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Sunday, December 31, 2023

InfiniteBody Honor Roll 2023

 InfiniteBody Honor Roll 2023


Eva Yaa Asantewaa
 
  
Fantasia Barrino-Taylor as Celie in The Color Purple
 
Going to Mars: The Nikki Giovanni Project

Margot Robbie in Barbie. (photo: Jaap Buitendijk/Warner Bros.)

 

Welcome to my annual end-of-year round-up of cultural moments--not so much a Best-Of. More of a Here's What Meant A Lot to Me!

As always, you'll find some Better-Late-Than-Never items I've caught up with--like the first one, Justin Kurzel's 2015 film, Macbeth, with its searing performances and cinematography.

I also want to acknowledge and give huge thanks for the contributions of my guest speakers for Body and Soul podcast--Lisa La Touche, devynn emory, Maxine Montilus, george emilio sanchez, Samar Haddad King, and Vicky Shick, and so many more. Catch up with this series on Spotify here.

Clearly, the 2020s continue to compete with one another for which year will be voted the most challenging. But even as our times become more dire, the arts continue to testify for human qualities and contributions still worthy of celebration and emulation.

As we approach the New Year, I wish you the clarity, strength, and courage to envision, create, and make a meaningful difference in 2024 and beyond.

Ceasefire now. Free Palestine.

-- Eva Yaa Asantewaa


Justin Kurzel's Macbeth

 

Macbeth (2015), directed by Justin Kurzel (Netflix)

All Quiet on the Western Front (2022), directed by Edward Berger (Netflix)

Going to Mars: The Nikki Giovanni Project (2022), directed by Joe Brewster and Michéle Stephenson (Sundance Film Festival 2023)

 

Danielle Deadwyler, star of Till

Roberta Flack
 

Till (2022), directed by Chinonye Chukwu (Amazon Prime Video)

American Masters: Roberta Flack, directed by Antonino D'Ambrosio (PBS)

The 1619 Project, various directors; executive produced by Nikole Hannah-Jones (Hulu)

Empire of Light, directed by Sam Mendes (HBO Max)

The Yanomami Struggle, curated by Thyago Nogueira, The Shed (February 3-April 16)

The Heisenberg Variations: Imagination, Invention, and Uncertainty, by Jennifer Finney Boylan, Julia S. Phelps Annual Lecture in the Arts and Humanities, Harvard Radcliffe Institute, February 16

Ron Carter: Finding the Right Notes, directed by Peter Schnall (PBS)

 

Still from Women Talking

 

We Are the Middle of Forever: Indigenous Voices from Turtle Island on the Changing Earth, editors:  Dahr Jamail and Stan Rushworth (The New Press, 2022)

The Elephant Whisperers, directed by Kartiki Gonsalves (Netflix)

Women Talking, directed by Sarah Polley (2022)

Remember This, directed by Jeff Hutchens and Derek Goldman (PBS Great Performances)

 

left-to-right: Deepika Padukone, Shah Rukh Khan, and John Abraham, Pathaan, Yash Raj Films

 

Pathaan, directed by Siddarth Anand (Amazon Prime Video)

Reggie, directed by Alexandria Stapleton (Amazon Prime Video)

Te Wheke, Atamira Dance Company, The Joyce Theater, March 29-April 2

A.I.M by Kyle Abraham, The Joyce Theater, April 4-9

Next at The Kennedy Center: Ballet Hispánico’s Doña Perón, PBS, streaming April 14-May 12

All the Beauty and the Bloodshed, directed by Laura Poitras, streaming on HBO Max

Trisha Brown Dance Company, The Joyce Theater, May 2-7

No Bears, directed by Jafar Panahi, streaming on The Criterion Channel

 

Author Robert Caro and editor Robert Gottlieb in Turn Every Page

 

Jeremy Strong, at left, and Brian Cox in Succession

Turn Every Page: The Adventures of Robert Caro and Robert Gottlieb, directed by Lizzie Gottlieb on Amazon Prime Video (2022)

