Uncategorized – Bates Dance Festival https://www.batesdancefestival.org Sat, 29 Jul 2017 14:33:11 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.3.2 https://www.batesdancefestival.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/cropped-BDF-icon-02-01-32x32.png Uncategorized – Bates Dance Festival https://www.batesdancefestival.org 32 32 Traditions of Movement, Community, and Love: The 35th Anniversary Gala https://www.batesdancefestival.org/traditions-of-movement-community-and-love-the-35th-anniversary-gala/ Sat, 29 Jul 2017 14:33:11 +0000 https://www.batesdancefestival.org/?p=6999 LAURA

Image by Jonathan Hsu

This weekend is a celebration. The 35th Anniversary Gala brings together artists who have been integral to the festival’s trajectory, replenishing and reinventing the spirit of BDF summer after summer. The celebration centers on the pillars of BDF, Marcy Plavin and Laura Faure, the two women responsible for nurturing the festival into what it is today. These indomitable women pioneered a community bonded by a love for movement and a commitment to cherish the individual, together. To Marcy Plavin, the founder of the festival 35 years ago, we say goodbye, we lovingly reminisce. To Laura Faure, the director of the festival for the past 30 years, who we lovingly celebrate, we say good luck. To both, we extend our deepest gratitude in the best way we know how: moving together.

ptp_gala_previews-6

Image by Jonathan Hsu

It feels only right that Bebe Miller returns once again to the festival, as she is the artist Laura first brought thirty years ago. This weekend she performs “In A Rhythm,” an excerpt from a new work in process. Miller and longtime collaborator Angie Hauser come together for an intricately woven improvisatory duet that reads like a conversation. The two women navigate a relationship rooted in language and physicality, juggling who is speaking and who is moving with care and reactivity. Their presence is consuming, their focus palpable. They are firecrackers, astutely perceptive to each other and the audience, continually nourishing the experience of making and doing with the experience of being watched. It is a sophisticated game of freeze dance, one with malleable rules and a buoyant sound score. The tone of reactivity is set from the beginning, when the two women are revealed onstage, both listening to the same device. The audience cannot hear, only the performers can. We are privy to this mystery only when they speak, Bebe and Angie, when they are awoken from their own listening, speaking phrases one can only assume have just been placed in their ear. The duet, although from a new work, is heavy with history, performed from a deep place of knowing, making the unknowing so satisfying.

ptp_gala_previews-7

Image by Jonathan Hsu

A Maine native, Riley Watts makes his festival premiere alongside longtime festival musician, Carl Landa. “Tonight’s Pattern” comes and goes in a flicker, ever-shifting and constantly renegotiating. It is an improvisation reliant entirely on memory and the present moment, emphasizing surprise, recognizing the sensation of being watched, and remembering the night before. Watts responds to the moment, constantly folding in on himself, never collapsing but expanding outward. It is a stream of consciousness, a deeply inquisitive investigation of dance thinking rubbing up against performative circumstance, demonstrating a technical prowess and an agility of thought. Through his physicality, you recognize the power of his mind. Watts expands into a superhuman and flashes into a firefly, redefining the trajectory of his solo, entirely contingent on this stage and this night. It is in the doing that the idea comes. The first move starts a journey, a spiraling and paradoxical train of thought that can only be resolved through the body. Circumstantially intuitive and technically stunning, “Tonight’s Pattern” is all consuming; inescapable and fully intangible.

ptp_gala_previews-11

Image by Jonathan Hsu

The rest of the program is characterized by thought, play, and investigation. Larry Keigwin opens the show with a playful solo to lively music that invigorates the space. Patrik Widrig’s “…And Still Doing…” is dominated by a sense of urgency in physical intent accompanied by a strategic perplexity in spoken word. In “Dr. Pearson’s Guide to Loss and Fear” Sara Pearson sketches an autobiographical narrative emphasizing didactic textual impetus in a rooted bed of movement sensibility. She loses track and tracks her loss, her fear. Tania Isaac’s words vibrate through the theatre and white crumples hang from the ceiling as she navigates the space below, excavating herself between her words and her movement. Doug Varone’s poignant duet with Natalie Desch illuminates the facets of a deeply personal relationship. The evening closes with a group work created by Michael Foley on students of the festival, an intricate weaving of partnering and sensibility, a love letter to his mentor Marcy Plavin and friend Laura Faure.

