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                    <text>In her project "Ode to Home" - part of PPL's Adaptive Practices series in Spring 2020 - Davis presented two April workshops. This recording is of the first workshop which took place on Zoom, the second was not recorded by request of the artist. Davis' artististic statement noted, "Sometimes one’s relationship to home can be complicated. An Ode to Home explores my relationship to my hometown and how my family's history is reflected in its natural and constructed landscapes. This work is a collection of 42 old and new photographs where narrative emerges through imagery, juxtaposition, and sequencing. If I develop a creative block, one of my strategies for moving forward is to revisit another project. An Ode to Home emerged out of a similar space, while reconsidering the in-between spaces that connect thoughts, projects, and relationships. In this two-part workshop, we will discuss the background and creative process of An Ode to Home and create a space to construct and share your own ode. What is your relationship to home and what can be gleaned from your existing collection of images to to communicate that story? How can you use the space between one image and the next as a tool to create meaning?" </text>
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                <text>In his project "Hold the Portal Open" - part of PPL's Adaptive Practices series in Spring 2020 - Micah Salkind created a series of audio recordings and published them on Soundcloud. This is a recording of the culiminating event held on Zoom in which participants met together to discuss the works with Salkind. In his artist statement, Salkind noted, "Hold The Portal Open is an experiment in narrative mixing, a technique wherein disco and house DJs use the lyrical content of songs to tell a story that complements affective shifts supported by music. Lyrics augment the ways that key, tempo, energy level, and other musical factors shift the ways we think, feel, and understand a sonic experience over time. Each day for six days I will create a new improvised mix of approximately 45-minutes with a title and a short prompt. Audiences are invited to stream or download each mix from SoundCloud and listen to it on a walk while meditating on the sounds, lyrics, title, and prompt. They can keep their own private notes about the experiences or not, but they are invited to share what they notice publicly as a comment on each mix or in a culminating conversation on April 27th.</text>
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                <text>The second of Salkind's daily recordings sent over email to participants of PPL's Adaptive Practices series. The recording was published to Soundcloud where listeners could leave comments on the mix itself. Salkind prompted listeners,"While listening, consider your new patterns; your unexpected and shifting ways of being. Who are you becoming? How will the version of you that emerges from the chrysalis be different from that which went in?"</text>
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            <description>Are you submitting this on behalf of someone else?</description>
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                <text>Providence Public Library </text>
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                  <text>Adaptive Practices: Six Artists Redefine Isolation and Distraction </text>
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                  <text>Adaptive Practices was an interactive project developed at PPL in the spring of 2020 as the pandemic necessitated closing public spaces and prohibited public gatherings. In March, as we considered how PPL might re-imagine our programming to both reflect and work within the perimeters of this new reality, we talked with our cadre of  Creative Fellows: Laura Brown-Lavoie, Becci Davis, Kelly Eriksen, Keri King, Walker Mettling, and Micah Salkind, six artists and creators who had each worked on a long-term, original project within our Special Collections. We thought about how, as artists, their endeavors often encompassed venturing into the unknown, enduring “fallow” periods of reflection and synthesis in which no immediate “product” would result, and working in solitude when research or experimentation was necessary. So we asked them to share their work with us in a way that would allow us to see and maybe even experience how they navigate and negotiate these conditions of uncertainty and unfamiliarity, and the result was this project.&#13;
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            <description>What would you title this item?</description>
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                <text>The fourth of Salkind's daily recordings sent over email to participants of PPL's Adaptive Practices series. The recording was published to Soundcloud where listeners could leave comments on the mix itself. Salkind prompted listeners, "While listening to “Jubilee,” imagine what it would feel like to share the abundance of the world. What would it smell like? What would it taste like? How can you practice finding joy in enough instead of craving more?"</text>
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            <description>Are you submitting this on behalf of someone else?</description>
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                <text>Providence Public Library </text>
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