Waiheke 100 Day Project
Meeting Thursdays 6:30pm – 7:30pm
20 March – 19 June
Standard Price $185
Community Services Card $166.50
Youth (16-24) $92.50
The Waiheke 100 Day Project is a celebration of daily creative activity. You will choose one small and simple creative act to perform each day for 100 days.
Course Description
The Waiheke 100 Day Project is a celebration of daily creative activity. You will choose one small and simple creative act to perform each day for 100 days.
Originally, the 100 Day Project was the brainchild of a Yale graphic design professor, Michael Bierut. From 2006-2011, he assigned his students to choose a design operation to repeat every day for 100 days. .
It became an international event via Instagram at #the100dayproject and the online community that runs the project each year.
The Waiheke 100 Day Project has the added dimensions of in-person community and support and the opportunity to show your work throughout the project in the purpose built “100 Day Project Gallery” at Waiheke Adult Learning.
There will be an introductory workshop to help you choose your project and ongoing weekly gatherings to compare notes, learn, curate and support each other and your work.
The project gives anyone, regardless of age, ability or background, the framework and permission to get creative. Whether you are a professional artist with a regular practice or some one who would just like to be “a bit more creative,” if you are willing to do the work, the 100 day project promises a creative boost and a few surprises along the way.
Project Faciltator
Tracey Sullivan
Tracey Sullivan is a reader, a writer and a runner, a poet, a maker and an editor, a parent of grown children and a creative educator. She has a diploma in publishing, and a post graduate diploma in teaching. She has recently completed a creative and critical Masters thesis in poetry. Her work has appeared in digital and print form in journals and anthologies, and on the radio in the Netherlands. A chapbook of her poetry, a place on earth, was published in Singapore by Math Paper Press. After many years abroad, she returned to Aotearoa New Zealand in 2019.