BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
PRODID:iCalendar-Ruby
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:
DESCRIPTION:Overview\nThis workshop series accompanies Professor Pamela Kar
 imi’s seminar: Biopolitics of Architecture & Art (ARCH 4408/6408).\n\nThe s
 eries brings together internationally recognized social practice artists wh
 ose work explores how bodies move\, sense\, and negotiate space. Through mo
 vement-based prompts\, collaborative exercises\, and place-responsive pract
 ices\, participants will examine how physical action\, perception\, and soc
 ial norms shape the rhythms of everyday life in the built environment.\n\nE
 ach workshop addresses the entanglement of embodiment and spatial experienc
 e and offers an experiential complement to the seminar’s theoretical framew
 orks. Together\, the sessions invite students to reconsider architecture no
 t only as a material field\, but also as a relational and choreographic ter
 rain formed through ordinary gestures\, encounters\, and modes of collectiv
 e being.\n\nFree and open to the public.\n\nWorkshop Series With Social Pra
 ctice Artists\nWorkshop 1: Tanin Torabi\nAward-winning Tehran-based filmmak
 er and choreographer known for innovative single-take screendance works.\n\
 nTitle: Narratives of Togetherness\nFocus: Embodied knowledges and the re-e
 xperiencing of personal and social movements.\nTime: February 26\, 2026\, 1
 0–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 2: Sarah Kanouse\nInterdisciplinary artist and Northe
 astern University professor exploring the political and ecological dimensio
 ns of landscape.\n\nTitle: Listening With Place\nFocus: How collaborative l
 istening practices can help us experience place as kin rather than as resou
 rce.\nTime: March 5\, 2026\, 10–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 3: Ellen Mueller\nInter
 disciplinary artist and Arts Midwest program director whose work examines t
 he environmental and social impacts of capitalism.\n\nTitle: Embodied Commu
 nity Care\nFocus: How we tend to our communities and shared futures\, espec
 ially when the work is mundane\, repetitive\, or difficult.\nTime: March 12
 \, 2026\, 10–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 4: Gabo Camnitzer\nArtist and Mass College
  of Arts & Design professor investigating childhood\, socialization\, and e
 xperimental forms of learning.\n\nTitle: Individual and Collective Entangle
 ments\nFocus: What is the smallest piece of society\, and what forms of rel
 ation\, labor\, and imagination constitute it?\nTime: March 19\, 2026\, 10–
 11 a.m.
DTSTAMP:20260313T200453Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260226
LOCATION:East Sibley Hall\nRoom 140
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:What Can Bodies Do? Biopolitics and Choreographies of Daily Life Wo
 rkshop Series with Social Practice Artists
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52060617411978
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/what-can-bodies-do-biopolitics-and-cho
 reographies-of-daily-life-workshop-series-with-social-practice-artists
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:
DESCRIPTION:Overview\nThis workshop series accompanies Professor Pamela Kar
 imi’s seminar: Biopolitics of Architecture & Art (ARCH 4408/6408).\n\nThe s
 eries brings together internationally recognized social practice artists wh
 ose work explores how bodies move\, sense\, and negotiate space. Through mo
 vement-based prompts\, collaborative exercises\, and place-responsive pract
 ices\, participants will examine how physical action\, perception\, and soc
 ial norms shape the rhythms of everyday life in the built environment.\n\nE
 ach workshop addresses the entanglement of embodiment and spatial experienc
 e and offers an experiential complement to the seminar’s theoretical framew
 orks. Together\, the sessions invite students to reconsider architecture no
 t only as a material field\, but also as a relational and choreographic ter
 rain formed through ordinary gestures\, encounters\, and modes of collectiv
 e being.\n\nFree and open to the public.\n\nWorkshop Series With Social Pra
 ctice Artists\nWorkshop 1: Tanin Torabi\nAward-winning Tehran-based filmmak
 er and choreographer known for innovative single-take screendance works.\n\
 nTitle: Narratives of Togetherness\nFocus: Embodied knowledges and the re-e
 xperiencing of personal and social movements.\nTime: February 26\, 2026\, 1
 0–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 2: Sarah Kanouse\nInterdisciplinary artist and Northe
 astern University professor exploring the political and ecological dimensio
 ns of landscape.\n\nTitle: Listening With Place\nFocus: How collaborative l
 istening practices can help us experience place as kin rather than as resou
 rce.\nTime: March 5\, 2026\, 10–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 3: Ellen Mueller\nInter
 disciplinary artist and Arts Midwest program director whose work examines t
 he environmental and social impacts of capitalism.\n\nTitle: Embodied Commu
 nity Care\nFocus: How we tend to our communities and shared futures\, espec
 ially when the work is mundane\, repetitive\, or difficult.\nTime: March 12
 \, 2026\, 10–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 4: Gabo Camnitzer\nArtist and Mass College
  of Arts & Design professor investigating childhood\, socialization\, and e
 xperimental forms of learning.\n\nTitle: Individual and Collective Entangle
 ments\nFocus: What is the smallest piece of society\, and what forms of rel
 ation\, labor\, and imagination constitute it?\nTime: March 19\, 2026\, 10–
 11 a.m.
DTSTAMP:20260313T200453Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260227
LOCATION:East Sibley Hall\nRoom 140
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:What Can Bodies Do? Biopolitics and Choreographies of Daily Life Wo
 rkshop Series with Social Practice Artists
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52060617424269
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/what-can-bodies-do-biopolitics-and-cho
 reographies-of-daily-life-workshop-series-with-social-practice-artists
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:
DESCRIPTION:Overview\nThis workshop series accompanies Professor Pamela Kar
 imi’s seminar: Biopolitics of Architecture & Art (ARCH 4408/6408).\n\nThe s
 eries brings together internationally recognized social practice artists wh
 ose work explores how bodies move\, sense\, and negotiate space. Through mo
 vement-based prompts\, collaborative exercises\, and place-responsive pract
 ices\, participants will examine how physical action\, perception\, and soc
 ial norms shape the rhythms of everyday life in the built environment.\n\nE
 ach workshop addresses the entanglement of embodiment and spatial experienc
 e and offers an experiential complement to the seminar’s theoretical framew
 orks. Together\, the sessions invite students to reconsider architecture no
 t only as a material field\, but also as a relational and choreographic ter
 rain formed through ordinary gestures\, encounters\, and modes of collectiv
 e being.\n\nFree and open to the public.\n\nWorkshop Series With Social Pra
 ctice Artists\nWorkshop 1: Tanin Torabi\nAward-winning Tehran-based filmmak
 er and choreographer known for innovative single-take screendance works.\n\
 nTitle: Narratives of Togetherness\nFocus: Embodied knowledges and the re-e
 xperiencing of personal and social movements.\nTime: February 26\, 2026\, 1
 0–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 2: Sarah Kanouse\nInterdisciplinary artist and Northe
 astern University professor exploring the political and ecological dimensio
 ns of landscape.\n\nTitle: Listening With Place\nFocus: How collaborative l
 istening practices can help us experience place as kin rather than as resou
 rce.\nTime: March 5\, 2026\, 10–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 3: Ellen Mueller\nInter
 disciplinary artist and Arts Midwest program director whose work examines t
 he environmental and social impacts of capitalism.\n\nTitle: Embodied Commu
 nity Care\nFocus: How we tend to our communities and shared futures\, espec
 ially when the work is mundane\, repetitive\, or difficult.\nTime: March 12
 \, 2026\, 10–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 4: Gabo Camnitzer\nArtist and Mass College
  of Arts & Design professor investigating childhood\, socialization\, and e
 xperimental forms of learning.\n\nTitle: Individual and Collective Entangle
 ments\nFocus: What is the smallest piece of society\, and what forms of rel
 ation\, labor\, and imagination constitute it?\nTime: March 19\, 2026\, 10–
 11 a.m.
