rock lives. find a rock, and pick it up. study it, think about it, understand it. give it a personality. once you know the rock, look to the audience, and (in your preferred medium of art) perform a story of a rock. (week two.)
fish pastry. remember something material from the past that you want or desire. nothing expensive, just a small treat or trinket of sorts. think hard about it. create something in memory of that object if possible, after the performance, get that object. (week three.)
sisyphus. create something that doesn't take long to create (a poem, a drawing, a knot). Before you finish, destroy the creation from the scraps of the once-created, create the same thing again. repeat until you physically can't or you give up. (week four.)
hive singularity. in a space that is big enough to permit movement, you (and a group of friends) are to dance and make sounds in a slow, ethereal manner. make sure to move as a group, and understand that all your contributions as an individuals contribute to the together of the hive. (week five.)
transmogrification. start in a space that was built without the intention of holding art. look at the object (including the space itself) as art. when looking at objects, mutter "this is art", and repeat until you believe what you say. finish when you are in an art gallery. (week six.)
pish. communicate verbally without language. the language will turn into music naturally, do not force it. have a conversation. the piece ends when language is spoken. (week seven.)
eulogy. write a eulogy for something not physical, but gone nonetheless. gather a group of people, some who may have done the same thing. one by one, give a eulogy to the non-physical. make sure to reflect when speaking, and to empathise when listening. when everyone has finished, take a minute of silence. once the minute is done, the piece ends. (week eight.)