John Mulaney: Baby J, directed by Alex Timbers, streaming on Netflix

Mother by Eiko Otake, Green-Wood Cemetery, May 7

Kazunori Kumagai: Tap Into The Light, Gibney, May 11-13

The Light We Carry: Michelle Obama and Oprah Winfrey, directed by Linda Mendoza, streaming on Netflix

Top Gun: Maverick, directed by Joseph Kosinski  (2022), streaming on Amazon Prime Video

Cette maison, directed by Miryam Charles (2022), streaming on The Criterion Channel

DanceAfrica 2023: Golden Ghana: Adinkra, Ananse, and Abusua, BAM, Artistic Director Abdel R. Salaam, May 26-29

Succession, created by Jesse Armstrong, streaming on HBO Max

ear for eye, directed by debbie tucker green (2021), streaming on The Criterion Channel

SciGirls Stories: Black Women in STEM, directed by Adja Gildersleve, Maya Washington, and Bianca Rhodes, streaming on PBS, June 1-29

Little Richard: King and Queen of Rock ‘n’ Roll, directed by James House, streaming on PBS, June 2-30

Jury Duty, directed by Jake Szymanski, streaming on Amazon Prime Video

 

L-r: Jean Millington, June Darling, and June Millington of Fanny (photo: Marita Madeloni)

 

Fanny: The Right to Rock, directed by Bobbi Jo Hart, streaming on PBS, May 22-June 19

Assembly: Center for Dialogue and Exchange in the Arts, Danspace Project, June 9-10

Purple, Sydnie L. Mosley Dances, Lincoln Center's Summer for the City, June 9-25

Open Working Rehearsal, The Met Orchestra, conducted by Yannick Nézet-Séguin with Angel Blue and Russell Thomas, Carnegie Hall, June 22

 


Taylor Mac's 24-Decade History of Popular Music (Max)
 
The film Nimona, adapted from ND Stevenson's 2015 graphic novel

Vir Das: Landing, directed by Vir Das, streaming on Netflix

Taylor Mac's 24-Decade History of Popular Music, directed by Rob Epstein and Jeffrey Friedman,  streaming on Max

Call Me Kate, directed by Lorna Tucker, streaming on Netflix

Nimona, directed by Troy Quane and Nick Bruno, streaming on Netflix

Not My Enemy, directed by Kehinde Ishangi (2022), streaming on Vimeo

 


 
Authors Anita Kopacz (above) and Viola Davis

Shallow Waters by Anita Kopacz (Simon & Schuster, 2022)

Finding Me by Viola Davis (Harper Collins, 2022) 

Oppenheimer, directed by Christopher Nolan

 

Kit Conner (left) and Joe Locke of Heartstopper

Heartstopper Season 2, streaming on Netflix

The Lincoln Lawyer, Seasons 1-2, streaming on Netflix

Barbie, directed by Greta Gerwig (2023)

The Half-God of Rainfall, by Inua Ellams, directed by Taibi Magar, at New York Theatre Workshop, July 14-August 20

Wayne Shorter: Zero Gravity, directed by Dorsay Alavi, streaming on Amazon Prime Video

Tree and Serpent: Early Buddhist Art in India 200 BCE-400 CE., Metropolitan Museum of Art, July 21 -November 13

Pepón Osorio: My Beating Heart/ Mi corazón latiente, The New Museum, June 29-September 17

María Magdalena Campos-Pons: Behold, Brooklyn Museum, September 15, 2023–January 14, 2024

The Blue Caftan, directed by Miryam Touzani (2022), streaming on Amazon Prime Video and Criterion Channel

Lupin (Season 3), streaming on Netflix

 

David Byrne of Talking Heads in Stop Making Sense

Edisa Weeks in 3 Rites: Liberty


Stop Making Sense (Restored), directed by Jonathan Demme

3 Rites: Liberty, by Delirious Dances/Edisa Weeks, October 12-15

Silver Dollar Road, directed by Raoul Peck, streaming on Amazon Prime Video


Performer Ty Defoe

Author Héctor Tobar

Embracing Duality: Modern Indigenous Culture (starring Halluci Nation, Martha Redbone, and Ty Defoe), Next at The Kennedy Center, PBS