DTSTAMP:20260313T200453Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260228
LOCATION:East Sibley Hall\nRoom 140
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:What Can Bodies Do? Biopolitics and Choreographies of Daily Life Wo
 rkshop Series with Social Practice Artists
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52060617433486
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/what-can-bodies-do-biopolitics-and-cho
 reographies-of-daily-life-workshop-series-with-social-practice-artists
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:
DESCRIPTION:Overview\nThis workshop series accompanies Professor Pamela Kar
 imi’s seminar: Biopolitics of Architecture & Art (ARCH 4408/6408).\n\nThe s
 eries brings together internationally recognized social practice artists wh
 ose work explores how bodies move\, sense\, and negotiate space. Through mo
 vement-based prompts\, collaborative exercises\, and place-responsive pract
 ices\, participants will examine how physical action\, perception\, and soc
 ial norms shape the rhythms of everyday life in the built environment.\n\nE
 ach workshop addresses the entanglement of embodiment and spatial experienc
 e and offers an experiential complement to the seminar’s theoretical framew
 orks. Together\, the sessions invite students to reconsider architecture no
 t only as a material field\, but also as a relational and choreographic ter
 rain formed through ordinary gestures\, encounters\, and modes of collectiv
 e being.\n\nFree and open to the public.\n\nWorkshop Series With Social Pra
 ctice Artists\nWorkshop 1: Tanin Torabi\nAward-winning Tehran-based filmmak
 er and choreographer known for innovative single-take screendance works.\n\
 nTitle: Narratives of Togetherness\nFocus: Embodied knowledges and the re-e
 xperiencing of personal and social movements.\nTime: February 26\, 2026\, 1
 0–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 2: Sarah Kanouse\nInterdisciplinary artist and Northe
 astern University professor exploring the political and ecological dimensio
 ns of landscape.\n\nTitle: Listening With Place\nFocus: How collaborative l
 istening practices can help us experience place as kin rather than as resou
 rce.\nTime: March 5\, 2026\, 10–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 3: Ellen Mueller\nInter
 disciplinary artist and Arts Midwest program director whose work examines t
 he environmental and social impacts of capitalism.\n\nTitle: Embodied Commu
 nity Care\nFocus: How we tend to our communities and shared futures\, espec
 ially when the work is mundane\, repetitive\, or difficult.\nTime: March 12
 \, 2026\, 10–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 4: Gabo Camnitzer\nArtist and Mass College
  of Arts & Design professor investigating childhood\, socialization\, and e
 xperimental forms of learning.\n\nTitle: Individual and Collective Entangle
 ments\nFocus: What is the smallest piece of society\, and what forms of rel
 ation\, labor\, and imagination constitute it?\nTime: March 19\, 2026\, 10–
 11 a.m.
DTSTAMP:20260313T200453Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260301
LOCATION:East Sibley Hall\nRoom 140
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:What Can Bodies Do? Biopolitics and Choreographies of Daily Life Wo
 rkshop Series with Social Practice Artists
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52060617444751
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/what-can-bodies-do-biopolitics-and-cho
 reographies-of-daily-life-workshop-series-with-social-practice-artists
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:
DESCRIPTION:Overview\nThis workshop series accompanies Professor Pamela Kar
 imi’s seminar: Biopolitics of Architecture & Art (ARCH 4408/6408).\n\nThe s
 eries brings together internationally recognized social practice artists wh
 ose work explores how bodies move\, sense\, and negotiate space. Through mo
 vement-based prompts\, collaborative exercises\, and place-responsive pract
 ices\, participants will examine how physical action\, perception\, and soc
 ial norms shape the rhythms of everyday life in the built environment.\n\nE
 ach workshop addresses the entanglement of embodiment and spatial experienc
 e and offers an experiential complement to the seminar’s theoretical framew
 orks. Together\, the sessions invite students to reconsider architecture no
 t only as a material field\, but also as a relational and choreographic ter
 rain formed through ordinary gestures\, encounters\, and modes of collectiv
 e being.\n\nFree and open to the public.\n\nWorkshop Series With Social Pra
 ctice Artists\nWorkshop 1: Tanin Torabi\nAward-winning Tehran-based filmmak
 er and choreographer known for innovative single-take screendance works.\n\
 nTitle: Narratives of Togetherness\nFocus: Embodied knowledges and the re-e
 xperiencing of personal and social movements.\nTime: February 26\, 2026\, 1
 0–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 2: Sarah Kanouse\nInterdisciplinary artist and Northe
 astern University professor exploring the political and ecological dimensio
 ns of landscape.\n\nTitle: Listening With Place\nFocus: How collaborative l
 istening practices can help us experience place as kin rather than as resou
 rce.\nTime: March 5\, 2026\, 10–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 3: Ellen Mueller\nInter
 disciplinary artist and Arts Midwest program director whose work examines t
 he environmental and social impacts of capitalism.\n\nTitle: Embodied Commu
 nity Care\nFocus: How we tend to our communities and shared futures\, espec
 ially when the work is mundane\, repetitive\, or difficult.\nTime: March 12
 \, 2026\, 10–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 4: Gabo Camnitzer\nArtist and Mass College
  of Arts & Design professor investigating childhood\, socialization\, and e
 xperimental forms of learning.\n\nTitle: Individual and Collective Entangle
 ments\nFocus: What is the smallest piece of society\, and what forms of rel
 ation\, labor\, and imagination constitute it?\nTime: March 19\, 2026\, 10–
 11 a.m.
DTSTAMP:20260313T200453Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260302
LOCATION:East Sibley Hall\nRoom 140
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:What Can Bodies Do? Biopolitics and Choreographies of Daily Life Wo
 rkshop Series with Social Practice Artists
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52060617457040
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/what-can-bodies-do-biopolitics-and-cho
 reographies-of-daily-life-workshop-series-with-social-practice-artists
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:
DESCRIPTION:Overview\nThis workshop series accompanies Professor Pamela Kar
 imi’s seminar: Biopolitics of Architecture & Art (ARCH 4408/6408).\n\nThe s
 eries brings together internationally recognized social practice artists wh
 ose work explores how bodies move\, sense\, and negotiate space. Through mo
 vement-based prompts\, collaborative exercises\, and place-responsive pract
 ices\, participants will examine how physical action\, perception\, and soc
 ial norms shape the rhythms of everyday life in the built environment.\n\nE
 ach workshop addresses the entanglement of embodiment and spatial experienc
 e and offers an experiential complement to the seminar’s theoretical framew
 orks. Together\, the sessions invite students to reconsider architecture no
 t only as a material field\, but also as a relational and choreographic ter
 rain formed through ordinary gestures\, encounters\, and modes of collectiv
 e being.\n\nFree and open to the public.\n\nWorkshop Series With Social Pra
 ctice Artists\nWorkshop 1: Tanin Torabi\nAward-winning Tehran-based filmmak
 er and choreographer known for innovative single-take screendance works.\n\
 nTitle: Narratives of Togetherness\nFocus: Embodied knowledges and the re-e
 xperiencing of personal and social movements.\nTime: February 26\, 2026\, 1
 0–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 2: Sarah Kanouse\nInterdisciplinary artist and Northe
 astern University professor exploring the political and ecological dimensio
 ns of landscape.\n\nTitle: Listening With Place\nFocus: How collaborative l
 istening practices can help us experience place as kin rather than as resou
 rce.\nTime: March 5\, 2026\, 10–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 3: Ellen Mueller\nInter
 disciplinary artist and Arts Midwest program director whose work examines t
 he environmental and social impacts of capitalism.\n\nTitle: Embodied Commu
 nity Care\nFocus: How we tend to our communities and shared futures\, espec
 ially when the work is mundane\, repetitive\, or difficult.\nTime: March 12
 \, 2026\, 10–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 4: Gabo Camnitzer\nArtist and Mass College
  of Arts & Design professor investigating childhood\, socialization\, and e
 xperimental forms of learning.\n\nTitle: Individual and Collective Entangle
 ments\nFocus: What is the smallest piece of society\, and what forms of rel
 ation\, labor\, and imagination constitute it?\nTime: March 19\, 2026\, 10–
 11 a.m.
