Professor Claudine Bigelow shared experiences that have influenced her life as a musician and as an artist.

Professor Claudine Bigelow shared “Unlocking Creative Potential Through Collaboration.” When musicians discuss collaboration, they often refer to performing with fellow instrumentalists. While working with other musicians is important for School of Music Professor Claudine Bigelow

music from the era for the participants. She was delighted when she finished her performance and the art professors invited her to stay and engage in creating art about the experience. Bigelow created 26 quilts to reflect on her experience studying the women’s suffrage movement. Her art was featured alongside other work inspired by the trip in an exhibit called “Bee in the Bonnet

“I realized that art has deeply influenced my creative work as a musician,” Bigelow said. “From my art and design fronts, I’ve learned so much about process. Deeper discussions behind the work are extremely important to what artists do. I am seeing things with new eyes. Studying visual art has helped open my eyes to see things more clearly in the architecture of music.” Bigelow also discussed her association with music professors Monte Belknap, Alex Woods and Michelle Kesler in the Deseret Quartet. Working with the quartet allowed Bigelow to explore music on new complex levels and learn how to work closely and uniformly with others. Bigelow included the quartet at the end of her remarks to demonstrate the results of the collaboration.

Bigelow concluded with an emphasis on the importance of including God in her artistic process. “Collaborating with Heavenly Father strengthens me as an individual. It helps me be brave beyond what I think I can do.” Bigelow also shared the words of painter Robert Henri, “When the artist is alive in any person, whatever his kind of work may be, he becomes an inventive, searching, daring, self-expressive creature. He becomes interesting to other people. He disturbs, upsets, enlightens and opens ways for better understanding. Where those who are not artists are trying to close a book, he opens it and shows there are still more pages.” “I stand before you in gratitude,” Bigelow said, “for how these collaborations have made more pages possible inside me, and I can feel that there are many more to come.”