Deadloch, written by Kate McCartney and Kate McLennan, streaming on Amazon Prime Video

Our Migrant Souls: A Meditation on Race and the Meanings and Mythsd of "Latino," by Héctor Tobar (MCD Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2023)

Nyad, directed by Jimmy Chin and Elizabeth Chai Vasarhelyi, streaming on Netflix

The Bear (Season 2), streaming on Hulu

 


Colman Domingo as Bayard Rustin in Rustin, streaming on Netflix

Stamped from the Beginning, directed by Roger Ross Williams, streaming on Netflix

Community of Parting, directed by Jane Jin Kaisen (2019), Vimeo

South to Black Power, directed by Sam Pollard and Llewellyn M. Smith (2023), Max

Maestro, directed by Bradley Cooper (2023)

Danzantes del Alba, Teatro Línea de Sombra, NYU Skirball Center, December 3

Lesbian Poetic Traditions: Judy Grahn, Julie R. Enszer, JP Howard, and Alicia Mountain, Live from NYPL, December 6

 

Beyoncé

Park Eun-bin of Extraordinary Attorney Woo

Teo Yoo and Greta Lee of Past Lives

 

Renaissance, directed by Beyoncé Knowles-Carter (2003)

Leave the World Behind, directed by Sam Esmail (2023), steaming on Netflix

She Said, directed by Maria Schrader (2022), streaming on Amazon Prime Video

Julian (2022) and Moth (2023), films by Kate Weare and Jack Flame Sorokin

Past Lives, directed by Celine Song (2023), streaming on Amazon Prime Video

The Color Purple, directed by Blitz Bazawule (2023)

Extraordinary Attorney Woo, directed by Yoo In-shik, streaming on Netflix from 2022

Visible Mending, directed by Samantha Moore, The New York Times, Op-Docs. https://www.nytimes.com/2023/12/26/opinion/knitting-healing.html

American Fiction, directed by Cord Jefferson (2023)

Tuesday, November 7, 2023

Body and Soul: Rebecca Fitton: Rethinking fiscal sponsorship and equity

Rebecca Fitton (photo: Sarah Annie Navarette)
 

Rebecca, a mixed-race Asian American person with messy short brown hair smiles. Their hands are in the pockets of a short-sleeve, navy corduroy jumpsuit.

In this episode of Body and Soul podcast, dance artist and administrator Rebecca Fitton (she/they) presents insights from her research into the ways current systems of fiscal sponsorship maintain the status quo of power and fail artists.

Listen to her Body and Soul episode via Spotify, and watch her film, Best Practices (2022).

Rebecca Fitton is from many places and peoples. She nurtures community through movement, conversation, and food, strives to equally prioritize her multifaceted roles as an artist, administrator, and advocate.  Fitton works as Co-Director/Director of Operations and Development for Bridge Live Arts and as the Director of Studio Rawls for artist Will Rawls. She has previously produced multi-disciplinary works for J. Bouey, zavé martohardjono, and FAILSPACE. From 2017-2021, she worked with DELIRIOUS Dances/Edisa Weeks to coordinate community gatherings focused on abolition movements. She was a Dance/NYC’s Junior Committee member from 2018-2020 and participated in Dance/USA’s Institute for Leadership Training in 2021. Their writing has been published by Triskelion Arts, Emergency Index, In Dance, The Dancer-Citizen, Etudes, Critical Correspondence, and Dance Research Journal. They hold a BFA in Dance from Florida State University and an MA in Performance as Public Practice from the University of Texas at Austin. rebeccafittonprojects.com

Monday, October 9, 2023

Body and Soul: Vicky Shick: The refuge we take in trust

Vicky Shick (photo: Alan Mandell)
 

Describing this photo, Vicky Shick writes:

I am sitting on a gray bench with a bunch of green leaves behind me. My hair is loosely piled.on top of my head. I am wearing a dark gray sweater - a light green collar is sticking out and around my neck is a colorful gray, red and pink scarf.

