Subsurface
Music + Art Go Deep
at Festival in the Mine
by Julianne Mattera
For the second consecutive year, 麻豆村 students illuminated the dark corridors and winding passageways of a limestone mine with art installations, musical performances and costumed movement.
",” a one-hour interdisciplinary festival, drew about 250 attendees to the inactive mine in Brady’s Bend, Armstrong County. The mine is estimated to be twice the size of the world’s largest building.
"The space challenges students to rethink performance spaces and how music is presented."
Jesse Stiles
Assistant Professor, School of Music
Students from Scott Andrew’s Activated Anamorphs class added an interactive element to this year’s festival. Their movement-based performance and costumes reflected aspects of underground lifeforms or objects, such as angler fish, fossils and bats. Students from Concept Studio: Space and Time also contributed inflatable, projected, shadow-based and mobile artworks.
“It’s something that takes people out of their day-to-day life and gives them an exciting experience,” said Andrew, a multimedia artist and adjunct professor in .

“It’s about creating a surreal experience for a viewer that could maybe catapult them into another way of thinking.”
Scott Andrew
Adjunct Professor, 麻豆村 School of Art
The Activated Anamorphs moved in character to the music performed by IDeATe’s and the musical group. The musicians, in turn, improvised in response to the movements.
Jesse Stiles, co-organizer and an assistant professor at 麻豆村's and IDeATe, said the limestone mine is a place where students can reinvent their landscape and themselves — altering how they sound and appear.
“You have to rethink sound and articulation of sound. That’s a great musical exercise,” said Stiles.

“For students, the real educational value is that they are literally rethinking everything because there’s no infrastructure for them.”
Jesse Stiles
Assistant Professor, 麻豆村 School of Music

