arts olympix 2013 handbook - updated 28_02_13
TRANSCRIPT
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ORGANIZATIONAL CREW
Varun Dadlani (Head) Tabitha Buchner (Committee Chair) Magaly Ramos (Committee Chair) Mari Sugimoto (Committee Chair)
Cristina Calvopiña (Committee Chair)
Marie Ritter Katie Le
Tauras Kalasauskas Trevor Sloughter Hauke Zießler Rebecca von Koslowski Gabriela Guevara Gaby Wiederkehr Valeria Azorina Lebriz Kiziler Anja Djokic Alexandra Moroti Laura Garcia Maria Kenttamies Elisabeth Baumann Anna Lambertz Juliane Kube
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Arts Olympix 2013 Committee Structure
Head organizer Individual that is in charge of over-‐seeing the entire organization of the Arts Olympix, including the management of sub-‐committees, running meetings, inspiring team, and fostering a healthy organizational environment. Also acts as the main one responsible for the event and its execution. This individual is voted into this position by the committee at the end of every spring semester, and will then be in charge of forming the committee in the following academic year. The Head organizer should have been a committee member the year before.
College Reps Within the committee, these will be the individuals in charge of mobilizing the students in their respective college to increase spirit, awareness, and participation in the Arts Olympix. Responsibilities will include working together with the College Office, COM, and CMs and advertising events within the college, helping prepare Pep Rallies, and most importantly, to aid in the organization of teams and participation in the event. The college reps will be supervised by the head organizer.
Public Relations Crew Head by one individual in the organizational committee, this crew is in charge of channeling different forms of art into the advertising campaign for this event. This crew will help build awareness about the event through different advertising means, as well as making sure that all of the rules and regulations are readily available to every participant.
Internal Communications Head by one individual in the organizational committee, this crew will be in charge of maintaining communication within the university campus. This group will be mainly in charge of organizing resources along with Campus Life and the Colleges to ensure the most effective execution of the event.
External Communications Head by one individual in the organizational committee, this crew will be in charge of starting communication outside of the campus in the efforts of recruiting the best possible judges for the six events of the Arts Olympix. The main task of the committee is to recruit and accommodate the judges to our events.
Finance Crew Head by one individual in the organizational committee, this crew will be in charge of applying for funding and managing the funding for the event’s required resources and material
After-‐Party Crew Sub-‐committee in charge of looking after the party that follows the Arts Olympix. This may or may not be directly linked to the day-‐event.
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Introduction to Official AO Handbook 1. Just like the annual Fall Sports Olympix, the Arts Olympix aims to encapsulate different
activities, healthy competition, and team spirit to create an annual community-‐building event that celebrates some of the many different forms of art that are and can be manifested on campus – as an inter college art contest.
2. Like the Sports Olympix, this annual event is booked for the fourth weekend of the
semester (to foster the energies from the beginning of the semester for a successful event.)
3. Unlike other arts events and shows such as Dancestoned and Spotlight, this one rounds
up various arts into one day filled with different activities, mini-‐competitions, and a grand finale show.
4. The Arts Olympix Committee will be in charge of planning, organizing, and executing the
event. Registration to the event will be handled by the College Reps within the organizing committee.
5. The competitions composing the Arts Olympix will require prior preparation and organization. Below is an outline of the activities. Each will be gone over in detail in this handbook, including a description, rules, and rubric for participants to use. These are subject to change in next years.
6. Everything in this handbook that is marked with a “ (TBD) ” is yet to be determined or confirmed. This handbook is subject to change and will serve as a foundation for this project titled: Arts Olympix. The Organizational Committee reserves the right to flexibility for modifications to the preparation, regulations, execution, and logistics of the event.
7. This event shall adhere to all of the protocols and requirements from the Event Planning Handbook by Campus Life.
Outline
Day-‐Competitions 1. Dance Battle 2. Canvas Painting Race 3. Battle of the Bands 4. Fashion Show Face-‐Off
Night-‐Shows 1. Movie 2. Lip-‐Sync 3. Award Ceremony 4. After-‐Party
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Arts Olympix General Rules and Notes • No knowledge of the following rules is not an excuse for breaking them. • The four teams eligible to participate in the Arts Olympix 2013 are based on the four
residential college system. Participating teams are Team Krupp, Team Mercator, Team C3, and Team Nordmetall.