DTSTAMP:20260313T200453Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260303
LOCATION:East Sibley Hall\nRoom 140
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:What Can Bodies Do? Biopolitics and Choreographies of Daily Life Wo
 rkshop Series with Social Practice Artists
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52060617472401
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/what-can-bodies-do-biopolitics-and-cho
 reographies-of-daily-life-workshop-series-with-social-practice-artists
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:
DESCRIPTION:Overview\nThis workshop series accompanies Professor Pamela Kar
 imi’s seminar: Biopolitics of Architecture & Art (ARCH 4408/6408).\n\nThe s
 eries brings together internationally recognized social practice artists wh
 ose work explores how bodies move\, sense\, and negotiate space. Through mo
 vement-based prompts\, collaborative exercises\, and place-responsive pract
 ices\, participants will examine how physical action\, perception\, and soc
 ial norms shape the rhythms of everyday life in the built environment.\n\nE
 ach workshop addresses the entanglement of embodiment and spatial experienc
 e and offers an experiential complement to the seminar’s theoretical framew
 orks. Together\, the sessions invite students to reconsider architecture no
 t only as a material field\, but also as a relational and choreographic ter
 rain formed through ordinary gestures\, encounters\, and modes of collectiv
 e being.\n\nFree and open to the public.\n\nWorkshop Series With Social Pra
 ctice Artists\nWorkshop 1: Tanin Torabi\nAward-winning Tehran-based filmmak
 er and choreographer known for innovative single-take screendance works.\n\
 nTitle: Narratives of Togetherness\nFocus: Embodied knowledges and the re-e
 xperiencing of personal and social movements.\nTime: February 26\, 2026\, 1
 0–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 2: Sarah Kanouse\nInterdisciplinary artist and Northe
 astern University professor exploring the political and ecological dimensio
 ns of landscape.\n\nTitle: Listening With Place\nFocus: How collaborative l
 istening practices can help us experience place as kin rather than as resou
 rce.\nTime: March 5\, 2026\, 10–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 3: Ellen Mueller\nInter
 disciplinary artist and Arts Midwest program director whose work examines t
 he environmental and social impacts of capitalism.\n\nTitle: Embodied Commu
 nity Care\nFocus: How we tend to our communities and shared futures\, espec
 ially when the work is mundane\, repetitive\, or difficult.\nTime: March 12
 \, 2026\, 10–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 4: Gabo Camnitzer\nArtist and Mass College
  of Arts & Design professor investigating childhood\, socialization\, and e
 xperimental forms of learning.\n\nTitle: Individual and Collective Entangle
 ments\nFocus: What is the smallest piece of society\, and what forms of rel
 ation\, labor\, and imagination constitute it?\nTime: March 19\, 2026\, 10–
 11 a.m.
DTSTAMP:20260313T200453Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260304
LOCATION:East Sibley Hall\nRoom 140
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:What Can Bodies Do? Biopolitics and Choreographies of Daily Life Wo
 rkshop Series with Social Practice Artists
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52060617486738
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/what-can-bodies-do-biopolitics-and-cho
 reographies-of-daily-life-workshop-series-with-social-practice-artists
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:
DESCRIPTION:Overview\nThis workshop series accompanies Professor Pamela Kar
 imi’s seminar: Biopolitics of Architecture & Art (ARCH 4408/6408).\n\nThe s
 eries brings together internationally recognized social practice artists wh
 ose work explores how bodies move\, sense\, and negotiate space. Through mo
 vement-based prompts\, collaborative exercises\, and place-responsive pract
 ices\, participants will examine how physical action\, perception\, and soc
 ial norms shape the rhythms of everyday life in the built environment.\n\nE
 ach workshop addresses the entanglement of embodiment and spatial experienc
 e and offers an experiential complement to the seminar’s theoretical framew
 orks. Together\, the sessions invite students to reconsider architecture no
 t only as a material field\, but also as a relational and choreographic ter
 rain formed through ordinary gestures\, encounters\, and modes of collectiv
 e being.\n\nFree and open to the public.\n\nWorkshop Series With Social Pra
 ctice Artists\nWorkshop 1: Tanin Torabi\nAward-winning Tehran-based filmmak
 er and choreographer known for innovative single-take screendance works.\n\
 nTitle: Narratives of Togetherness\nFocus: Embodied knowledges and the re-e
 xperiencing of personal and social movements.\nTime: February 26\, 2026\, 1
 0–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 2: Sarah Kanouse\nInterdisciplinary artist and Northe
 astern University professor exploring the political and ecological dimensio
 ns of landscape.\n\nTitle: Listening With Place\nFocus: How collaborative l
 istening practices can help us experience place as kin rather than as resou
 rce.\nTime: March 5\, 2026\, 10–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 3: Ellen Mueller\nInter
 disciplinary artist and Arts Midwest program director whose work examines t
 he environmental and social impacts of capitalism.\n\nTitle: Embodied Commu
 nity Care\nFocus: How we tend to our communities and shared futures\, espec
 ially when the work is mundane\, repetitive\, or difficult.\nTime: March 12
 \, 2026\, 10–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 4: Gabo Camnitzer\nArtist and Mass College
  of Arts & Design professor investigating childhood\, socialization\, and e
 xperimental forms of learning.\n\nTitle: Individual and Collective Entangle
 ments\nFocus: What is the smallest piece of society\, and what forms of rel
 ation\, labor\, and imagination constitute it?\nTime: March 19\, 2026\, 10–
 11 a.m.
