When daily interaction and face-to-face events ground to a halt thanks to the COVID-19 pandemic, creativity – even in a creative world – was stretched and put to the test. Students and faculty had to shift the way they learned and taught, a change that is particularly felt by theatre education students. Once part of a world where live experience was essential, performances now take place with screens and technology.
But as Gus Weltsek, Assistant Professor of Arts ºÚÂí´ÅÁ¦, puts it, “In this synthetic, technologized universe, a shift is occurring though to where the students and faculty are beginning to own the virtual as an aesthetic, pedagogical and intellectual experience of growth, exploration and true artistic inquiry.”
Cordelia Driussi is an alumna of the Theatre ºÚÂí´ÅÁ¦ program and currently a graduate student at New York University’s Steinhart School in the Drama ºÚÂí´ÅÁ¦ program. She has been helping School of ºÚÂí´ÅÁ¦ students with the creative and production work and says since most of the training as arts and education students, especially in theatre, involves building social skills and improvisation techniques, the isolation of quarantine has separated students from their creative teams, systems of support and avenues to connect with new people.
“The joy of arts classes has always been the brave space we create with our students: the right to ask questions, to make a mistake, to be their honest selves. Normally, we are all in the room together, and students can buy into activities because they are all together in a room without judgement. It’s not so easy to lower our inhibitions and pretend to be goofy animals, cartoon characters, etc., when our family members are nearby trying to focus on virtual work or school,” she said.