• College Masters, College Office Managers, RAs, and any sole individual that is directly affiliated to the college are allowed participation in the event, including alumni and graduate students.
• Graduate students enrolled at Jacobs University Bremen are also allowed to participate by affiliating themselves with any of the four teams listed above.
• Participation from all four teams (including graduates) in the form of representation is recommended.
o Representation will be decided within the college for each one of the activities with the guidance of the respective College Team Rep.
• An individual is limited to participate in a maximum of three competitions to encourage diverse participation.
• Undergraduate students participants are only allowed to participate (and compete for) the college that he/she is currently residing in, with the exception of participation in the movie competition.
• The Arts Olympix Committee encourages everyone to participate regardless of talents and special skills. The Arts Olympix attempts to create opportunities for everyone to participate in a different-‐themed competitive environment and in a healthy manner.
• This handbook will be made available via e-‐mail and Facebook for everyone to access, download, and print.
• Every college, with the help of the College Team Reps, reserves the right to organize its representation in the way that best fits for them. Organizational teams for each one of the mini-‐competitions are encouraged for more effective preparation.
• The Arts Olympix Committee suggests that every college have pep rallies and organizational meetings to effectively prepare the activities.
• The amount of points allotted to each activity is an indicator/recommendation of how much preparation should go into each one of the activities.
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• On the day of the event, none of the activities will overlap in time to allow for equal attendance and support. A schedule can be found at the end of the handbook.
• Every college office reserves the right to support their students in any way seen fit by the committee in the preparation of the competition. Participation by the college offices in this effort is completely voluntary.
• Every team for every activity shall be registered with their respective College Reps by Sunday, February 17, 2013. These lists will be brought to the organizational committee. These registrations can be made with the College Reps responsible for registration in each college:
o Krupp: Gabriela Guevara and Domingo Vivas o Mercator: Marie Ritter and Valeria Azorina o College 3: Alexandra Moroti and Akshun Abhimanyu o Nordmetall: Anja Djokic and Julianne Kube
• A member of the Arts Olympix Organizational Committee will collect all of the scores
from each activity and will calculate an average of these scores for that activity for a respective team. This number will count towards the final sum of points of the day.
• The average of scores of each activity for a single team will be added up (7 activities) to obtain a final score for the day. The highest number will receive the first place recognition.
• Anti-‐sportsmanship and the use of offensive language/behavior will not be tolerated, and anything perceived as offensive to the competitors through artistic manifestation in any of the competitions may lead to disqualification by the committee.
• Rubrics will be supplied with the point breakdown prior to the event and will be available for all the competitions to all the students in the hopes of improving transparency, fairness and healthy competition.
Important Dates (Arts Olympix 2013)
February 10 Arts Olympix Information Session Cheer-‐Up – 9 PM (Organized by the College Reps in each one of the colleges)
February 17 College Reps report the teams for each activity internally to the committee.
Feb. 17 -‐ 24 College Reps organize optional Pep Rallies or Cheer-‐Ups
February 22 Deadline for submission of The Third Eye contest Feb. 22 – March 2 Preparation / PR for Event March 2 Arts Olympix 2013 @ 9:30 AM in H3
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Battle of the Bands
Description The Battle of the Bands is a music-‐based competition that involves the formation of groups by each team and the presentation of a single musical number that will be judged upon to then have points awarded.
Location of Event MusicLab
Time of Event 14:00
Judges 1) Peter Schupp / 2) Juan Maria Solare / 3) Andressa Schröder / 4) Dorian Boncoeur
Maximum Points Possible 60
Rules • Every team needs to present a musical number in the form of a band or musical group
to qualify for judging. • Every group can have up to 10 members. • The members of the group must be residents or affiliates of the respective college. • Every group should utilize a minimum of 3 different instruments, excluding the vocal
instrument. • There are no restrictions on the genre or type of music played. Originality is
encouraged (see rubric.) • The length of performance should be from 2 to 7 minutes long. It may integrate many
different songs into a medley but there will only be one opportunity for stage time. • A standard set-‐up will be in place on stage, including a drum set, an electric guitar, a
bass, an acoustic guitar, 1-‐2 vocal microphones, and a keyboard. o These instruments can be used but are not limited to these. o Tuning of all bands must take place starting at TBD, one hour before the event.