ptp_gala_previews-19

Image by Jonathan Hsu

This show is full of love; love for dance and for this community. This incredible lineup of artists has come together to celebrate and honor this incredible world that has been created at the Bates Dance Festival. An evening of opulent and evocative work, these artists bring with them a history deeply influenced by the festival, by the two women who stand as pillars. Before, during, and after the show, we find ourselves returning to sentiments of gratitude. These sentiments live deeply within us, they always have; sentiments we sprinkle through the movement of our lives, reinvigorating the spirit of the Bates Dance Festival everywhere we go. For that, we have Marcy and Laura to thank.

This post was written by Phoebe Ballard. Phoebe is the BDF social media intern for the 2017 summer. 

 

]]>
Live from the Festival: Looking Back on Week One https://www.batesdancefestival.org/live-from-the-festival-looking-back-on-week-one/ Mon, 24 Jul 2017 15:44:00 +0000 https://www.batesdancefestival.org/?p=6985 blog1

Image by Jonathan Hsu

Within the first seven days of the Professional Training Program participants had seen two shows in the Schaeffer Theatre, had taken up to twenty dance classes, learned more about zoe|juniper in a show and tell event, participated in massage workshops, master classes, and panel discussions, auditioned for Michael Foley’s gala piece, jammed at the Contact Improvisation jam held by Nancy Stark Smith, and even hung out at the annual “Pants Party,” held by Melody Eggen.

Our daily classes, ranging from modern to ballet to creative process to Caribbean Dance Hall, have been lively and fun. Teachers strive to amplify community, which again and again proves to be a simple task, as students continually step foot in the classroom with that goal in mind. Openness and a willingness to try new things are staples of each classroom, a bolded point on the mutually-agreed-upon-but-never-handed-out syllabus. It is hot and it is sweaty, each space alive with the energy and heat generated in the class before. We are testing boundaries, redefining bravery, and emboldening each other, leaving a deep but fulfilling soreness in our bones, a soreness that makes it hard to sit down at dinner but a soreness that is the driving force bringing us back to class each day reinvigorated and reenergized.

blog

Image by Jonathan Hsu

Contact builds community, and in this community, physical contact is key. Nancy Stark Smith led a masterful contact jam in Alumni Gym on Wednesday, which will be complimented by a follow up jam this coming Wednesday. At 7:30, participants filled the gym with their energy, and the rules of the space were established. No photos or videos, feel free to take it slow, invest deeply in your partner and the improvisation, you can dance or watch as much as you’d like, and, most importantly, no talking. Voices were absent from the space, amplifying the movement and making the room not quiet and not loud, but very full. Risk taking and human connection were primary, each participant navigating new bodies in a sea of support, both on the marley and off.

blog 2

Image by Jonathan Hsu

The traditions begin to reveal themselves during the first week of PTP, taking the form of bonus workshops, panel discussions, lunchtime conversations, and, a true festival favorite, the “Pants Party”. Melody Eggen, our resident costume designer, brings a collection of wide-legged, loose, patterned pants, shirts, and jumpers, a tradition that has begun a festival-recognized-but-once-again-unspoken-dress code for BDF dancers and faculty. Gathering together in the living room of Frye House, people pick through, try on, and purchase brightly colored patterned pants that sprinkle Bates campus, bringing the spirit and magic of the festival into the dining hall, the quad, and the town of Lewiston. Melody’s creations live in the BDF Store for the remainder of the festival, so if you missed the party, be sure to head over.

The past week was full and set the tone for a great two weeks to come. This week, we have a flood of artists and alumni returning for the 35th Anniversary Gala, which honors the legacy of both Marcy Plavin and Laura Faure and highlights and celebrates the eclectic and extensive history of the festival. The Musicians’ Concert takes place Monday night and each evening this week holds various activities sure to leave participants fulfilled (and slightly exhausted, but that’s exactly what’s expected).

This post was written by Phoebe Ballard. Phoebe is the BDF social media intern for the 2017 summer.

