Sonia Sanchez |
POSTPONED DUE TO INCLEMENT WEATHER
Hosted by the W.E.B. Du Bois Department of Afro-American Studies at UMass Amherst, the event is free and open to the public. Doors open at 6:15 pm.
For further information, click here.
Sonia Sanchez |
niv Acosta (photo by Nicole Whelan) |
niv Acosta and Yessenia Acosta in i shot denzel (photo courtesy of New York Live Arts) |
Gina Gibney (photo: Christopher Duggan © Gina Gibney Dance, Inc.) |
This is our space. It’s a safe space. And here is our opportunity to share our stories and look forward to what may be.
Dr. Anita Gonzalez Professor of Theater and Drama University of Michigan School of Music, Theatre and Dance (photo courtesy of Dr. Gonzalez) |
International dancer/choreographer, Sarita Allen, sits down with legendary choreographer/dancer, Dianne McIntyre, in a candid conversation about their experiences throughout their careers. This program will also feature excerpts from Dianne McIntyre’s repertoire.For more information and to make a reservation, click here.
The National Women's Studies Association seeks a panelist for its 2014 conference.
We will most likely be submitting under Theme 5: Creating Justice, and we are particularly interested in abstracts about 20th century American dance forms.
If you are interested, please send an email with a brief description of your research to Kendra Unruh, PhD at kunruh@dcccd.edu.
Top: Kyle Clark, Bottom: Ryan Cliett of Rennie Harris Puremovement (photos by Brian Mengini) |
Carrie Mae Weems A Broad and Expansive Sky—Ancient Rome (from Roaming), 2006 Chromogenic print, 73 x 61 inches (185.4 x 154.9 cm) Private collection, Portland, Oregon © Carrie Mae Weems |
I took a tip from Frida who from her bed painted incessantly--beautifully while Diego scaled the scaffolds to the very top of the world. -- from Weems's text for Not Manet's Type (1997)Weems claims space for African and Afro-Atlantic realities, for people of African descent, particularly women, and our families and communities within society and its art.
The landscape of dance presentation in NYC has undergone a dynamic shift over the last five years. New spaces for showing work have opened. Museums and galleries are regularly programming performance, and several venues that present multiple artistic genres have become specifically interested in presenting dance. This conversation, with a sampling of voices from these venues, will create a layered portrait of the constantly shifting field of dance presentation and examine its new directions. How do these shifts in presenting spaces and structures address the current condition of the arts and artists in NYC, how do they affect the way artists make work and how that work is seen?
The Collage Collective’s first group show features an array of collage and mixed media work. These seven women cut, rip, shred, glue, stitch, tape and pin two- and three-dimensional pieces. They’ve been upcycling and recycling, hunting and gathering, scavenging and hoarding alone and together since meeting in a weekly art class in Manhattan three years ago. The results: diverse, colorful, exciting, thought-provoking and thoughtful expressions ripped from today’s headlines and their deepest desires.
Paulus Berensohn |
OurGoods, New York Live Arts, and Fourth Arts Block are proud to offer Downtown Dance Learning Circles.
Want to meet with a group of peers once a month (4 meetings over 4 months) to discuss challenges and possibilities in your life and work? All movement, dance, theater, and performance artists can apply, and artists will be placed in peer groups based on years working as a generative artist. Apply for this opportunity by February 14.Click here for complete information and a link to the DDLC application form.
The magnificent Angélique Kidjo performing at Rockefeller Park, NYC (c)2013, Eva Yaa Asantewaa |
Jaamil Olawale Kosoko (photo courtesy of Kelly Strayhorn Theater) |
Part performance theory, part vocalization, part group movement/thinking exploration, students will investigate themes of trans performance states, sensitivity, risk-taking, eroticism, exhibitionism, bad behavior, and vocal sounding as a means of healing the self through live performance. Together we watch and support each other by finding, exposing, and attempting to break open previously locked/hidden pathways of emotional, physical and visual performativity. Students are encouraged to bring props and costumes to the workshop to which they have personal meanings, but are willing to let be destroyed.
Kosoko with composer-musician Pauline Oliveros (photo courtesy of Jaamil Olawale Kosoko) |
by Margalit Fox, The New York Times, January 18, 2014
Students from Ailey's New Directions Choreography Lab rehearsing a work-in-progress by Nia Love (c)2014, Eva Yaa Asantewaa |
Top and bottom: Ailey/Fordham BFA students at Wednesday's rehearsal (c)2014, Eva Yaa Asantewaa |
Design by Nia Love (c)2014, Eva Yaa Asantewaa |
Dance artist Paloma McGregor |
An evening with the founders of Ase Dance Theatre Collective, Dance Diaspora Collective and The Body Ecology Performance Ensemble, who have developed potent, virtuosic performance practices rooted in cultivating collectivism. In a field that is so often individualistic or product-driven, how and why are Rashida Bumbray, Ebony Noelle Golden and Adia Tamar Whitaker making contemporary performance work aligned with community building? Join us in experiencing their work and vision.This event is free and open to the public. A photo ID is required to enter NYU buildings.
Gillian Chadsey in WaxFactory's #aspellforfainting |
Using Charcot’s Tuesday night lectures at the Salpêtrière and his instigation of hysterical performance as a leaping-off point, WaxFactory traces the lines of fainting, hallucination, delusion, and love letters that run through the source material.
James Baldwin |
Okwui Okpokwasili in her solo, Bronx Gothic (photo by Ian Douglas) |
Dana Michel (photos: Ian Douglas) |
The visionary Camille A. Brown who created and convened The Gathering (c)2014, Eva Yaa Asantewaa |
With Baraka Sele (left), discussion moderator for Brown's historic event (photo by Cynthia Oliver) |
A selection of poems, essays, and stories by participants of the Afghan Women’s Writing Project will be read by audience members, AWWP staff and volunteers, and special guests. AWWP believes that to tell one’s story is a human right, and this work testifies to the bravery of Afghan women and to the power of their words. Author and AWWP founder Masha Hamilton will also read from her latest novel What Changes Everything. Admission is free.
Masha Hamilton is the author of five acclaimed novels, most recently What Changes Everything, which the Washington Post praised for its “elegantly wrought prose (which) conveys terror as well as tenderness” and 31 Hours, which the Washington Post called one of the best novels of 2009. In October 2013, she finished sixteen months working in Afghanistan as Director of Communications and Public Diplomacy at the US Embassy. She is currently working as Communications Director for Concern Worldwide. She also founded two world literacy projects, the Camel Book Drive and the Afghan Women’s Writing Project.
Masha is the winner of the 2010 Women’s National Book Association award, presented “to a living American woman who derives part or all of her income from books and allied arts, and who has done meritorious work in the world of books beyond the duties or responsibilities of her profession or occupation.” She began her career as a full-time journalist, working in Maine, Indiana, and New York City before being sent by the Associated Press to the Middle East, where she was news editor for five years, including the period of the first intifada, and then moving to Moscow, where she worked for five years during the collapse of communism, reporting for the Los Angeles Times and NBC-Mutual Radio and writing a monthly column, Postcards from Moscow. She also reported from Kenya in 2006, and from Afghanistan in 2004 and 2008.Richmond Hill Library