This will minimize set-‐up time during the actual event. Sound checks are to be done at this time and are mandatory for all participating teams.
o Any additional instruments, amplifiers, cables, and microphones must be supplied by the students.
• The Arts Olympix Committee reserves the right to disqualify any band that is observed to be behaving in an uncompetitive or inappropriate manner.
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Battle of the Bands -‐ Judging Rubric Name of college: ______________________________________________ __________________________________
Poor (0-‐2)
Mediocre (3-‐5)
Good (6-‐8)
Excellent (9-‐10)
Score (out of 10)
Adherence to Rules (0-‐5)
N/A N/A N/A N/A /5
Planning /
Preparedness (0-‐10)
Lack of planning altogether, too much improvisation, bad
timing, no knowledge of lyrics, etc. Not prepared.
Little planning and readiness. Lack of performance material and
dynamics, tuning takes too long.
Evidence of some planning. Some
signs of improvisation. Lack of time management.
Clear evidence of planning (i.e. choreogr., costumes, stage-‐props.) Tuning was timely, and band started on time. Readiness and evidence of rehearsal.
/10
Originality (0-‐10)
Lack of originality in performance and
song choice.
Not very unique and quite plain,
showing very little originality.
Somewhat original. Degree of uniqueness is
present.
Unique material and song choice(s.) Band looks
original. Changes up the original song or presents
an original.
/10
Interface with Audience (0-‐10)
Interface with audience is flat. No interaction and lack of confidence by the
band.
Lack of stage personality, little verbal and physical interaction with
audience.
Medium amounts of
verbal interaction and physical
interaction. Some confidence.
Good verbal interaction with audience.
Introduction of band and song. Physical interaction (i.e.eye contact & waving).
Very confident in performance.
/10
Quality of
Performance (0-‐15)
Lack of stage presence and poor performance of instruments to
create music. (0-‐4)
Stage presence is lacking and performance quality is
mediocre. (5-‐9)
Band plays well, uses instruments well and shows confidence. (10-‐
12)
High confidence and competence. Choice of song was good for group,
as well as use of instruments. Excellent
stage presence and sound. (13-‐15)
/15
Presentation
(0-‐10)
Not appropriate presentation. Attitudes were
negative or neutral.
Lack of entertainment
factor but attitude is positive and appearance is somewhat appropriate.
Positive attitude and appropriate appearance are presented.
Good attitude by the band and appropriate outward appearance. Band was
entertaining and showed sportsmanship
/10
TOTAL SUM
/60
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Canvas Painting Race Description Focusing on visual arts and painting, this competition is a form of race between teams of representatives in filling a “canvas” with paint. Five minutes before the event, all teams will receive a general artistic stimulus. These will be used to paint a large “canvas” in a limited time span while an audience watches the canvases come to life. Each work of art will then be judged. During the time that the canvases are being painted, ambient music will be played and drinks will be served. At the end of the 30 minutes, every team will have up to 5 minutes to explain their painting to the audience and the judges.
Location of Event H3
Time of Event 11:00
Judges 1) Jana Kleineberg / 2) Doris Mosbach / 3) Michele Broszio / 4) Elias Lory
Maximum Points Possible 45
Rules • There can be a maximum of 4 representatives (painters) per team for their respective
“canvas team.” • The race will last for 30 minutes (the canvases will be relatively large in size, hence
the extended time for this mini competition.) After 30 minutes, all brushes must be off the canvas. If not, the team will be automatically disqualified.
• The judges will release the artistic stimulus 5 minutes before the clock starts running to allow for improvised brainstorming and communication between canvas team members.
• At the end of the 30 minutes, every team will have a maximum of 5 minutes to explain their painting to the audience and the judges.
• There should be absolutely no interaction between the artists and the audience. Artists may interact among each other and the audience among themselves, but not between artists and audience. This will be made clear by the judges.
• There are no restrictions on the type of painting or content. All teams will be supplied with the same quantity and quality of materials.
• The Arts Olympix Committee reserves the right to disqualify any team that is observed to be behaving in an uncompetitive or inappropriate manner.
