MigrationPhotograph by Elizabeth Cecil

This series of images taken on the Island were mostly about seeking space. I have always been drawn to birds who have the freedom and the expansiveness of the sky. Seeing these birds in flight I felt my own longing for that kind of flight and freedom.

Artist
Elizabeth Cecil Elizabeth Cecil is a fine art and editorial photographer based on Martha’s Vineyard. Elizabeth specializes in food, travel and agricultural photography while always pursuing personal bodies of work. She contributes to multiple publications on the island and is the founding and current Photo Editor for Edible Vineyard (2010-present). Elizabeth fell in love with photography chasing trains with her dad in Milwaukee. She made her first pictures with a blue Fisher Price and a roll of 110 film and the excitement of making images has stayed with her ever since.
Location
State Beach Pedestrian walk way269 Edgartown Oak Bluffs Rd, Edgartown, MA, USA Open in Google Maps › Open in Apple Maps ›
What do you See?
What do you see? Stop 0

Maximum file size: 52.43MB

Leaving BirdsSong by Mark Erelli

The photograph I interpreted [from stop 1] evoked bleakness, but also a sense of stark beauty. The birds aren’t centered; they look like they’ve been frozen in the middle of an exodus toward the edge of the frame. I’d sum the image up in one word: leaving. I was focused on the birds, so the lines with the avian imagery like “this town would surely be deserted if not for mourning doves and crows,” were birthed from images that came to me of these old-timers perched on their barstool roosts. Humans have always envied birds for their flight, but I think it’s deeper than that. For me, flight represents freedom from ties, and the ability to escape. That’s something I think we’ve all felt the urge to do at one time or another. After I settled on the influence of the birds, I simply fleshed out a back story populated with characters, rooted in a place, that envy anyone who wants to take flight.

Artist
Mark Erelli Discovered when he was 23, Mark Erelli released his debut album in 1999. For the past 10 years, he’s toured internationally, sharing the stage with Dave Alvin, Gillian Welch, John Hiatt and others, and appearing at many major folk festivals, including Newport, Philadelphia and Shrewsbury (UK). Erelli gained notoriety as a multi-instrumentalist, accompanying artists like Lori McKenna and Josh Ritter everywhere from Nashville’s Grand Ole Opry to London’s Royal Albert Hall. In 2009, he was one of eight artists invited to participate in the Darwin Song Project, a collaborative release featuring songs inspired by the life and work of Charles Darwin.
Location
Jaws BridgeJaws Bridge, Seaview Avenue, Edgartown, MA, USA Open in Google Maps › Open in Apple Maps ›
What do you Hear?
What do you see? Stop 1

Maximum file size: 52.43MB

La fin d’après-midiDance by Bridgman|Packer Dance

The essence of the song I interpreted [from stop 2] for us was a sense of impermanence and nostalgia. We chose to approach our choreography without a literal interpretation of the lyrics, so after listening to the song many times, we put it aside. We performed the dance and edited the video without the music, and then added it back in at the end of the creative process.

We got this idea of a relationship through time and the idea of leaving. We decided to film different passages back and forth through the frame with various meetings and fading in and out of characters representing impermanence. It seemed like there was an autumn feeling to the song, which is why we used a sepia tone. We used the appearing and disappearing characters to explore the duality of identity acknowledging that we’re not always just one personality or emotion or entity and that we are complex and can have many feelings at the same time. For example, the sentiment “Should I stay or should I go?” Our passage through the frames could be a metaphor for different memories, dreams, projections, thoughts, or fantasies. At the end, at the table, there is finally a sense of place and a rustic elegant sensibility to it but then even that is impermanent and disappears around us.