DTSTAMP:20260313T200453Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260305
LOCATION:East Sibley Hall\nRoom 140
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:What Can Bodies Do? Biopolitics and Choreographies of Daily Life Wo
 rkshop Series with Social Practice Artists
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52060617496979
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/what-can-bodies-do-biopolitics-and-cho
 reographies-of-daily-life-workshop-series-with-social-practice-artists
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:
DESCRIPTION:Overview\nThis workshop series accompanies Professor Pamela Kar
 imi’s seminar: Biopolitics of Architecture & Art (ARCH 4408/6408).\n\nThe s
 eries brings together internationally recognized social practice artists wh
 ose work explores how bodies move\, sense\, and negotiate space. Through mo
 vement-based prompts\, collaborative exercises\, and place-responsive pract
 ices\, participants will examine how physical action\, perception\, and soc
 ial norms shape the rhythms of everyday life in the built environment.\n\nE
 ach workshop addresses the entanglement of embodiment and spatial experienc
 e and offers an experiential complement to the seminar’s theoretical framew
 orks. Together\, the sessions invite students to reconsider architecture no
 t only as a material field\, but also as a relational and choreographic ter
 rain formed through ordinary gestures\, encounters\, and modes of collectiv
 e being.\n\nFree and open to the public.\n\nWorkshop Series With Social Pra
 ctice Artists\nWorkshop 1: Tanin Torabi\nAward-winning Tehran-based filmmak
 er and choreographer known for innovative single-take screendance works.\n\
 nTitle: Narratives of Togetherness\nFocus: Embodied knowledges and the re-e
 xperiencing of personal and social movements.\nTime: February 26\, 2026\, 1
 0–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 2: Sarah Kanouse\nInterdisciplinary artist and Northe
 astern University professor exploring the political and ecological dimensio
 ns of landscape.\n\nTitle: Listening With Place\nFocus: How collaborative l
 istening practices can help us experience place as kin rather than as resou
 rce.\nTime: March 5\, 2026\, 10–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 3: Ellen Mueller\nInter
 disciplinary artist and Arts Midwest program director whose work examines t
 he environmental and social impacts of capitalism.\n\nTitle: Embodied Commu
 nity Care\nFocus: How we tend to our communities and shared futures\, espec
 ially when the work is mundane\, repetitive\, or difficult.\nTime: March 12
 \, 2026\, 10–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 4: Gabo Camnitzer\nArtist and Mass College
  of Arts & Design professor investigating childhood\, socialization\, and e
 xperimental forms of learning.\n\nTitle: Individual and Collective Entangle
 ments\nFocus: What is the smallest piece of society\, and what forms of rel
 ation\, labor\, and imagination constitute it?\nTime: March 19\, 2026\, 10–
 11 a.m.
DTSTAMP:20260313T200453Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260306
LOCATION:East Sibley Hall\nRoom 140
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:What Can Bodies Do? Biopolitics and Choreographies of Daily Life Wo
 rkshop Series with Social Practice Artists
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52060617507220
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/what-can-bodies-do-biopolitics-and-cho
 reographies-of-daily-life-workshop-series-with-social-practice-artists
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:
DESCRIPTION:Overview\nThis workshop series accompanies Professor Pamela Kar
 imi’s seminar: Biopolitics of Architecture & Art (ARCH 4408/6408).\n\nThe s
 eries brings together internationally recognized social practice artists wh
 ose work explores how bodies move\, sense\, and negotiate space. Through mo
 vement-based prompts\, collaborative exercises\, and place-responsive pract
 ices\, participants will examine how physical action\, perception\, and soc
 ial norms shape the rhythms of everyday life in the built environment.\n\nE
 ach workshop addresses the entanglement of embodiment and spatial experienc
 e and offers an experiential complement to the seminar’s theoretical framew
 orks. Together\, the sessions invite students to reconsider architecture no
 t only as a material field\, but also as a relational and choreographic ter
 rain formed through ordinary gestures\, encounters\, and modes of collectiv
 e being.\n\nFree and open to the public.\n\nWorkshop Series With Social Pra
 ctice Artists\nWorkshop 1: Tanin Torabi\nAward-winning Tehran-based filmmak
 er and choreographer known for innovative single-take screendance works.\n\
 nTitle: Narratives of Togetherness\nFocus: Embodied knowledges and the re-e
 xperiencing of personal and social movements.\nTime: February 26\, 2026\, 1
 0–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 2: Sarah Kanouse\nInterdisciplinary artist and Northe
 astern University professor exploring the political and ecological dimensio
 ns of landscape.\n\nTitle: Listening With Place\nFocus: How collaborative l
 istening practices can help us experience place as kin rather than as resou
 rce.\nTime: March 5\, 2026\, 10–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 3: Ellen Mueller\nInter
 disciplinary artist and Arts Midwest program director whose work examines t
 he environmental and social impacts of capitalism.\n\nTitle: Embodied Commu
 nity Care\nFocus: How we tend to our communities and shared futures\, espec
 ially when the work is mundane\, repetitive\, or difficult.\nTime: March 12
 \, 2026\, 10–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 4: Gabo Camnitzer\nArtist and Mass College
  of Arts & Design professor investigating childhood\, socialization\, and e
 xperimental forms of learning.\n\nTitle: Individual and Collective Entangle
 ments\nFocus: What is the smallest piece of society\, and what forms of rel
 ation\, labor\, and imagination constitute it?\nTime: March 19\, 2026\, 10–
 11 a.m.
DTSTAMP:20260313T200453Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260307
LOCATION:East Sibley Hall\nRoom 140
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:What Can Bodies Do? Biopolitics and Choreographies of Daily Life Wo
 rkshop Series with Social Practice Artists
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52060617518485
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/what-can-bodies-do-biopolitics-and-cho
 reographies-of-daily-life-workshop-series-with-social-practice-artists
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:
DESCRIPTION:Overview\nThis workshop series accompanies Professor Pamela Kar
 imi’s seminar: Biopolitics of Architecture & Art (ARCH 4408/6408).\n\nThe s
 eries brings together internationally recognized social practice artists wh
 ose work explores how bodies move\, sense\, and negotiate space. Through mo
 vement-based prompts\, collaborative exercises\, and place-responsive pract
 ices\, participants will examine how physical action\, perception\, and soc
 ial norms shape the rhythms of everyday life in the built environment.\n\nE
 ach workshop addresses the entanglement of embodiment and spatial experienc
 e and offers an experiential complement to the seminar’s theoretical framew
 orks. Together\, the sessions invite students to reconsider architecture no
 t only as a material field\, but also as a relational and choreographic ter
 rain formed through ordinary gestures\, encounters\, and modes of collectiv
 e being.\n\nFree and open to the public.\n\nWorkshop Series With Social Pra
 ctice Artists\nWorkshop 1: Tanin Torabi\nAward-winning Tehran-based filmmak
 er and choreographer known for innovative single-take screendance works.\n\
 nTitle: Narratives of Togetherness\nFocus: Embodied knowledges and the re-e
 xperiencing of personal and social movements.\nTime: February 26\, 2026\, 1
 0–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 2: Sarah Kanouse\nInterdisciplinary artist and Northe
 astern University professor exploring the political and ecological dimensio
 ns of landscape.\n\nTitle: Listening With Place\nFocus: How collaborative l
 istening practices can help us experience place as kin rather than as resou
 rce.\nTime: March 5\, 2026\, 10–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 3: Ellen Mueller\nInter
 disciplinary artist and Arts Midwest program director whose work examines t
 he environmental and social impacts of capitalism.\n\nTitle: Embodied Commu
 nity Care\nFocus: How we tend to our communities and shared futures\, espec
 ially when the work is mundane\, repetitive\, or difficult.\nTime: March 12
 \, 2026\, 10–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 4: Gabo Camnitzer\nArtist and Mass College
  of Arts & Design professor investigating childhood\, socialization\, and e
 xperimental forms of learning.\n\nTitle: Individual and Collective Entangle
 ments\nFocus: What is the smallest piece of society\, and what forms of rel
 ation\, labor\, and imagination constitute it?\nTime: March 19\, 2026\, 10–
 11 a.m.