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Canvas Painting Race -‐ Judging Rubric Name of college: ______________________________________________ __________________________________
Beginning (0-‐2)
Developing (3-‐5)
Accomplished (6-‐8)
Exemplary (9-‐10)
Score
Adherence to
Stimulus (0-‐10)
The stimulus provided for the
work of art was not reflected in the
painting.
Stimulus was only somewhat present and relevant to the
work.
Stimulus was clearly present in
the work.
Team encompassed and integrated stimulus
provided very well into work.
/10
Visual Appeal
(0-‐15)
Painting looks poor and the colors are in dissonance. (0-‐4)
The use of colors and style is
mediocre and has relatively little
visual appeal. (5-‐9)
The painting is appealing and style shows skill.
(10-‐12)
The painting is attractive and has great visual
appeal. Excellent color combinations and painting style show high degrees of
skill. (13-‐15)
/15
Teamwork &
Effort (0-‐10)
Lack of teamwork and little effort is
evident.
Mediocre degree of effort showed, little to medium
amount of teamwork.
Team showed cooperation and good effort.
Painting team worked well together and
communicated throughout the painting process. Showed high levels of
effort.
/10
Explanation of
Work (0-‐10)
Lack of relevance and originality.
Explanation is mediocre and only
somewhat relevant. Low
levels of creativity.
Explanation was good and relevant.
Creativity and originality present.
Explanation following work showed thought,
coherence, and high levels of creativity and
originality. Showed relevance to stimulate.
/10
TOTAL SUM
/45
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Fashion Show Face-‐Off
Description The Fashion Show Face-‐Off is a competition that aims to celebrate creativity through fashion and design. With listed categories, every college will come up with unique outfits to model in a judged fashion show. The criteria will include originality, personality, and quality of outfit.
Location of Event MusicLab
Time of Event 15:45
Judges 1) Cornelia Lohmann / 2) Vera von Ahlen / 3) Yasmin Boeck / 4) Stefan Meichau
Maximum Points Possible 60
Rules • There will be 6 categories, from which every college will have to make a couple of
outfits to be modeled (male and female outfits.) • The six categories to be modeled are:
o The Lady and the Tramp o You Are What You Eat o Anything But Clothes (Recycled) o Mythological Pairs o Young vs. Old o College Spirit Couture
• The six categories will form part of one college team fashion collection. o They will be presented one after the other in an order that is up to the
respective team. o Every team will be allotted up to 16 minutes to present their collection (using
the categories listed above) in any way they choose. o A team should include a moderator(s) to present their collection.
• Every team must provide the music they wish played during the collection in one MP3 track. This should be turned in to the Arts Olympix Committee by March 1st, 2013 at 11:59 PM to: [email protected]
• The outfits must be supplied by members of the college. These may be constructed with materials from one’s own closet. The Arts Olympix Committee encourages creativity through use of own materials.
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• A panel of judges will use the criteria and rubrics to judge the modeling of each category by each college using a rubric.
• Every category should have two models. • The categories listed above are open to interpretation by the respective team, using
the name of the category as a prompt. • The College Spirit Couture category should be an artistic expression and
interpretation of the respective college’s spirit and identity. o The best presentation will accrue the highest number of points. o This category is open to original performances and/or choreographies and
music should also be supplied. o This category will be judged by the four College Office Managers (TBD).
• The Arts Olympix Committee reserves the right to disqualify any team that is observed to be behaving in an uncompetitive or inappropriate manner.
Fashion Show Face-‐Off – Judging Rubric (1) Name of college: ______________________________________________
Criteria for each Category • Originality: For complete points the costumes must be outstanding, something that
catches everyone's attention.
• Personality: For complete points the couple or performers must demonstrate that they are into the characters they are representing.
• Quality: For complete points the costumes must show time and consideration. Costumes that seem to be put together at the last minute, for example, should be awarded fewer points.
• A maximum of 4 extra points can be awarded (at the judge’s discretion) on the basis of the entire presentation of the collection (including moderation.) This will be added to the total sum of points accumulated for the six categories.
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Fashion Show Face-‐Off – Judging Rubric (2)
Categories Beginning (0-‐2)
Developing (3-‐5)
Accomplished (6-‐8)
Exemplary (9-‐10)
Score
The Lady and the Tramp (0-‐10)
(see criteria above.) (see criteria above.)
(see criteria above.)