Artist
Bridgman|Packer Dance Art Bridgman and Myrna Packer, Artistic Directors of Bridgman|Packer Dance, are collaborators in performance and choreography and have toured their work throughout the United States, Europe, Asia, and Central America. Their innovative work developing “Video Partnering” — the integration of live performance and video technology — has been acclaimed for its highly visual and visceral alchemy of the live and the virtual. The 2008 Guggenheim Fellowship awarded to Bridgman and Packer was the first in the history of the Guggenheim Foundation to be given to two individuals for their collaborative work. Bridgman and Packer are recipients of grants from the National Endowment for the Arts for eight consecutive years from 2007 through 2014 and grants from New England Foundation for the Arts, New York State Council for the Arts, National Dance Project, USArtists International, Performing Americas Project, and La Red. They have received two Choreography Fellowships and a BUILD grant from the New York Foundation for the Arts, four National Performance Network Creation Fund Awards, and choreographic commissions from Dance Theater Workshop (now New York Live Arts), Portland Ovations, Danspace Project, the 92nd Street Y New Works in Dance Fund, and Dance New Amsterdam. Photo Credit: Paul B. Goode
Location
State Beach Pedestrian walk way266 Edgartown Oak Bluffs Rd, Vineyard Haven, MA 02568, USA Open in Google Maps › Open in Apple Maps ›
What do you Hear?
What do you see? Stop 2

Maximum file size: 52.43MB

A DanceSculpture by Susanna Bauer

Susanna Bauer’s Interview with Sally Taylor about interpreting the dance from stop 3.

Sally: Without going back to the dance that inspired you to creat this sculpture, what do you remember about it?

Susanna: A wooden barn building, a fig tree, a woman and a man appearing and disappearing, meeting and dancing together, separating, meeting again, connecting, and towards the end sitting down at a table drinking wine and leaving together.

Sally: What was your first reaction to the dance? (thoughts, emotions, memories, tastes, smells etc?)

Susanna: Summer, wood, made me think of times spent with my partner at an old house in France

Sally: If you had to choose one word to sum up the dance what would it be?

Susanna: Relationship

Sally: What emotion did it elicit?

Susanna: searching for calmness

Sally: What was the dance about in your mind? (Did it tell a story? Paint a picture? Etc.)

Susanna: For me it told a story about a relationship, maybe the story of many relationships, the tangles and challenges, times of closeness and distance, sometimes confusion, finding common ground and connectedness.

Sally: Take me through each step of your process from getting the dance to the creation of your work.

Susanna: Viewing the dance several times in a row, then not watching it for a couple of days just keeping it in my mind. The essence that stayed was the notion of movement and the development of a relationship. The question of how to visually express it. Transferring this to my preferred medium I thought of falling leaves, tracing their paths and how they might connect. The theme of relationships appears quite often in my work and for me a leaf has got personality and individuality – it took a while to find a couple that could dance together. Choosing a frame size to work to and then experimenting with different paths allowing the natural curl of a crochet line to have its say.

Sally: What did you title your work and why?

Susanna: I simply called my piece of work ‘A Dance’ as this is where it came from and I would like to leave any further interpretation to the individual viewer.

Sally: What part of your work came to you first?

Susanna: Two leaves.

Artist
Susanna Bauer Medium: Sculpture Elsewhere: http://www.susannabauer.com Facebook susannabauer@live.com
Location
State Beach Pedestrian Walk Way234 Edgartown Oak Bluffs Rd, Vineyard Haven, MA, USA Open in Google Maps › Open in Apple Maps ›
What do you Taste?
What do you see? Stop 3

Maximum file size: 52.43MB

CompassPainting by Kara Taylor

In the sculpture [from stop 4] there was a sense of longing, searching for purpose in a weighted sort of weightless way. I felt longing and discovery, weakness and strength, awareness, and heartache. The idea of painting on a circle was my immediate response to the music because it felt circular to me like you were going to arrive back at the same place you started from. The chair in my image symbolizes home and waiting to return. I titled my work “Compass.” The stars are often used for navigation, to find your way home. The dangling piano weights represent time, like a pendulum–Vertical time instead of horizontal.

Artist
Kara Taylor Medium: Sculpture In 1997 Kara received a BFA from Maine College of Art after majoring in ceramic sculpture. After college, she lived in Maui for a year and begun to paint. Since, she’s participated in various group shows through out New England and 1 Juried International Exhibition. The years following took Kara to India, a place that has long influenced her philosophy on art and life. 
In 2000, she returned to Martha’s Vineyard and opened Haystack Gallery in West Tisbury, an immediate success. After 5 years, her work moved to a bigger space, now called Kara Taylor Fine Art on Main St. in Vineyard Haven. Elsewhere: http://karataylorart.com
Location
State Beach Pedestrian Walk Way239 Beach Rd, Vineyard Haven, MA 02568, USA Open in Google Maps › Open in Apple Maps ›
What do you See?
What do you see? Stop 4

Maximum file size: 52.43MB