Events
Civil Disobedience Partners with Michael Christie of the Phoenix Symphony to Chart New Territory.
Tuesday, September 22nd, 2009Michael Christie, Music Director and Conductor of the Phoenix Symphony, will participate in a Civil Disobedience seminar entitled “Concerts in the Age of Interactivity.” Working with hip hop artists Fabel and Phonte, ASU Professors Gary Hill and Richard Mook, and advanced ASU graduate students, Maestro Christie will participate in the development of new institutionalized concert formats that facilitate audience participation and engagement. A report on the group’s findings will be released in Spring of 2010.
KRS-One Participates in Civil Disobedience Panel
Tuesday, November 4th, 2008Renowned rap artist and hip hop organizer KRS-One will headline a panel discussion of the Status of Graffiti and Hip Hop in Phoenix on Saturday, November 8 from 12:30-2 in Evelyn Smith Music Theatre on the ASU Tempe Campus. Admission is free.
If you can’t make it in person, you may view the event live via a webex meeting. To do this, go to https://eval.webex.com/eval/j.php?ED=110405487&UID=1073734337
Enter your name and email address, and join the meeting. You may chat live with other viewers, see, and hear the panel in real-time. Students enrolled in MUS 354 may earn extra credit by posting questions for the panel on our discussion board on the course website: herbergeronline.asu.edu/hiphop. (questions submitted to the meeting chat room will not earn extra credit points).
This event is made possible by the ASU Herberger College of the Arts, the School of Music, and Future Arts Research.
As a preview, here’s KRS-One and Marley Marl’s video “Hip Hop Lives.”
Graffiti Project
Sunday, October 26th, 2008Graffiti Project: Civil Disobedience
Graffiti art has been celebrated and exhibited in area museums but it never has been explored in the place it exists. ASU Herberger College of the Arts students and faculty are exploring this grass-roots community arts activism in the urban landscape.
The Civil Disobedience project allows us to challenge the traditional place of art and education in American society and to create new ways art and education can be experienced.
Much of Phoenix, Ariz. is experiencing profound demographic and physical transformation, and our alleys or hidden passageways often are vibrant corridors of exchange and interaction, intersecting diverse urban populations.
We bring graffiti art past the museum walls and further into the community Nov. 7, 2008. Join us as national and local graffiti writers transform the alley located on the north side of McDowell Road between 18th and 19th Streets in downtown Phoenix.
This event is made possible by the ASU Herberger College of the Arts and our co-sponsors: Future Arts Research, Armstrong-Prior, Arizona Flower Shop, Imperial Tile Company, Medina’s Automotive, and Mercado Latino Y Carniceria.