]]>
Ritual and Redemption: zoe|juniper Presents “Clear & Sweet” https://www.batesdancefestival.org/ritual-and-redemption-zoejuniper-presents-clear-sweet/ Fri, 21 Jul 2017 13:54:17 +0000 https://www.batesdancefestival.org/?p=6965 20170720195358_IMG_5898Breaking down the proscenium divide in the Schaeffer Theatre, the creative team that makes up zoe|juniper sets the stage for their performance this weekend. Their third return to the festival, the dance-design duo Zoe Scofield and Juniper Shuey present “Clear and Sweet,” a work which relishes tradition while breaking through its confines. The viscerally compelling amalgamation of movement, visual design, and sonic tradition and innovation promises a unique experience for each audience member, one that is thoughtfully crafted albeit different than the person across the room.

Scofield’s choreography is heavily influenced by her ballet training, upholding the technical prowess necessary to accomplish such feats, but breaking down the elements to find rhythmic and physical variance. Scofield’s visionary choreographic choices enrapture the space, sending dancers spiraling in very intentional paths coming into contact with one another only to find themselves alone shortly after. Trust is emphasized, blindfolds are worn, community is encouraged. It is rigorous and precise, provoking thoughtful inquiries and deeper thinking, a moving picture of brain, body, and being.

20170720195748_IMG_5935The movement is just one element of this performative expedition, wholly important yet only a piece. Juniper Shuey’s visual design gives a notion of roundness, centralizing the dancers and giving them boundless space within the performance area, allowing them to be fully and uniquely seen. A circular band of strings dangle magnificently from the ceiling, and beneath it, a warm ring imprints the floor – making these disconnected entities one – as if the band of strings had left this imprint, or the strings had risen from it. Shuey’s work hones in on center, centralizing and dispelling energy to the space and the borders, etching this memory within it, a space filled with dancers and audience members alike.

Washing over and padding the theatre, the work becomes even more enriched with aural movement and transposition. The sound for the work comes from traditions of Sacred Harp Singing, as does much of the inspiration for the work itself. The singing is live and allows audiences the opportunity to participate, mirroring the traditions of Sacred Harp Singing – in which it is not a performative act, but a ritual of participation. Local Maine singers and recorded sounds become atmospheric and resonate differently with each audience member, dependent entirely on their seat. It is rich and provocative. This, layered with Evan Anderson’s new compositions, heavily influenced by the elements of death metal, support the work, creating yet another unique and necessary entry point in.

“Clear and Sweet” provides each viewer with a unique experience from their particular angle. It feels like a hollow abstraction teeming with life. The choreographic, visual, and sonic elements come together to create a unique experience, one that examines ritual, redemption, and community, while highlighting and providing shifting points of perspective. It allows audiences the opportunity to be alone, together; filling a porous container that is constantly collapsing in and expanding out.

This post was written by Phoebe Ballard. Phoebe is the BDF Social Media intern for the 2017 summer. All images by Jonathan Hsu.

 

]]>
On Being Around: David Dorfman Dance Premieres “Aroundtown” https://www.batesdancefestival.org/on-being-around-david-dorfman-dance-premieres-aroundtown/ Thu, 13 Jul 2017 19:28:28 +0000 https://www.batesdancefestival.org/?p=6935 David Dorfman is a champion of the dance world and a veteran of the Bates Dance Festival, returning to the festival regularly for the past twenty-two years. His company members are also familiar faces to the BDF community, having seen both sides of the Schaeffer Theatre, once sitting in the audience as students, interns, and counselors, and now, looking out on the view from the stage. The festival has served as an incubator for many David Dorfman Dance works, and the essence of his new work, “Aroundtown,” epitomizes the foundational essence of this festival through a physical metaphor, emphasizing community, hope, and love.

DDD jonathan

Image by Jonathan Hsu

“Aroundtown” is alive, constantly shifting, collectively together. It leaves a pit in your stomach, a yearning for more, a desire to go there, to do that. Grandiose movement phrases and daring feats of physical stamina mirror the sweeping tone of the work, finding beauty and intimacy in the mundane, determining and defining a sublime way of existing in the world. The music, new compositions by Liz de Lise, Sam Crawford, Zeb Gould, and Jeff Hudgins, are performed live and add yet another layer of robustly evocative humanity to this rich world. The process, which has spanned over two years, has been a constant practice of sorting through and seeing. This work, which is responsive to the current moment, thrives on a constant questioning of what the most important residue is, both within the company and within the world. The result is sensical and familiar, but all at once nonsensical and abandoned, presenting an honest exactness that is subject to change at any given moment.