(see criteria above.) /10
Anything but
Clothes (Recycled)
(0-‐9)
(see criteria above.) (see criteria above.)
(see criteria above.)
(see criteria above.) /10
Mythological Pairs (0-‐10)
(see criteria above.) (see criteria above.)
(see criteria above.)
(see criteria above.) /10
Young vs. Old
(0-‐10)
(see criteria above.) (see criteria above.)
(see criteria above.)
(see criteria above.) /10
You Are What You Eat (0-‐10)
(see criteria above.) (see criteria above.)
(see criteria above.)
(see criteria above.) /10
College Spirit
Couture (0-‐10)
(see criteria above.) (see criteria above.)
(see criteria above.)
(see criteria above.) + College spirit and identity
are very well encapsulated.
/10
Extra Collection Points
(1) (2) (3) (4) /4
TOTAL SUM /60
NOTE: Please use and keep in mind the criteria above when judging all categories.
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Dance Battle Description The Dance Battle takes dancers from each of the colleges for an improvised dance “battle.” In the form of a fast-‐moving mini tournament, dancers will compete in front of a panel of judges in quick dance-‐offs as they move on to semi-‐finals. A list of about 30 songs will be published for the dancers to listen to beforehand but they won’t know which song they will get.
Location of Event H3
Time of Event 10:00
Judges 1) Eva Schimmele / 2) Gallo Suarez / 3) Precious Nhlamulo Mtimkhulu / 4) TBD
Maximum Points Possible 45
Rules • Every team must create a team of four people to represent them in the dance battle
tournament. • This tournament will encapsulate several genres of music, particularly hip hop,
contemporary/ballet, oriental, Bollywood, Latin. o A list of songs will be released 2 nights before the day of the battle. This will
allow the team to prepare beforehand, if they wish. • Every dance-‐off of the tournament will involve four, minute-‐long songs.
o The battle will last a total of four minutes; after all four songs are covered. o Both dancer opponents dance to the same song at the same time, and the
judges make a consensus on the winner after a short deliberation. o The team is allowed to swap in and swap out team members from the dance
arena, but a dancer is only allowed two different sets in one dance battle. o There should only be two dancers at a time in the dance arena (one per team.)
• Judges will use criteria, and not a rubric to determine the winning team of each round. It is up their undisputable judgment and discretion to decide the winners.
• Each team will be given two opportunities to battle in the first round. • Using the tournament scheme, first, second, third, and fourth place will be
determined. • First place will be awarded 45 points, second place will be awarded 30 points, third
place will be awarded 20 points, and fourth place will be awarded 20 points. • The Arts Olympix Committee reserves the right to disqualify any team that is
observed to be behaving in an uncompetitive or inappropriate manner.
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Dance Battle Mini Tournament Structure
Judging Criteria • Content:
o Variety of dance positions, movements and combinations. o Difficulty of dance movements. o Uniqueness or originality of dance movements. o Continuity of dance movements.
• Execution: o Basic pattern, rhythm, and timing between partners and to the selected music. o Proper performance of footwork, hand, head, arm, and body movements
through dance variations; to include balance and centering through executed movements.
o Alignment, framework, and proper presentation of dance positions; to include smoothness of follow–through from movement into position.
• Style o Artistic interpretation and choreography projected through dance movement. o Attentiveness, enthusiasm, enjoyment of the dance. o Flair and accent of dance movement, mood.
Further judging and/or evaluation are up to the judge’s personal discretion. The judge’s sole function is to determine the winner of each dance-off by judging each team’s performance as a whole.