DTSTAMP:20260313T200453Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260308
LOCATION:East Sibley Hall\nRoom 140
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:What Can Bodies Do? Biopolitics and Choreographies of Daily Life Wo
 rkshop Series with Social Practice Artists
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52060617529750
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/what-can-bodies-do-biopolitics-and-cho
 reographies-of-daily-life-workshop-series-with-social-practice-artists
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:
DESCRIPTION:Overview\nThis workshop series accompanies Professor Pamela Kar
 imi’s seminar: Biopolitics of Architecture & Art (ARCH 4408/6408).\n\nThe s
 eries brings together internationally recognized social practice artists wh
 ose work explores how bodies move\, sense\, and negotiate space. Through mo
 vement-based prompts\, collaborative exercises\, and place-responsive pract
 ices\, participants will examine how physical action\, perception\, and soc
 ial norms shape the rhythms of everyday life in the built environment.\n\nE
 ach workshop addresses the entanglement of embodiment and spatial experienc
 e and offers an experiential complement to the seminar’s theoretical framew
 orks. Together\, the sessions invite students to reconsider architecture no
 t only as a material field\, but also as a relational and choreographic ter
 rain formed through ordinary gestures\, encounters\, and modes of collectiv
 e being.\n\nFree and open to the public.\n\nWorkshop Series With Social Pra
 ctice Artists\nWorkshop 1: Tanin Torabi\nAward-winning Tehran-based filmmak
 er and choreographer known for innovative single-take screendance works.\n\
 nTitle: Narratives of Togetherness\nFocus: Embodied knowledges and the re-e
 xperiencing of personal and social movements.\nTime: February 26\, 2026\, 1
 0–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 2: Sarah Kanouse\nInterdisciplinary artist and Northe
 astern University professor exploring the political and ecological dimensio
 ns of landscape.\n\nTitle: Listening With Place\nFocus: How collaborative l
 istening practices can help us experience place as kin rather than as resou
 rce.\nTime: March 5\, 2026\, 10–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 3: Ellen Mueller\nInter
 disciplinary artist and Arts Midwest program director whose work examines t
 he environmental and social impacts of capitalism.\n\nTitle: Embodied Commu
 nity Care\nFocus: How we tend to our communities and shared futures\, espec
 ially when the work is mundane\, repetitive\, or difficult.\nTime: March 12
 \, 2026\, 10–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 4: Gabo Camnitzer\nArtist and Mass College
  of Arts & Design professor investigating childhood\, socialization\, and e
 xperimental forms of learning.\n\nTitle: Individual and Collective Entangle
 ments\nFocus: What is the smallest piece of society\, and what forms of rel
 ation\, labor\, and imagination constitute it?\nTime: March 19\, 2026\, 10–
 11 a.m.
DTSTAMP:20260313T200453Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260309
LOCATION:East Sibley Hall\nRoom 140
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:What Can Bodies Do? Biopolitics and Choreographies of Daily Life Wo
 rkshop Series with Social Practice Artists
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52060617539991
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/what-can-bodies-do-biopolitics-and-cho
 reographies-of-daily-life-workshop-series-with-social-practice-artists
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:
DESCRIPTION:Overview\nThis workshop series accompanies Professor Pamela Kar
 imi’s seminar: Biopolitics of Architecture & Art (ARCH 4408/6408).\n\nThe s
 eries brings together internationally recognized social practice artists wh
 ose work explores how bodies move\, sense\, and negotiate space. Through mo
 vement-based prompts\, collaborative exercises\, and place-responsive pract
 ices\, participants will examine how physical action\, perception\, and soc
 ial norms shape the rhythms of everyday life in the built environment.\n\nE
 ach workshop addresses the entanglement of embodiment and spatial experienc
 e and offers an experiential complement to the seminar’s theoretical framew
 orks. Together\, the sessions invite students to reconsider architecture no
 t only as a material field\, but also as a relational and choreographic ter
 rain formed through ordinary gestures\, encounters\, and modes of collectiv
 e being.\n\nFree and open to the public.\n\nWorkshop Series With Social Pra
 ctice Artists\nWorkshop 1: Tanin Torabi\nAward-winning Tehran-based filmmak
 er and choreographer known for innovative single-take screendance works.\n\
 nTitle: Narratives of Togetherness\nFocus: Embodied knowledges and the re-e
 xperiencing of personal and social movements.\nTime: February 26\, 2026\, 1
 0–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 2: Sarah Kanouse\nInterdisciplinary artist and Northe
 astern University professor exploring the political and ecological dimensio
 ns of landscape.\n\nTitle: Listening With Place\nFocus: How collaborative l
 istening practices can help us experience place as kin rather than as resou
 rce.\nTime: March 5\, 2026\, 10–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 3: Ellen Mueller\nInter
 disciplinary artist and Arts Midwest program director whose work examines t
 he environmental and social impacts of capitalism.\n\nTitle: Embodied Commu
 nity Care\nFocus: How we tend to our communities and shared futures\, espec
 ially when the work is mundane\, repetitive\, or difficult.\nTime: March 12
 \, 2026\, 10–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 4: Gabo Camnitzer\nArtist and Mass College
  of Arts & Design professor investigating childhood\, socialization\, and e
 xperimental forms of learning.\n\nTitle: Individual and Collective Entangle
 ments\nFocus: What is the smallest piece of society\, and what forms of rel
 ation\, labor\, and imagination constitute it?\nTime: March 19\, 2026\, 10–
 11 a.m.
DTSTAMP:20260313T200453Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260310
LOCATION:East Sibley Hall\nRoom 140
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:What Can Bodies Do? Biopolitics and Choreographies of Daily Life Wo
 rkshop Series with Social Practice Artists
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52060617550232
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/what-can-bodies-do-biopolitics-and-cho
 reographies-of-daily-life-workshop-series-with-social-practice-artists
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:
DESCRIPTION:Overview\nThis workshop series accompanies Professor Pamela Kar
 imi’s seminar: Biopolitics of Architecture & Art (ARCH 4408/6408).\n\nThe s
 eries brings together internationally recognized social practice artists wh
 ose work explores how bodies move\, sense\, and negotiate space. Through mo
 vement-based prompts\, collaborative exercises\, and place-responsive pract
 ices\, participants will examine how physical action\, perception\, and soc
 ial norms shape the rhythms of everyday life in the built environment.\n\nE
 ach workshop addresses the entanglement of embodiment and spatial experienc
 e and offers an experiential complement to the seminar’s theoretical framew
 orks. Together\, the sessions invite students to reconsider architecture no
 t only as a material field\, but also as a relational and choreographic ter
 rain formed through ordinary gestures\, encounters\, and modes of collectiv
 e being.\n\nFree and open to the public.\n\nWorkshop Series With Social Pra
 ctice Artists\nWorkshop 1: Tanin Torabi\nAward-winning Tehran-based filmmak
 er and choreographer known for innovative single-take screendance works.\n\
 nTitle: Narratives of Togetherness\nFocus: Embodied knowledges and the re-e
 xperiencing of personal and social movements.\nTime: February 26\, 2026\, 1
 0–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 2: Sarah Kanouse\nInterdisciplinary artist and Northe
 astern University professor exploring the political and ecological dimensio
 ns of landscape.\n\nTitle: Listening With Place\nFocus: How collaborative l
 istening practices can help us experience place as kin rather than as resou
 rce.\nTime: March 5\, 2026\, 10–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 3: Ellen Mueller\nInter
 disciplinary artist and Arts Midwest program director whose work examines t
 he environmental and social impacts of capitalism.\n\nTitle: Embodied Commu
 nity Care\nFocus: How we tend to our communities and shared futures\, espec
 ially when the work is mundane\, repetitive\, or difficult.\nTime: March 12
 \, 2026\, 10–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 4: Gabo Camnitzer\nArtist and Mass College
  of Arts & Design professor investigating childhood\, socialization\, and e
 xperimental forms of learning.\n\nTitle: Individual and Collective Entangle
 ments\nFocus: What is the smallest piece of society\, and what forms of rel
 ation\, labor\, and imagination constitute it?\nTime: March 19\, 2026\, 10–
 11 a.m.
