International Academy of Aquatic Art

The International Academy of Aquatic Art (or IAAA) is a nonprofit organization for the development of swimming as a performing art. It is based in the United States.

International Academy of Aquatic Art (or IAAA)
Founded1955
FounderMary Derosier, Richard J. Dodson, Henry Gundling
TypeCultural organisation
FocusOrganization for the development of swimming as a performing art.
Location
  • USA
Area served
United States
Websitewww.aquatic-art.org

History

The IAAA was founded in 1955 by former synchronized swimmers from the USA in order to develop swimming as artistic, creative and non-competitive activity.[1] The incorporators were:

  • Mary Derosier: former national chairman of the Amateur Athletic Union, which was one of the first organizations who invented synchronized swimming competitions[2]
  • Richard J. Dodson: in 1951 publisher of the first magazine for synchronized swimming, the Synchronized Swimmer[3]
  • Henry Gundling: synchronized swimming coach, manager and husband of synchronized swimmer Beulah Gundling

The IAAA regularly organizes festivals throughout the United States and Canada presenting different swimming performances with choreographies for soloists, duets and groups. The IAAA swimmers are called aquatic artists. The style of the performances, which are shown by women and men as well, is a mixture of synchronized swimming, water ballet, ornamental, rhythmic and scientific swimming. In most cases the swimmers use different forms of art music for the programs presented at the IAAA festivals. Bert Hubbard, one of the first male synchronized swimmers from the USA, is a board member of the IAAA and documents its history and artistic activities.

Further reading

  • Robert E. Kerper: Splash - Aquatic Shows from A to Z (published by Michael Zielinsky, 2002)[4]
  • Dawn Pawson Bean: Synchronized swimming - An American history. McFarland Company Inc. Publishers, Jefferson (North Carolina, USA), 2005.[5]
  • Johanna Beisteiner: Art music in figure skating, synchronized swimming and rhythmic gymnastics/Kunstmusik in Eiskunstlauf, Synchronschwimmen und rhythmischer Gymnastik. PhD thesis, Vienna 2005, (German). Contains information about the International Academy of Aquatic Art (Chapter I/2: History of synchronized swimming, pages 40–55).[6]
gollark: <@498244879894315027> Firstly, you could probably try and just use some existing packet capture tool for this. Secondly, seriously what are you doing?! I don't think trying to replay IP or Ethernet packets (whatever gets sent to the network card) has any chance of working to meddle with a higher-level service.
gollark: I suspect it's whatever you're doing to bptr after each broadcast. That looks dubious and the log says it's a "loadprohibited" error, which sounds like something memory.
gollark: I don't think this affects *me* very badly, since my configured disk encryption all runs in software without any weird TPM interaction, I don't use "secure" boot, and it seems like this would need physical access or unrealistically good timing, but it's still not very good.
gollark: I wonder if AMD's PSP has similar holes. In any case, they should really just not be sticking subprocessors with closed-source non-user-modifiable firmware and root access into every CPU.
gollark: I don't think there's a reason they couldn't other than bad performance. Which might require you to turn down quality, increase bitrate, decrease resolution/framerate or whatever else.

References

  1. History on the official website of the IAAA
  2. History Archived 2012-07-11 at the Wayback Machine on the official website of USA Synchronized Swimming. 2010.
  3. Development. of different forms of artistic swimming on the official website of Federation Internationale de natation (FINA).
  4. 2009 Buck Dawson Authors Award. Information about the book by R.E. Kerper on the official website of the International Swimming Hall of Fame. April 18, 2018.
  5. E-Book on Google website. Contains information about Bert Hubbard on page 51.
  6. Article on the dissertation in the online catalog of the Austrian National Library. (German and English)
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