In this episode of Body and Soul podcast, the respected, award-winning artist and educator Vicky Shick discusses the challenge and "universal necessity" of trust in a time of widespread distrust and anxiety. As an artist, she sources trust in "the innate intelligence in our bodies" and "in the vulnerable practice of creation."

Listen to Vicky's episode here. And scroll down to learn more about her work!

Vicky Shick has been involved in the New York dance community for four decades--teaching, performing, and making pieces. She feels grateful to all the incredible people with whom she has worked. She was a member of the Trisha Brown Dance Company and staged several of Brown’s dances, including in her hometown, Budapest. Previously, she was a member of the Sara Rudner Performance Ensemble. Vicky has developed student pieces at Barnard, The New School and Yale, among other institutions. Her last two works were at Arts on Site, and a collaborative performance at Roulette with choreographer/artist Jon Kinzel. In New York City, she teaches at Movement Research, for the Trisha Brown Dance Company and has taught for 15 years at Hunter College. She was a Movement Research Artist-in-Residence (twice), a Bessie recipient (twice), a grant recipient from the Foundation for Contemporary Arts, a Gibney DiP grantee, and a Guggenheim Fellow.

Sunday, October 8, 2023

BODY AND SOUL: Heather Robles: Reclaiming aliveness

Heather Robles (photo: AK47 Division)
In this headshot of Heather, she smiles while facing the camera, her brown hair pulled back in a bun, while wearing red lipstick, red dangly earrings, and a black suit jacket with white shirt underneath.

Heather Robles gently beckons us out of the numbness we might have slipped into as the world feels so hard right now. What do we desire and how can desire and curiosity awaken and guide us forward towards joy?

You'll notice this episode has no background music. I didn't need or want that sound to cover Frijolito's snoring!

CLICK HERE TO LISTEN!

Heather Robles (photo: by Keith A Manning)

Black and white photo shows Heather in a full body position back arched up, arms above head and hands furled like a plant about to unfold, her legs standing with one knee bent and foot forced arch. She is in front of a window with city lights showing through, the floor wooden. She is wearing a long asymmetrical sleeveless top and black leggings while barefoot.

Heather Robles is a nondisabled queer Latinx cis woman of Indigenous Mexican descent who lives on the stolen land of the Lenape and Canarsie peoples in what is colonially called Brooklyn. She is Founder and Artistic Executive Director of Alma Dance Company. As a choreographer and performer, she has worked with many artists including Yvonne Rainer, Sidra Bell, Pavel Zuštiak, Nathan Trice, DANCENOISE, André M. Zachery, Buglisi Dance Theater, Fredrick Earl Mosley, Suzzanne Ponomarenko Dance, The Equus Projects. She is also the Executive Director of the New York Dance and Performance Awards, The Bessies, and a certified birth doula at Our Birth Doula. Heather is also a dance educator, teaching artist, producer, and advocate for mental health in the dance field. https://www.almadanceco.com

Sunday, August 6, 2023

Congratulations to the Bessies organization and this year's winners!

j. bouey in A Message from Mx. Black Cooper (photo: Rachel Keane)

 
The New York Dance and Performance Awards, the Bessies, tonight announced the 2023 award recipients at the 39th Bessie Awards Ceremony. The Illustrious Blacks hosted this year’s celebratory event, which was held at Lincoln Center’s Damrosch Park as part of Lincoln Center’s Summer for the City. A complete list of the 2023 awards follows below.
 
Bessie Awards were presented to artists for outstanding choreographer/creator, performer, sound design/music composition, visual design, outstanding revival, and breakout choreographer—an award that honors an artist who has made an exceptional leap in their career this past year. All of the awardees and nominated artists in these categories received a $500 honorarium, courtesy of a grant from the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation.
 
Renowned dancer, singer, and actor Dionne Figgins presented Virginia Johnson with the 2023 Award for Lifetime Achievement in Dance. Artists and dance advocates Porshia A. Derival and Ms Vee presented Michele Byrd-McPhee with the 2023 Award for Outstanding Service to the Field of Dance. Other presenters included Tyler Ashley, Clifton Brown, George Faison, Erin Fogerty, Dyane Harvey Salaam, Karisma Jay, Gian Marco Riccardo Lo Forte, Abdel Salaam, and Paz Tanjuaquio.
 