DTSTAMP:20260313T200453Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260311
LOCATION:East Sibley Hall\nRoom 140
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:What Can Bodies Do? Biopolitics and Choreographies of Daily Life Wo
 rkshop Series with Social Practice Artists
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52060617559449
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/what-can-bodies-do-biopolitics-and-cho
 reographies-of-daily-life-workshop-series-with-social-practice-artists
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:
DESCRIPTION:Overview\nThis workshop series accompanies Professor Pamela Kar
 imi’s seminar: Biopolitics of Architecture & Art (ARCH 4408/6408).\n\nThe s
 eries brings together internationally recognized social practice artists wh
 ose work explores how bodies move\, sense\, and negotiate space. Through mo
 vement-based prompts\, collaborative exercises\, and place-responsive pract
 ices\, participants will examine how physical action\, perception\, and soc
 ial norms shape the rhythms of everyday life in the built environment.\n\nE
 ach workshop addresses the entanglement of embodiment and spatial experienc
 e and offers an experiential complement to the seminar’s theoretical framew
 orks. Together\, the sessions invite students to reconsider architecture no
 t only as a material field\, but also as a relational and choreographic ter
 rain formed through ordinary gestures\, encounters\, and modes of collectiv
 e being.\n\nFree and open to the public.\n\nWorkshop Series With Social Pra
 ctice Artists\nWorkshop 1: Tanin Torabi\nAward-winning Tehran-based filmmak
 er and choreographer known for innovative single-take screendance works.\n\
 nTitle: Narratives of Togetherness\nFocus: Embodied knowledges and the re-e
 xperiencing of personal and social movements.\nTime: February 26\, 2026\, 1
 0–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 2: Sarah Kanouse\nInterdisciplinary artist and Northe
 astern University professor exploring the political and ecological dimensio
 ns of landscape.\n\nTitle: Listening With Place\nFocus: How collaborative l
 istening practices can help us experience place as kin rather than as resou
 rce.\nTime: March 5\, 2026\, 10–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 3: Ellen Mueller\nInter
 disciplinary artist and Arts Midwest program director whose work examines t
 he environmental and social impacts of capitalism.\n\nTitle: Embodied Commu
 nity Care\nFocus: How we tend to our communities and shared futures\, espec
 ially when the work is mundane\, repetitive\, or difficult.\nTime: March 12
 \, 2026\, 10–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 4: Gabo Camnitzer\nArtist and Mass College
  of Arts & Design professor investigating childhood\, socialization\, and e
 xperimental forms of learning.\n\nTitle: Individual and Collective Entangle
 ments\nFocus: What is the smallest piece of society\, and what forms of rel
 ation\, labor\, and imagination constitute it?\nTime: March 19\, 2026\, 10–
 11 a.m.
DTSTAMP:20260313T200453Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260312
LOCATION:East Sibley Hall\nRoom 140
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:What Can Bodies Do? Biopolitics and Choreographies of Daily Life Wo
 rkshop Series with Social Practice Artists
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52060617571738
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/what-can-bodies-do-biopolitics-and-cho
 reographies-of-daily-life-workshop-series-with-social-practice-artists
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:
DESCRIPTION:Overview\nThis workshop series accompanies Professor Pamela Kar
 imi’s seminar: Biopolitics of Architecture & Art (ARCH 4408/6408).\n\nThe s
 eries brings together internationally recognized social practice artists wh
 ose work explores how bodies move\, sense\, and negotiate space. Through mo
 vement-based prompts\, collaborative exercises\, and place-responsive pract
 ices\, participants will examine how physical action\, perception\, and soc
 ial norms shape the rhythms of everyday life in the built environment.\n\nE
 ach workshop addresses the entanglement of embodiment and spatial experienc
 e and offers an experiential complement to the seminar’s theoretical framew
 orks. Together\, the sessions invite students to reconsider architecture no
 t only as a material field\, but also as a relational and choreographic ter
 rain formed through ordinary gestures\, encounters\, and modes of collectiv
 e being.\n\nFree and open to the public.\n\nWorkshop Series With Social Pra
 ctice Artists\nWorkshop 1: Tanin Torabi\nAward-winning Tehran-based filmmak
 er and choreographer known for innovative single-take screendance works.\n\
 nTitle: Narratives of Togetherness\nFocus: Embodied knowledges and the re-e
 xperiencing of personal and social movements.\nTime: February 26\, 2026\, 1
 0–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 2: Sarah Kanouse\nInterdisciplinary artist and Northe
 astern University professor exploring the political and ecological dimensio
 ns of landscape.\n\nTitle: Listening With Place\nFocus: How collaborative l
 istening practices can help us experience place as kin rather than as resou
 rce.\nTime: March 5\, 2026\, 10–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 3: Ellen Mueller\nInter
 disciplinary artist and Arts Midwest program director whose work examines t
 he environmental and social impacts of capitalism.\n\nTitle: Embodied Commu
 nity Care\nFocus: How we tend to our communities and shared futures\, espec
 ially when the work is mundane\, repetitive\, or difficult.\nTime: March 12
 \, 2026\, 10–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 4: Gabo Camnitzer\nArtist and Mass College
  of Arts & Design professor investigating childhood\, socialization\, and e
 xperimental forms of learning.\n\nTitle: Individual and Collective Entangle
 ments\nFocus: What is the smallest piece of society\, and what forms of rel
 ation\, labor\, and imagination constitute it?\nTime: March 19\, 2026\, 10–
 11 a.m.
DTSTAMP:20260313T200453Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260313
LOCATION:East Sibley Hall\nRoom 140
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:What Can Bodies Do? Biopolitics and Choreographies of Daily Life Wo
 rkshop Series with Social Practice Artists
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52060617581979
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/what-can-bodies-do-biopolitics-and-cho
 reographies-of-daily-life-workshop-series-with-social-practice-artists
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:
DESCRIPTION:Overview\nThis workshop series accompanies Professor Pamela Kar
 imi’s seminar: Biopolitics of Architecture & Art (ARCH 4408/6408).\n\nThe s
 eries brings together internationally recognized social practice artists wh
 ose work explores how bodies move\, sense\, and negotiate space. Through mo
 vement-based prompts\, collaborative exercises\, and place-responsive pract
 ices\, participants will examine how physical action\, perception\, and soc
 ial norms shape the rhythms of everyday life in the built environment.\n\nE
 ach workshop addresses the entanglement of embodiment and spatial experienc
 e and offers an experiential complement to the seminar’s theoretical framew
 orks. Together\, the sessions invite students to reconsider architecture no
 t only as a material field\, but also as a relational and choreographic ter
 rain formed through ordinary gestures\, encounters\, and modes of collectiv
 e being.\n\nFree and open to the public.\n\nWorkshop Series With Social Pra
 ctice Artists\nWorkshop 1: Tanin Torabi\nAward-winning Tehran-based filmmak
 er and choreographer known for innovative single-take screendance works.\n\
 nTitle: Narratives of Togetherness\nFocus: Embodied knowledges and the re-e
 xperiencing of personal and social movements.\nTime: February 26\, 2026\, 1
 0–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 2: Sarah Kanouse\nInterdisciplinary artist and Northe
 astern University professor exploring the political and ecological dimensio
 ns of landscape.\n\nTitle: Listening With Place\nFocus: How collaborative l
 istening practices can help us experience place as kin rather than as resou
 rce.\nTime: March 5\, 2026\, 10–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 3: Ellen Mueller\nInter
 disciplinary artist and Arts Midwest program director whose work examines t
 he environmental and social impacts of capitalism.\n\nTitle: Embodied Commu
 nity Care\nFocus: How we tend to our communities and shared futures\, espec
 ially when the work is mundane\, repetitive\, or difficult.\nTime: March 12
 \, 2026\, 10–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 4: Gabo Camnitzer\nArtist and Mass College
  of Arts & Design professor investigating childhood\, socialization\, and e
 xperimental forms of learning.\n\nTitle: Individual and Collective Entangle
 ments\nFocus: What is the smallest piece of society\, and what forms of rel
 ation\, labor\, and imagination constitute it?\nTime: March 19\, 2026\, 10–
 11 a.m.