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Dance Battle 2013 – List of Potential Battle Songs Bollywood Latin Hip Hop Contemporary /
Ballet Oriental
Mundiya tu bachke rahi
Hasta que salga el sol-‐ Don Omar
Harlem shake – Baauer
Comptine d'Un Autre Éte
Nancy Ajram -‐ Akhsmak Ah / ععججررمم ننااننسسىى -‐ آآهه أأخخااصصممكك
Punjabiyan di Shaan Vakhri
Una Vaina Loca-‐ Fuego
The motto – Drake
A thousand Years-‐ Christina Perri
Shik * Shak * Shok ششررققىى ررققصص 0:45
Mahi ve kal ho na ho
Burn it up-‐ Wisin y Yandel ft. Nelly
No hands – Waka Flocka Flame
Fix You-‐ Coldplay Amr Diab -‐ Nour El Ain "Habiby"
Chamak challo Suave (Kiss Me)-‐ J.Lo ft. Pitbull
So dope – New Boyz
The Story by Brandi Carlile
Beats Antique – Egyptic
Sheila ki jawani Verano Azul-‐ Juan Magan
Right thurr – Chingy
Iris -‐ Goo Goo Dolls
Nancy Ajram -‐ Ah We Noss / ننااننسسىى ععججررمم -‐ ووننصص آآهه
It’s the time to disco
Carita Bonita-‐ Pee Wee
Work it – Missy Elliot
Bluebird-‐ Sara Bareilles
Ihab Tawfik -‐ Allah 3elik ya sidi
Desi girl Follow The Leader-‐ Jennifer Lopez
4 minutes – Madonna ft. J. Timberlake
When you look me in the eyes-‐ The Jonas Brothers
Rola Saad A'n Eznak Ya Ma'alem
Subha hone na dain Besitos de Colores Money in the bank – Swizz Beats
Drehz -‐ Heart Cry Nancy Ajram -‐ Mo'gabah 0
Maujan he maujan Como tu no hay dos-‐ DJ Buxxi
Look at me now – Chris Brown
Grenade (Acoustic Version)-‐ Bruno Mars
Ahmed Adaweya -‐ Bent El Sultan / ععددووييةة أأححممدد -‐ ببننتت االلسسللططاانن
Desi thumka Taboo-‐ Don Omar Black and Yellow (Fast beat)
Everytime – Britney Spears
Hakim – Efred
Kajra re Bailando Por ahi-‐ Pitbull
Mercy – Kanye West
Chasing pavements – Adele
Arabian bellydance music
Hasta que salga el sol-‐ Don Omar
Play the guitar – B.o.B.
Bleeding love – Leona Lewis
Una Vaina Loca-‐ Fuego
Rich & flexing – Ludacris
How to save a life – The Fray
Burn it up-‐ Wisin y Yandel ft. Nelly
Clique – Kanye West
Part of me – Meghan Tonjes
Suave (Kiss Me)-‐ J.Lo ft. Pitbull
Hot thing -‐ Usher Jar of Hearts – Glee Version
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Movie Description Part of the Arts Olympix Finale, the movie takes on many more points towards the final score and involves more participation. The movie will be a themed short-‐film with a defined universal criteria that will encourage large amounts of creativity action. Every movie will premiere during the finale of the Arts Olympix where it will be judged and evaluated according to a rubric.
Location of Event Cinema
Time of Event 19:30
Judges 1) Thorsten Thiel / 2) Sigrid Jürgens / 3) Boris Riesenberg / 4) Elizabeth Reick
Maximum Points Possible 80
Rules • A minimum of 5 actors/actresses must appear in the movie.
o There must be at least one of each gender in the movie. o There must be at least one university staff member appearing in the movie.
• The movie must be between 6-‐8 minutes in length. It will be cut off at the 8th minute. • The movie file must be submitted to the Arts Olympix Committee, due at 11:59 PM on
Friday, March 1st, 2013. The movie file should be sent electronically to: [email protected].
• The movie must revolve around one of the following themes (or a combination.): o Post Apocalypse o Impossible Love
• The movie must have at least one scene filmed on campus and at least one scene filmed off campus.
• The movie must have the phrase “I got 99 problems but a ____(fill in the blank)___ ain’t one” somewhere in its dialogue.
• The movie must have at least one dialogue in a language that is not English. • The movie must have at least one potato in it. • Following the criteria listed above is necessary to obtain full points. • Teams will be allowed to submit a trailer that will then be uploaded to Vimeo for an
additional 10 bonus points. This trailer must be sent to [email protected] by Wednesday, February 27th, 2013 at 11:59 PM.
• In the interest of openness, and fostering creativity, the Arts Olympix team will accept any film submission provided by a college team. However the makers of the film agree
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that they are aware of legal restrictions, and that if their film does not meet them they shall not be able to take their film public, and if they choose to do so they do it at their own risk. The Arts Olympix team reserves the right to not upload and make public any film that is in violation of legal restrictions.