Barkha Patel was honored with the 2023 Juried Bessie Award, selected by the 2023 Bessie Jury luciana achugar, Ayodele Casel, and Kyle Marshall. The Juried Award recognizes a choreographer who exhibits some of the most interesting and exciting ideas in dance in New York City today, and whose work deserves to be seen more outside the city. The award comes with touring support and other engagement opportunities from New York State DanceForce.
 
The ceremony also included special remarks from Vicky Capote of Dance/NYC, Alton Murray, Deputy Commissioner, NYC Department of Cultural Affairs, Lucy Sexton, Executive Director, New Yorkers for Culture and Arts, and Bessies Executive Director Heather Robles.
 
The ceremony included an audience participation dance tribute to O’Shae Sibley. Dance Theatre of Harlem performed Orange, a duet by Stanton Welch, in honor of Virginia Johnson. Fredrick Earl Mosley’s Unbroken, performed by his company Diversity of Dance was also presented, along with an excerpt from Princess Lockeroo’s The Fabulous Waack Dancers Big Show, and Afro-Acro, performed by AbunDancers Youth Ensemble.
 
The Bessies also honored members of the dance community who died this past year. The moving In Memoriam was presented by dancers Mireicy Aquino and Jhailyn Farcon.
 
The celebration continued at the Bessies Silent Disco After-Party with DJ Sabine Blaizin on Lincoln Center’s Josie Robertson Plaza.
 
The 2023 Bessie Awards Ceremony was produced by Torya Beard and Heather Robles.
 
THE 2023 NEW YORK DANCE AND PERFORMANCE AWARD RECIPIENTS AND CITATIONS:
LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT IN DANCE AWARD
 
Virginia Johnson
 
For inspiring audiences for 28 years with dynamic performances as a founding member and principal dancer of Dance Theatre of Harlem. For her tenure as Artistic Director of Dance Theatre of Harlem, continuing the company’s legacy of innovation and excellence, while expanding its reach and impact through collaborations with other organizations. For founding Pointe Magazine, and serving as editor-in-chief for nearly a decade. For editorial vision, bringing diverse voices and perspectives to the forefront of the dance community. For a lifelong commitment to the arts, and a career of significant contributions to the world of dance as a celebrated dancer, editor, and artistic director.
 
OUTSTANDING SERVICE TO THE FIELD OF DANCE AWARD
 
Michele Byrd-McPhee
 
For being an incredible force in the global dance community, especially as an advocate for young girls and women in hip-hop. As the Founder and Executive Director of Ladies of Hip-Hop, Byrd-McPhee has worked for decades to recontextualize spaces and conversations about hip-hop along gender, cultural, socio-historical, and racial lines. Her vision for women of all generations in hip-hop has created opportunities for them to perform on concert dance stages, teach in the most prestigious dance institutions, and create incredible opportunities for themselves within hip-hop’s legacy.
 
OUTSTANDING CHOREOGRAPHER/CREATOR
 
LaTasha Barnes
LaTasha Barnes presents The Jazz Continuum at The Joyce Theater
 
A joyous celebration of jazz dance throughout history, Barnes flexes the imposed proscenium setting to engage a communal experience, demonstrating community as the center of this form. An offering of (re)embodiment to the audience, this work showcases seamless transitions between styles, demonstrating technical mastery from the cast and deep creativity and thoughtfulness from its creator.
 
Dormeshia
Dormeshia Tap Collective: Rhythm Is Life at The Joyce Theater
 
For crafting stellar interplay between movement, sound, performer, and improvisation. Deeply human, rooted in tradition and joy, Dormeshia shows us where tap dance has been, where it is, and where it is going.
 
Benjamin Akio Kimitch
Tiger Hands at The Shed
 
For a beautiful work with an extraordinarily sensitive exploration of personal and cultural identity. The work creates an entirely new movement vocabulary that holds resonant memories of traditional Peking opera dance forms, and is embedded with shimmering novelty in tribute to a beloved mother.
 