DTSTAMP:20260313T200453Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260314
LOCATION:East Sibley Hall\nRoom 140
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:What Can Bodies Do? Biopolitics and Choreographies of Daily Life Wo
 rkshop Series with Social Practice Artists
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52060617594268
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/what-can-bodies-do-biopolitics-and-cho
 reographies-of-daily-life-workshop-series-with-social-practice-artists
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:
DESCRIPTION:Overview\nThis workshop series accompanies Professor Pamela Kar
 imi’s seminar: Biopolitics of Architecture & Art (ARCH 4408/6408).\n\nThe s
 eries brings together internationally recognized social practice artists wh
 ose work explores how bodies move\, sense\, and negotiate space. Through mo
 vement-based prompts\, collaborative exercises\, and place-responsive pract
 ices\, participants will examine how physical action\, perception\, and soc
 ial norms shape the rhythms of everyday life in the built environment.\n\nE
 ach workshop addresses the entanglement of embodiment and spatial experienc
 e and offers an experiential complement to the seminar’s theoretical framew
 orks. Together\, the sessions invite students to reconsider architecture no
 t only as a material field\, but also as a relational and choreographic ter
 rain formed through ordinary gestures\, encounters\, and modes of collectiv
 e being.\n\nFree and open to the public.\n\nWorkshop Series With Social Pra
 ctice Artists\nWorkshop 1: Tanin Torabi\nAward-winning Tehran-based filmmak
 er and choreographer known for innovative single-take screendance works.\n\
 nTitle: Narratives of Togetherness\nFocus: Embodied knowledges and the re-e
 xperiencing of personal and social movements.\nTime: February 26\, 2026\, 1
 0–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 2: Sarah Kanouse\nInterdisciplinary artist and Northe
 astern University professor exploring the political and ecological dimensio
 ns of landscape.\n\nTitle: Listening With Place\nFocus: How collaborative l
 istening practices can help us experience place as kin rather than as resou
 rce.\nTime: March 5\, 2026\, 10–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 3: Ellen Mueller\nInter
 disciplinary artist and Arts Midwest program director whose work examines t
 he environmental and social impacts of capitalism.\n\nTitle: Embodied Commu
 nity Care\nFocus: How we tend to our communities and shared futures\, espec
 ially when the work is mundane\, repetitive\, or difficult.\nTime: March 12
 \, 2026\, 10–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 4: Gabo Camnitzer\nArtist and Mass College
  of Arts & Design professor investigating childhood\, socialization\, and e
 xperimental forms of learning.\n\nTitle: Individual and Collective Entangle
 ments\nFocus: What is the smallest piece of society\, and what forms of rel
 ation\, labor\, and imagination constitute it?\nTime: March 19\, 2026\, 10–
 11 a.m.
DTSTAMP:20260313T200453Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260315
LOCATION:East Sibley Hall\nRoom 140
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:What Can Bodies Do? Biopolitics and Choreographies of Daily Life Wo
 rkshop Series with Social Practice Artists
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52060617606557
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/what-can-bodies-do-biopolitics-and-cho
 reographies-of-daily-life-workshop-series-with-social-practice-artists
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:
DESCRIPTION:Overview\nThis workshop series accompanies Professor Pamela Kar
 imi’s seminar: Biopolitics of Architecture & Art (ARCH 4408/6408).\n\nThe s
 eries brings together internationally recognized social practice artists wh
 ose work explores how bodies move\, sense\, and negotiate space. Through mo
 vement-based prompts\, collaborative exercises\, and place-responsive pract
 ices\, participants will examine how physical action\, perception\, and soc
 ial norms shape the rhythms of everyday life in the built environment.\n\nE
 ach workshop addresses the entanglement of embodiment and spatial experienc
 e and offers an experiential complement to the seminar’s theoretical framew
 orks. Together\, the sessions invite students to reconsider architecture no
 t only as a material field\, but also as a relational and choreographic ter
 rain formed through ordinary gestures\, encounters\, and modes of collectiv
 e being.\n\nFree and open to the public.\n\nWorkshop Series With Social Pra
 ctice Artists\nWorkshop 1: Tanin Torabi\nAward-winning Tehran-based filmmak
 er and choreographer known for innovative single-take screendance works.\n\
 nTitle: Narratives of Togetherness\nFocus: Embodied knowledges and the re-e
 xperiencing of personal and social movements.\nTime: February 26\, 2026\, 1
 0–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 2: Sarah Kanouse\nInterdisciplinary artist and Northe
 astern University professor exploring the political and ecological dimensio
 ns of landscape.\n\nTitle: Listening With Place\nFocus: How collaborative l
 istening practices can help us experience place as kin rather than as resou
 rce.\nTime: March 5\, 2026\, 10–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 3: Ellen Mueller\nInter
 disciplinary artist and Arts Midwest program director whose work examines t
 he environmental and social impacts of capitalism.\n\nTitle: Embodied Commu
 nity Care\nFocus: How we tend to our communities and shared futures\, espec
 ially when the work is mundane\, repetitive\, or difficult.\nTime: March 12
 \, 2026\, 10–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 4: Gabo Camnitzer\nArtist and Mass College
  of Arts & Design professor investigating childhood\, socialization\, and e
 xperimental forms of learning.\n\nTitle: Individual and Collective Entangle
 ments\nFocus: What is the smallest piece of society\, and what forms of rel
 ation\, labor\, and imagination constitute it?\nTime: March 19\, 2026\, 10–
 11 a.m.