Six dancers comprise the cast, the community. We see Kendra and Simon, Nik and Aya, Jordan and Jasmine. The work is contingent on them. We see these people, their whole being, not just their dancing body. Through the act of dancing they not only show themselves fully, they become themselves fully. The beauty comes with the togetherness of the dancers actively listening in the present moment, deeply sensing each other as humans above all else. Language is welcomed and necessary in this world, giving time and space to establish ideas and let them settle. Not just moving bodies, each dancer approaches the work from a deep place of truth, bringing with them their past and allowing it to mold their present. They support each other profoundly, sincerely, earnestly. Physical feats coupled with an unabashed outpouring of emotion create an emphatic world, wholly familiar and unfamiliar, sculpting a standard we, audience members and performers alike, relate to and strive for.

DDD jonathan1

Image by Jonathan Hsu

The sense of community is palpable, a commonality in Dorfman’s work that is heavily amplified in “Aroundtown”. Impulsiveness stokes the dance, igniting performers and bringing them together, risking it all, physically and emotionally, individually as an entity. Touch is not just functional, it is an imprint left on each body, brought there physically and leaving a residue deeply infused with emotion. It is tender and it is human, it is all the things we cannot be alone. The work is constantly testing love and asking it to be real, not as a monumental or abstract idea, but as a glorious reality. “Aroundtown” functions as a real town, an enlivened community, the performers odd and model citizens. It is a thing everyone knows and recognizes; a folk dance we are all a part of and have different roles in.

This work is an astonishing and beautiful feat of humanity. “Aroundtown” is an alchemy of movement and language, calling upon familiarities evident in society to craft a world beautifully specific and universally recognized, held preciously in the bodies and spirits of the movers and in the hearts of the audience. It is something they (and we) do not get to realize unless we are together, and that doesn’t always mean in unison.

This post was written by Phoebe Ballard. Phoebe is the BDF social media intern for the 2017 summer. Special thanks to Kendra Portier and Simon Thomas-Train for their insightful words. 

]]>
Live from BDF: A Conversation with Our Young Dancers https://www.batesdancefestival.org/live-from-bdf-a-conversation-with-our-young-dancers/ Tue, 04 Jul 2017 19:41:56 +0000 https://www.batesdancefestival.org/?p=6913 ydwAs we hit our halfway point, a few of the young dancers graciously agreed to gush about their experiences thus far at the Young Dancers workshop. An exceedingly talented and articulate group, these four dancers gave us an opportunity to experience the festival through their eyes. Read on to see what, Lihle, age 18, from South Africa, Nyna, age 15, from Denver, Colorado, Sophia, age 17, from Dallas, Texas, and Zaria, age 18, from Atlanta, Georgia have to say.

What has been unexpected in your time here so far at YDW?

Sophia: The most unexpected thing has been this environment we exist in; it is so unique and so special. Everyone in the environment is so respectful and so supportive of each other; everyone is celebrating everyone else’s successes. I am trying new things and progressing in every mode. There is such a focus on growing as a human being and not just growing as a dancer, and that has been really wonderful for me.

Lihle: Everything was so unexpected to me because I am not used to four classes a day. I usually do one and that is it. It is physically and intellectually draining, but really good.

Nyna: Just being here is really unexpected for me, I wasn’t sure I would be able to come, but I am so grateful I got to come. I feel like I’m really improving and learning as a person and it is a lot of information but I am really grateful.

Zaria: It has been a really eye-opening experience for me, I am very used to a traditional approach to dance and this has challenged me to see dance from so many different angles and perspectives. Who knew that just walking and using nonverbal communication could be so powerful, even more powerful than words. That with this intimate sense of community gives me a new perspective on dance. You don’t always have to do big tricks, it’s about moving with passion and conviction.