Omari Wiles
New York Is Burning at Works & Process at The Guggenheim
 
For a beautiful representation of intergenerational Black experiences that pays homage to the dancers and artists from the classic documentary Paris Is Burning. This work is a gorgeously joyous, queer collection of dance and music stories. As a timeless tribute, it highlights the Afro Dance, House, Vogue, and Ballroom communities, their current cultural relevance, and prioritizes the diversity of dancers’ bodies, bringing out the power within Black dance and music.
 
OUTSTANDING PERFORMER
 
j. bouey
 
In A Message from Mx. Black Copper by j. bouey at Movement Research at the Judson Church
For an exhilarating performance embodying Black joy. This work is an exploration of emotion and movement that evokes love, trauma, honesty, and progression. The performance was thoughtful, unapologetic, and celebratory of life, self, and ancestry.
 
Amanda Castro
In Ayodele Casel: Chasing Magic by Ayodele Casel at The Joyce Theater
 
Castro’s performance capacity and arresting stage presence offer playfulness, dynamism, and mastery, particularly in the connection between percussionist and dancer. Her clear delineation in performance teaches the audience about Afro-Latin influences and intrinsic tap rhythms, with a demonstrated fluency in many styles.
 
Joyce Edwards
In Grace, The Equality of Night and Day and Open Door by Ronald K. Brown at The Joyce Theater
 
For bringing presence and identity into an exquisite embodiment of Ronald K. Brown’s work. Edwards exudes irrefutable strength, depth, warmth, reverence, conviction, and connection.
 
Albert Silindokuhle Ibokwe Khoza
In And so you see… our honorable blue sky and ever enduring sun… can only be consumed slice by slice… by Robyn Orlin at New York Live Arts
 
A uniquely bombastic, outrageous, and gorgeous performance that transcends genres, this is an unforgettably commanding performance that reveals deeper truths.
 
OUTSTANDING REVIVAL
 
In The Upper Room (1986/2022)
By Twyla Tharp at New York City Center
 
For a masterfully crafted and timeless work of dance art. In the Upper Room synthesizes choreography, costumes, music, and lighting into a transcendent experience for both audience and performers. The compelling score intersects with the bold choreography, creating an experience of raw power and grace.
 
OUTSTANDING SOUND DESIGN/ MUSIC COMPOSITION
 
Charles Turner and Sean Mason
 
For LaTasha Barnes presents The Jazz Continuum by LaTasha Barnes at The Joyce Theater
For a New York City sonic dream of musical arrangement that pays tribute to the eras of Black music from authentic jazz to hip-hop classics. The audience is brilliantly taken on a rollercoaster of musical nostalgia that makes one want to cry, dance, and move with joy! From the piano keys to the DJ turntables, and from the jazz clubs of Harlem to the playgrounds of Brooklyn, the arrangement is a true delight showing the magic of The Jazz Continuum.
 
OUTSTANDING VISUAL DESIGN
 
Tina Tzoka & Loukas Bakas (Set Design), Stephanos Droussiotis (Lighting Design), Nektarios Dionysatos (Sculptures and Special Constructions), Dimitris Korres (Mechanical Inventions)
For Transverse Orientation by Dimitris Papaioannou at the Brooklyn Academy of Music
 
For a team of designers who create scenes beyond what people might think is possible, and leave them gasping in awe. The team is the ‘David Copperfield’ of the field, possessing wide imaginative abilities that create the magic and make-believe of the theater.
 
OUTSTANDING BREAKOUT CHOREOGRAPHER
 
Symara Johnson
 
For deeply personal and profoundly joyful movement research with a choreographic practice based in American and West Indian heritage. For merging movement practices with rigorous archival research which calls for being in the present moment. For a creation of space within this practice for engagement of many ideas generated on the spot, and the ability to move between them with abandonment.
 
2023 JURIED BESSIE AWARD
 
Barkha Patel
 
For elegantly and magnificently creating, educating, and sharing work that elevates classical Indian and Kathak dance. Patel is deeply rooted in her art form’s spiritual and cultural history and is a contemporary voice who will contribute to the evolution of Kathak dance and its place in the dance world at large. 
 
