.m., Niu Campus Hall
Honolulu Waldorf School, 350 Ulua Street, Niu Valley

This hands-on workshop is for parents, educators and those interested in how the child learns by means of his/her creative faculties. At a time when technology increasingly pervades education it is important to be aware of what capacities children need to develop. In this workshop we will do children’s drawing exercises that lay the groundwork for skills and faculties such as visual thinking, cognitive feeling (emotional intelligence), and moral imagination. We will focus on basic artistic principles that enhance the learning experience in grades 1 through 3 and the transition stage that occurs for the 9-10 year old. No drawing experience is necessary.

Van James is a Hawai’i based artist, author and educator; a graduate of the San Francisco Art Institute, Emerson College in England, and the Goetheanum School of Painting in Switzerland.  He teaches art at the Honolulu Waldorf High School and is a regular guest instructor at Taruna College in New Zealand, Rudolf Steiner College in California, and numerous schools in Asia. He is editor of Pacifica Journal, and chairman of the Anthroposophical Society in Hawai’i, as well as the author of several books on art and culture including Drawing with Hand, Head and Heart: Learning the Natural Way to Draw. He is known locally for his award winning series of Ancient Sites guidebooks.

This workshop is sponsored by Jeff White Associates—
A suggested donation of $30 will benefit the Annual General Fund of the Honolulu Waldorf School.
Space is limited. RSVP-- please call 377-5471 to reserve your place.