• The Arts Olympix Committee reserves the right to disqualify any team that is observed to be behaving in an uncompetitive or inappropriate manner.
Movie – Judging Rubric Name of college: ______________________________________________ __________________________________
Beginning (0-‐5)
Developing (6-‐10)
Accomplished (11-‐15)
Exemplary (16-‐20)
Score
Adherence to Requirements
(0-‐20)
Little to none of the requirements were
fulfilled.
Only some requirements were
fulfilled.
The majority of requirements were fulfilled.
All requirements were fulfilled. The theme is clearly observed in the
movie.
/20
Storyline / Originality (0-‐20)
Movie lacks a good storyline and
originality. Poor development.
Storyline and levels of originality are
mediocre.
Storyline and dialogue show creativity.
Characters are somewhat developed.
Storyline shows a logical and creative flow of ideas
and events. Original dialogue, use of
characters, and method of compliance with requirements.
/20
Acting / Effort
(0-‐20)
Poor acting and lack of effort to produce a quality movie.
Acting and degree of effort are of mediocre level.
Acting is good and there is effort by the students to
produce a good film.
Acting is taken seriously and students demonstrate capabilities in their roles.
There is an evident presence in effort to make
a good short film.
/20
Technical Aspects (0-‐20)
Technical aspects of the film are poor and take away from the other aspects of the
film.
Technical aspects are mediocre.
Technical aspects of the film are
good.
Lighting, quality, sound, music, etc all compliment the purposes of the movie. The aspects amount to an excellent direction and
production.
/20
TOTAL SUM
/80
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Lip-‐Sync Description The finale of the Arts Olympix and most important presentation will be of a lip sync, which integrates many different arts into one show. It consists of the usage of various song clips and recordings into a performance. Using songs and recorded voices, a storyline is built and performed, where actors and actresses (through costumes, props, and choreography) tell a story by simply moving their lips. It is simply a mini musical that is lip-‐synched.
Location of Event Cinema
Time of Event 21:00
Judges 1) Thorsten Thiel / 2) Sigrid Jürgens / 3) Boris Riesenberg / 4) Elizabeth Reick
Maximum Points Possible 100
Rules • The lip-‐sync presentation can be a maximum of 9 minutes long. • The performance must include at least one male and at least one female. • The Arts Olympix Committee suggests a minimum of 7 performers / people involved
in the organization and preparation of the performance. o There is no limit to the number of participants.
• The lip sync presentation must have a back-‐track for the entire presentation. There may be no live music or significant sounds created in the presentation. This backtrack should be sent latest on March 1st, 2013 at 11:59 PM to [email protected].
• There must be at least 4 different songs included in the back track. • If dialogue is to be used, it must be all pre-‐recorded into the back track. • The lip sync must follow a coherent story line. • There must be at least one song in a language that is not English. • There must be at least one choreographed group number included in the lip sync. • Lights and sound will be standardized across the evening, a lip sync group may not
require for special lighting and/or sound enhancements to their performance. • On the day of the event, a beamer will be made available to project sceneries and/or
certain lightings on the stage. Movie formats are encouraged to be able to include both backtrack and sceneries. It should be sent to [email protected] on March 1st, 2013 at 11:59 PM.
• The Arts Olympix Committee reserves the right to disqualify any team that is observed to be behaving in an uncompetitive or inappropriate manner.
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Lip-‐Sync – Judging Rubric Name of college: ______________________________________________ __________________________________
Categories Beginning (0-‐5)
Developing (6-‐10)
Accomplished (11-‐15)
Exemplary (16-‐20)
Score
Adherence to Requirements
(0-‐20)
The lip sync does not adhere appropriate to the rules listed.
The lip sync adheres to some of the requirements listed in the rules.
The lip sync adheres to most
of the requirements listed in the
rules.
The lip-‐sync adheres to all of the requirements listed in the rules (ie time limits, participation number, etc.)
/20
Originality and
Storyline (0-‐20)
The storyline is not clear and there is a lack of originality
and clarity.
The lip sync showcases a somewhat
understandable story lines and lower degrees of
originality.
The lip sync showcases a coherent storyline.
The lip sync integrates all its factors to create an original, creative, and coherent storyline. It should also be a clear
storyline.
/20
Use of
Costumes and Props (0-‐20)
Few or no props and costumes are used in the performance.