ABOUT THE BESSIES
 
The New York Dance and Performance Awards have saluted outstanding and groundbreaking creative work in the dance field in New York City for 39 years. Known as “The Bessies” in honor of revered dance teacher Bessie Schönberg, the awards were established in 1984 by David R. White at Dance Theater Workshop. They recognize choreography, performance, music composition, visual design, legacy, and service to the field of dance by independent dance artists and organizations. Nominees are chosen by a selection committee composed of artists, presenters, producers, and writers. All those working in the dance field are invited to join the Bessies Membership and participate in annual discussions on the direction of the awards and nominate members to serve on the selection committee. For more information about The Bessies, visit www.bessies.org.
 
The 2022–2023 Bessie Awards Selection Committee: Tyler Ashley, Elizabeth Burke, Tymberly Canale, Yoshiko Chuma, Donna Costello, Porshia A. Derival, Tiffany Geigel, Valerie Green, Satsu Holmes, William Isaac, Anabella Lenzu, Gian Marco Riccardo Lo Forte, Shalewa Mackall, Yoko Murakami, Ivan Talijančić, and Kate Thomas.
 
The Bessies Steering Committee: Paz Tanjuaquio (chair), Yvonne H. Chow, Stanford Makishi, maura nguyễn donohue, Nicky Paraiso, Craig Peterson, Tiffany Rea-Fisher, george emilio sanchez, and Charmaine Warren.

Sunday, June 25, 2023

BODY AND SOUL: Stephan Koplowitz: History in place

Stephan Koplowitz (photo: Lynn Lane)
 

Award-winning choreographer and writer Stephan Koplowitz discusses the importance of thorough research into the history of a place--and knowledge of one's own relationship to history--in the making of site-specific performance. He describes site work as disruptive and all performance as political.

Listen to Stephan's episode of Body and Soul podcast here. And scroll down to learn more about his own history and work! 

 

Occupy by Stephan Koplowitz (photo: George Simian)

Mill Town by Stephan Koplowitz (photo: Jonathan Hsu)
 

Stephan Koplowitz is an award-winning artist/educator who creates site-specific and staged
dance performances, interactive media installations, and short films. His site performances aim
to alter people’s perspectives of place, site, and scale, infused with a sense of the human
condition, and concerned with the intersection of natural, social, and cultural ecologies within
urban and natural environments. His productions have been produced by performing arts
venues domestically and abroad having created 93 works (66 commissions) in the US, Europe,
and Asia. He received a 2017 Rockefeller Bellagio Fellowship, a 2004 Alpert Award, a 2003
Guggenheim Fellowship, 2000 “Bessie,” and 6 NEA Choreography Fellowships (1988-97). He
was named a Distinguished Alumni by Wesleyan University (BA in Music Composition) and the
University of Utah (MFA, Choreography). In April 2022, Oxford University Press published his
critically praised book On Site: Methods for Creating Site-Specific Performance. Koplowitz lives
in New York City. https://www.stephankoplowitz.com

Tuesday, June 20, 2023

BODY AND SOUL: Thomas Ford: For love of Black queer identity

Thomas Ford (photo: Angelo Soriano)

A person with brown skin wears a gray cap and a gray sleeveless shirt tucked into black athletic pants. His torso bends to the side, and ears hang over his shoulder in the same direction. The fingers of his right hand gently reach to the camera, while his knees bend and legs spread in a wide position.

In today's episode of Body and Soul podcast, dance artist and writer Thomas Ford reflects on his research into the violent colonial history at the root of homophobia in Black families and community.

Listen to Ford's talk here.

Thomas Ford is a dance artist, writer and scholar whose research examines the mechanisms of identity and culture through an exploration of embodiment, choreography, and Black, queer, critical and performance studies. https://www.thomasfordnyc.com/

Thursday, June 8, 2023

BODY AND SOUL: Kate Mattingly: Troubling the silence

  
Kate Mattingly
Above: a white woman's face with curly, honey-colored hair, smiling and tilting her head slightly left. No photographer credit. Courtesy of Kate Mattingly.