DTSTAMP:20260313T200453Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260316
LOCATION:East Sibley Hall\nRoom 140
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:What Can Bodies Do? Biopolitics and Choreographies of Daily Life Wo
 rkshop Series with Social Practice Artists
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52060617616798
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/what-can-bodies-do-biopolitics-and-cho
 reographies-of-daily-life-workshop-series-with-social-practice-artists
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:
DESCRIPTION:Overview\nThis workshop series accompanies Professor Pamela Kar
 imi’s seminar: Biopolitics of Architecture & Art (ARCH 4408/6408).\n\nThe s
 eries brings together internationally recognized social practice artists wh
 ose work explores how bodies move\, sense\, and negotiate space. Through mo
 vement-based prompts\, collaborative exercises\, and place-responsive pract
 ices\, participants will examine how physical action\, perception\, and soc
 ial norms shape the rhythms of everyday life in the built environment.\n\nE
 ach workshop addresses the entanglement of embodiment and spatial experienc
 e and offers an experiential complement to the seminar’s theoretical framew
 orks. Together\, the sessions invite students to reconsider architecture no
 t only as a material field\, but also as a relational and choreographic ter
 rain formed through ordinary gestures\, encounters\, and modes of collectiv
 e being.\n\nFree and open to the public.\n\nWorkshop Series With Social Pra
 ctice Artists\nWorkshop 1: Tanin Torabi\nAward-winning Tehran-based filmmak
 er and choreographer known for innovative single-take screendance works.\n\
 nTitle: Narratives of Togetherness\nFocus: Embodied knowledges and the re-e
 xperiencing of personal and social movements.\nTime: February 26\, 2026\, 1
 0–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 2: Sarah Kanouse\nInterdisciplinary artist and Northe
 astern University professor exploring the political and ecological dimensio
 ns of landscape.\n\nTitle: Listening With Place\nFocus: How collaborative l
 istening practices can help us experience place as kin rather than as resou
 rce.\nTime: March 5\, 2026\, 10–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 3: Ellen Mueller\nInter
 disciplinary artist and Arts Midwest program director whose work examines t
 he environmental and social impacts of capitalism.\n\nTitle: Embodied Commu
 nity Care\nFocus: How we tend to our communities and shared futures\, espec
 ially when the work is mundane\, repetitive\, or difficult.\nTime: March 12
 \, 2026\, 10–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 4: Gabo Camnitzer\nArtist and Mass College
  of Arts & Design professor investigating childhood\, socialization\, and e
 xperimental forms of learning.\n\nTitle: Individual and Collective Entangle
 ments\nFocus: What is the smallest piece of society\, and what forms of rel
 ation\, labor\, and imagination constitute it?\nTime: March 19\, 2026\, 10–
 11 a.m.
DTSTAMP:20260313T200453Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260317
LOCATION:East Sibley Hall\nRoom 140
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:What Can Bodies Do? Biopolitics and Choreographies of Daily Life Wo
 rkshop Series with Social Practice Artists
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52060617630111
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/what-can-bodies-do-biopolitics-and-cho
 reographies-of-daily-life-workshop-series-with-social-practice-artists
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:
DESCRIPTION:Overview\nThis workshop series accompanies Professor Pamela Kar
 imi’s seminar: Biopolitics of Architecture & Art (ARCH 4408/6408).\n\nThe s
 eries brings together internationally recognized social practice artists wh
 ose work explores how bodies move\, sense\, and negotiate space. Through mo
 vement-based prompts\, collaborative exercises\, and place-responsive pract
 ices\, participants will examine how physical action\, perception\, and soc
 ial norms shape the rhythms of everyday life in the built environment.\n\nE
 ach workshop addresses the entanglement of embodiment and spatial experienc
 e and offers an experiential complement to the seminar’s theoretical framew
 orks. Together\, the sessions invite students to reconsider architecture no
 t only as a material field\, but also as a relational and choreographic ter
 rain formed through ordinary gestures\, encounters\, and modes of collectiv
 e being.\n\nFree and open to the public.\n\nWorkshop Series With Social Pra
 ctice Artists\nWorkshop 1: Tanin Torabi\nAward-winning Tehran-based filmmak
 er and choreographer known for innovative single-take screendance works.\n\
 nTitle: Narratives of Togetherness\nFocus: Embodied knowledges and the re-e
 xperiencing of personal and social movements.\nTime: February 26\, 2026\, 1
 0–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 2: Sarah Kanouse\nInterdisciplinary artist and Northe
 astern University professor exploring the political and ecological dimensio
 ns of landscape.\n\nTitle: Listening With Place\nFocus: How collaborative l
 istening practices can help us experience place as kin rather than as resou
 rce.\nTime: March 5\, 2026\, 10–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 3: Ellen Mueller\nInter
 disciplinary artist and Arts Midwest program director whose work examines t
 he environmental and social impacts of capitalism.\n\nTitle: Embodied Commu
 nity Care\nFocus: How we tend to our communities and shared futures\, espec
 ially when the work is mundane\, repetitive\, or difficult.\nTime: March 12
 \, 2026\, 10–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 4: Gabo Camnitzer\nArtist and Mass College
  of Arts & Design professor investigating childhood\, socialization\, and e
 xperimental forms of learning.\n\nTitle: Individual and Collective Entangle
 ments\nFocus: What is the smallest piece of society\, and what forms of rel
 ation\, labor\, and imagination constitute it?\nTime: March 19\, 2026\, 10–
 11 a.m.
DTSTAMP:20260313T200453Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260318
LOCATION:East Sibley Hall\nRoom 140
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:What Can Bodies Do? Biopolitics and Choreographies of Daily Life Wo
 rkshop Series with Social Practice Artists
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52060617641376
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/what-can-bodies-do-biopolitics-and-cho
 reographies-of-daily-life-workshop-series-with-social-practice-artists
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:
DESCRIPTION:Overview\nThis workshop series accompanies Professor Pamela Kar
 imi’s seminar: Biopolitics of Architecture & Art (ARCH 4408/6408).\n\nThe s
 eries brings together internationally recognized social practice artists wh
 ose work explores how bodies move\, sense\, and negotiate space. Through mo
 vement-based prompts\, collaborative exercises\, and place-responsive pract
 ices\, participants will examine how physical action\, perception\, and soc
 ial norms shape the rhythms of everyday life in the built environment.\n\nE
 ach workshop addresses the entanglement of embodiment and spatial experienc
 e and offers an experiential complement to the seminar’s theoretical framew
 orks. Together\, the sessions invite students to reconsider architecture no
 t only as a material field\, but also as a relational and choreographic ter
 rain formed through ordinary gestures\, encounters\, and modes of collectiv
 e being.\n\nFree and open to the public.\n\nWorkshop Series With Social Pra
 ctice Artists\nWorkshop 1: Tanin Torabi\nAward-winning Tehran-based filmmak
 er and choreographer known for innovative single-take screendance works.\n\
 nTitle: Narratives of Togetherness\nFocus: Embodied knowledges and the re-e
 xperiencing of personal and social movements.\nTime: February 26\, 2026\, 1
 0–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 2: Sarah Kanouse\nInterdisciplinary artist and Northe
 astern University professor exploring the political and ecological dimensio
 ns of landscape.\n\nTitle: Listening With Place\nFocus: How collaborative l
 istening practices can help us experience place as kin rather than as resou
 rce.\nTime: March 5\, 2026\, 10–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 3: Ellen Mueller\nInter
 disciplinary artist and Arts Midwest program director whose work examines t
 he environmental and social impacts of capitalism.\n\nTitle: Embodied Commu
 nity Care\nFocus: How we tend to our communities and shared futures\, espec
 ially when the work is mundane\, repetitive\, or difficult.\nTime: March 12
 \, 2026\, 10–11 a.m.\n\nWorkshop 4: Gabo Camnitzer\nArtist and Mass College
  of Arts & Design professor investigating childhood\, socialization\, and e
 xperimental forms of learning.\n\nTitle: Individual and Collective Entangle
 ments\nFocus: What is the smallest piece of society\, and what forms of rel
 ation\, labor\, and imagination constitute it?\nTime: March 19\, 2026\, 10–
 11 a.m.
DTSTAMP:20260313T200453Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260319
LOCATION:East Sibley Hall\nRoom 140
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:What Can Bodies Do? Biopolitics and Choreographies of Daily Life Wo
 rkshop Series with Social Practice Artists
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52060617653665
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/what-can-bodies-do-biopolitics-and-cho
 reographies-of-daily-life-workshop-series-with-social-practice-artists
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