Some props are used in the performance
Many costumes and props are used in the
performance.
The use of costumes and props is effectively
employed to compliment the lip-‐sync, storyline, and
music.
/20
Music and
Choreography (0-‐20)
Lack of choreography and appropriate music.
The music choice is somewhat good and mediocre
even. Choreography is missing or present in low quality.
The music choice is good and
relevant. Good choreography is
present.
Excellent choice of, variety, and order of music. The lip sync
employed a very good choreography.
/20
Judge’s
Discretion (0-‐20)
This space is reserved for to the judge’s discretion for
bonus points deemed worthy.
This space is reserved for to the judge’s discretion for bonus points deemed worthy.
This space is reserved for to the judge’s discretion for bonus points
deemed worthy.
This space is reserved for to the judge’s discretion for bonus points deemed
worthy.
/20
TOTAL SUM /100
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The Third Eye – Photography Contest
Description In the form of a contest, this event celebrates the photographer as an individual, not affiliated to a college.
Location of Event Facebook
Deadline for Submissions February 22, 2013
“Liking” Cut-‐Off Date March 1st, 2013, 23:59
Judges Likes on Facebook
Prize A very cool and creative one. ;o)
Rules • Each participant can submit only one image file. • Basic editing is allowed:
o Contrasts, Saturation, Hue, Sharpness, and Cropping is allowed. • The photos will be submitted to the Arts Olympix Committee by the specified deadline
at [email protected]. • The photos will be uploaded in an anonymous way on the Arts Olympix 2013 fan
page. • The theme of the contest is “Tell Me a Story” – the photo should be able to tell a
story on its own. • The photo should not be shared/promoted on Facebook. If a contestant promoted or
shares his/her picture on Facebook, he/she will be disqualified from the contest. Someone else may not promote the picture either through any means.
• The photo should be accompanied by a title (not a caption!) • This contest is open to any member of the Jacobs community. • Authors of submissions will be revealed when the contest is over. • The winner will be determined by the number of likes on the Arts Olympix Facebook
page. He/She will be recognized at the awards ceremony at the end of the day.
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Day Schedule: March 2nd, 2013
9:30 AM Breakfast @ H3.
10:00 AM
Dance Battle (10:00 – 11:00 ) See event description above for detailed breakdown.
11:30 AM Canvas Painting Race (11:30 – 12:30) • 11:30 – 11:35:
o Judges sit down, introduce themselves and the stimulus phrase. • 11:35 – 12:05:
o Painting from the teams, people watch and enjoy beverages and snacks. • 12:05 – 12:30:
o Explanation by the painters, and closing of event.
12:30 PM Lunch
1:00 PM Battle of the Bands Sound Check and Tuning (13:00 – 14:00 ) • 13:00 – 13:15:
o Krupp College tunes and practices. • 13:15 – 13:30:
o Nordmetall College tunes and practices. • 13:30 – 13:45:
o College III tunes and practices. • 13:45 – 14:00:
o Mercator College tunes and practices.
2:00 PM
Battle of the Bands (14:00 – 15:30 ) • 14:00 – 14:10:
o Bands set up, people settle in, judges take their place. • 14:15 -‐14:25
o First gig: Krupp College, 3 minutes set-‐up and tuning. • 14:30 – 14:40
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o Second gig: College Nordmetall, 3 minutes set-‐up and tuning. • 14:45 – 14:55
o Third gig: College III, 3 minutes set-‐up and tuning. • 15:00 – 15:10
o Fourth gig: Mercator College, 3 minutes set-‐up and tuning. • 15:10 – 15:15
o Moderator ends event and invites everyone to the finale in the cinema at 19:30.
-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐Intermission Cheer-‐Up!-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐
3:45 PM
Fashion Show Face-‐Off (15:45 – 17:40) • 15:45 – 16:00:
o Judges sit down. Light/sound check. Hosts introduce the event, the judges, and the categories.
• 16:00 – 16:20 o Mercator College presents collection.
• 16:25 – 16:45: o Krupp College presents collection.
• 16:50 – 17:10 o College Nordmetall presents collection
• 17:15 – 17:35: o College 3 presents collection.
• 17:35 – 17:40 o Closing statements, invitation to Finale.
17:40 – 19:30 Dinner