This Spring, author Kate Mattingly published Shaping Dance Canons: Criticism, Aesthetics, Equity, an analysis of many decades of dance criticism in the US (University of Florida Press). As a white woman, she accepts responsibility to speak out about white supremacy. In her talk today, she shares thoughts on how white supremacy has historically defined and dominated dance criticism and continues to silence women in academia.

Dr. Mattingly has written for The New York Times, The Village Voice, Dance Magazine, and Pointe Magazine and is associate editor of Dance Chronicle. She is assistant professor of dance at Old Dominion University in Norfolk, Virginia.

Listen to Dr. Mattingly's talk on Body and Soul podcast here.


Below: two dancers, a Black man and white woman, seen in profile, with his right hand holding her right hand as she leans away from his body. He stands firmly in a deep lunge while she leans into her left hip. Image of Troy Blackwell and Kate Mattingly from a workshop staging of William Forsythe's Steptext at New York University. (Photo: Peter A. Smith)


Kate Mattingly (she/her) focuses on fostering equity in dance education. As an assistant professor at Old Dominion University, she teaches ballet, dance histories, teaching principles, dance studies, and graduate research methods. Her book, Shaping Dance Canons, interrogates how critics have foreclosed opportunities for certain artists and dance forms while generating validity for others, thereby contributing to a racialized dance canon. Her writing has been published in The New York Times, The Village Voice, Dance and Pointe magazines, The Washington Post, and academic journals. She has a forthcoming anthology, called Antiracism in Ballet Teaching, that will be published by Routledge. Kate’s undergraduate degree in Architecture is from Princeton University, her MFA degree in Dance is from NYU, and her doctoral degree in Performance Studies with a Designated Emphasis in New Media is from University of California, Berkeley.

Shaping Dance Canons: Criticism, Aesthetics, Equity (University of Florida Press, 2023)
Dance Chronicle, Executive Editor
Special Issue: "Interrogating Histories and Historicizing Dance Studies"

Tuesday, May 30, 2023

BODY AND SOUL: Italy Bianca: Pleasure Within

Italy Bianca (photo: Ashanti Hinton)
A brown-skinned woman with locs wearing a black,orange, and green halter top on the left side of the frame. Behind, a white background.

Photo: Aesam Sharafaldin

A brown-skinned woman with locs down to her waist and wearing a silver long necklace with two silver bracelets. Eyes closed and right arm on top of the left. Behind, a black background.

 

"My life is a dance," says dancer-healer-teacher Italy Bianca, "How am I going to stage it, each and every day?" Body and soul are connected, she knows from personal experience of trauma, healing, and creativity. In this talk to inspire other artists, teachers, caregivers, and anyone, Italy invokes what she has learned through modalities such as massage, acupuncture, herbalism, spiritual practice, and the use of sensory deprivation tanks.

Listen to her episode of Body and Soul podcast here!


Photo: Ernesto Mancebo

A brown-skinned woman with locs in a black dress leaning against a black cloth. The body is leaning towards the right with legs in a squat-like position. Arms are reaching out to the left side.

Italy Bianca is a sacred multimedia artist and herbalist who seeks to serve and enlighten the collective. From South Carolina and based in Brooklyn, NY, Italy believes that dancing leads to the transformation and healing of our personal and collective traumas; and aspires to offer the gift of transformational healing through community art. Her work focuses on creating work that portrays the rawest layers of human experience in collaboration with other local dancers and musicians. She has collaborated with various NYC dancers and companies such as Aeternus Dance Company, Asha Dance Company, Fiyah Dancehall Theatre, Sydnie L. Mosley Dances, and Marguerite Hemmings. In 2017, Italy was nominated for a Bessie Award in the Outstanding Performer c, and Chategory and appeared in Crystal Water's I am House video in 2018. Italy received a B.A. in Dance Education, Performance and choreography from Coker University and trained at the Joffrey Ballet School in their Jazz and Contemporary Dance program. https://www.italybianca.com/

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