Rhythm & Ritual: marking time through daily ritual with Megan Driving Hawk

Rhythm & Ritual, marking time through daily ritual with Megan Driving Hawk

Begins May 21st (meets weekly for one year)
Thursdays, 1 - 3 pm EDT on Zoom

How can ritual become a portal through which one can access deep time, inhabited time, and time-out-of time simultaneously? In this year-long practice group participants will build new and/or deepen their ongoing ritual practices. At the end of the year, participants have the opportunity to submit their images and words to be included in a small edition of a hand bound book called, Rhythm & Ritual: A Field Guide.

How do past and future happen in the present? How do we access ancestral memory that lives in the body? What does it mean to say the land and where our bodies hold memory?

Can the act of making a photograph be sacred? If we make physical photographic objects in ritual and ceremony and intend for them to be left in legacy, does that change how we photograph and the meaning we give to the act of making? How can ritual and ceremony help you develop an ongoing practice of noticing and honoring the Earth’s elements and seasons?

We will find inspiration in short readings and quotes on themes of legacy, seasonal time, memory, ancestral memory, reciprocity, spiritual time and poetic time. Starting with the quote by Douglas Good Feather, “… the behaviors of our human experiences, here on earth, are reflections of the movements of the celestial bodies above us.”

This practice group will focus on conceptual rather than technical discussion. All levels of photographers are welcome. Practice group participants can opt to pay monthly or all at once for the entire year.

Monthly recurring payment - sliding scale: $45 - $100 per month
One time payment - sliding scale: $520 - $1200

 

Megan Driving Hawk  is an artist/mother/educator using habits of the heart to facilitate connection, healing, and learning through photography, poetry, & traditional needlework. Creatively, she researches collective healing, trauma, memory, and time. Academically, she researches culturally responsive fine arts education. She earned a BFA in Fine Art Photography from Arizona State University, an MEd in Secondary Education with K-12 Art certification from ASU, and an MFA in Interdisciplinary Studies from the University of Hartford.

As a National Board-Certified Teacher, she has spent over 10 years in the classroom creating and teaching a culturally responsive art education curriculum. She has served as Indigenous Student Advisor, Teacher Equity Lead, Visual Arts Lead, National Arts Honor Society Advisor among others. Currently she is the Equity, Diversity & Inclusion Rep for the Arizona Art Education Association, a Running with Purpose Artist/Athlete Advocate, and a member of Kinship Photography Collective.

Her artwork has been reviewed, collected, and exhibited numerous times throughout the present-day U.S. and internationally, including the ASU Art Museum and the Tempe Public Works Collection. She has been invited as a guest lecturer, workshop facilitator, and panelist for various events at the national, state, & local levels.  Driving Hawk has received numerous honors and awards, including honorable mention in the 2020 Women Photographing Women category of the Julia Margaret Cameron Awards, 2023 artist-in-residence at the Tempe Center for the Arts, 2023 Arizona Art Educator of the Year, and 2025 Agent of Change in Equity, Diversity, & Inclusion.

Driving Hawk currently lives in the Sonoran Desert on O’odham, Yavapai, Akimel O’odham (Upper Pima) and Hohokam lands (present-day Phoenix, Arizona). She is a white wife & mother of two in a Lakȟóta Thiwáhe. Her life is a residency in Matrescence & outdoor learning through Indigenous ways of knowing.

 
Susan Patrice

As the founder and director of Makers Circle, Susan Patrice designs and implements arts-informed community initiatives in partnership with non-arts organizations who want to expand their reach and impact through innovative cross-sector collaboration. Makers Circle has a deep passion for the power of the creative process to encourage adaptive change, expand awareness, and open up new ways of seeing and relating. We believe that the arts and artists should play a major role in community regeneration and non-profit advancement. Web design and digital storytelling are foundational to the work we do with non-profits.

https://kinship.photography/
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Keeping Time: Contemplative Photography and the Art of Stewardship with Susan Patrice

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Bodies in Time with Frances Bukovsky