How can our identities, knowledge, values and biases influence how we work? Our guests Kaira Zoe Cañete, Emma Blomkamp, Shona Coyne and Jilda Andrews seek to answer this question by drawing from their co-creative experiences from various sectors including social policy, academic research, and cultural institutions. You can find Kim online on ANU Researchers | Apple Music | Spotify He writes for the Deans and Directors of the Creative Arts, the Crawford Centre for Public Policy at the ANU and hosts a regular segment on ABC Radio to discuss music and the larger world. Kim Cunio is the Head of the School of Music at the Australian National University (ANU), performer, researcher, and Grammy long listed composer. The Neuroscience of Music and the Concept of 'Lull': Liane Gabora | Sue Woolfe Indigenous Collaborations and the Creative Academy - Article by Kim Cunio, Chris Sainsbury and Frank Milward: How music can help us understand what co-creation is and how it happens The challenges of transferring a co-creative musical approach into organisational and institutional settings such as universities The process of seeking cultural authority to work with particular knowledges and traditions How Kim’s diverse cultural background combined with his creative and technical skills influences his approach to musical practice Topics explored include:Įmbracing the complexities of being positioned as the ‘other’ when engaging in non-traditional research Musician and academic, Kim Cunio, reflects on the co-creative musical projects that he has been involved with and shares insights into the responsibilities that different cultural roles and relationships require of us. Music provides a fascinating example of co-creativity in action – whether that be through the coming together of instruments and performers, the space in which the music is played, or the process of audience members listening to music. We pay our respects, an ongoing gratitude to the custodian's past present and future of the lands on which we work and of the knowledges from which we learn.Ĭollaboratory is a production of the Scaffolding Cultural Co-creativity Project hosted by the Centre for Heritage and Museum Studies in the College of Arts and Social Sciences at the Australian National University funding is generously provided by the Australian National University Translational Fellowship Scheme. Additional research and production support by Yichen Li.Ĭollaboratory is produced on the lands of the Ngunnawal, Ngunawal and Ngambri people. Instagram - is written, edited and produced by Maya Haviland with production and editorial assistance from Nicole Deen. Music, Co-Creativity and Cultures: A Conversation with Kim CunioĬheck out blog posts written by the hosts and guests of Collaboratory here.Įmail - Collaboratory Podcast | Scaffolding Cultural CoCreativity Intellectual Property and Agreement: A Conversation with Dr Diana JamesĪ Conversation with Jenni Savigny and Stephen Corey: Digital StorytellingĬo-Created Research: A Conversation with Kaira Zoe CañeteĬommunity Engagement and Consent: A Conversation with Azure Hermes To ensure accessibility we are committed to providing transcripts of all our podcast episodes - you can read the full transcript here.Ĭatch up on past episodes of Collaboratory: We would really appreciate it if you could take a few minutes to share your thoughts with us about Collaboratory - what you like, what you think can be improved and any topics that you would like the podcast to cover by completing this survey: In the meantime, check out episodes that you may have missed, and please provide us with your feedback. We wanted to let you know that we will be taking a break to do some back-end production work and will be back with new episodes from April 2023. Thank you for listening to and engaging with the Collaboratory podcast.
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