What is something a teacher has said that has stuck with you or resonated with you?

Sophia: Everything Lida says. I just want her to be my life coach. The two things that I really like are: “don’t apologize for taking up space,” and, “if the dance is boring it is your responsibility to change it”. It is all about having accountability for what you’re doing.

Nyna: Something Dante said really resonated with me when we were working on the solo piece in rep. He told me to dance for myself and not try and imitate other people. He told me I didn’t have to do what I thought other people would think was right, but to do what I thought was right.

Lihle: All the teachers are very encouraging, which makes me want to do my best and keep trying even when I am exhausted.

Zaria: Another thing Lida says in her class is “you have nowhere else to be but here”. I realized that I am always thinking ahead, but when she says that, it reminds me to be present in the moment and give 100% to this moment because we can’t know what’s next. This is our life right now.

Aside from the dancing, what is your favorite thing about being here?

Nyna: Getting soaked twice in a monsoon on our way to the improv jam.

Sophia: Generally at summer programs I’ve been at, the counselors are just there for liability. But here, I feel like they are making such an impact on all of us. It is so cool to have role models like them to look up to and get to be close with. I think that is really special about this program.

Zaria: I think all the leaders that are here are always encouraging and want to see you succeed. They want to help your abilities and are always pushing you to try harder, but the whole time they are right there next to you.

Lihle: It is really fun with the counselors and the teachers. Being here for me is really special. Yeah, it’s just really special.

What is one thing you are seeking or working on?

Sophia: It was kind of by chance that I ended up here. I’m very interested in modern but do a lot of ballet at home. I am looking for the grounding modern dance brings, and I have realized all the different outlets for dance. Laura has said a couple of times, “dance is a vehicle to change the world” and I think that is so cool. Coming away from this, I have a goal of using my dancing to make an impact in some way.

Lihle: One of the big reasons I am here is because I want to make a change. Where I come from, people can be so judge-y. They think ballet is just for white people, just for gay people. I am here to start making changes. It is my dream to become a professional dancer here.

Nyna: Before I came to Bates, I was considering quitting dancing because I felt kind of stuck, but once I got here, my mind started to change. I think I’m going to keep up with it. It’s hard, but I want to stick with it.

Zaria: One of my goals is to reach outside my comfort zone while I’m here, exploring new styles and stretching my abilities and myself and really just learning as much as I can. Observing all these professionals in these classes will really help me in my future career because I think I eventually want to teach and learning from them will really help me.

Anything else you want to add?

Bates is great.

It’s amazing.

It’s unlike any other program I’ve been at, in a good way.

 

This post was written by Phoebe Ballard. Phoebe Ballard is the Social Media Intern for the 2017 summer. 

]]>
2016 BDF Intern Testimonials https://www.batesdancefestival.org/2016-bdf-intern-testimonials/ Fri, 05 Aug 2016 17:06:25 +0000 https://www.batesdancefestival.org/?p=5930 This summer the Bates Dance Festival had nineteen interns working behind the scenes of the theater, office, and more to help keep this vibrant festival up and running. The BDF interns hail from all corners of the country and descended upon the Festival to share their passion for dance. Six interns assisted our Youth Arts Program, six interns worked in the administrative offices, two interns documented the Festival on film, and five interns tirelessly worked in the theater doing technical work. All of the interns also have the chance to take courses in the Professional Training Program and are fully immersed in Festival life. Below are testimonies from some of the interns’ experiences here at BDF.

 

Video Interns Heather O'Neill and Sharon Keenan

Video Interns Heather O’Neill and Sharon Keenan

“Not only am I learning valuable in-class skills by observing such incredible teachers, but I am also thinking more holistically about arts education. It takes a village to raise an artist… I am so proud to spend my time here at Bates! I feel like new doors are opening for me here. By being around so many experienced artists, I’m learning every day how much I don’t know about dance or learning and how limitless my creative future can be. I will bring forward with me a freshly fueled passion and inspiration for the arts, along with new collaborators and support networks.”

Olandra Lickter is a 2016 Education Intern. A UC Santa Cruz graduate she lives in New Orleans, where she works for an arts enrichment program providing quality arts education for all regardless of financial hardship.

Education Interns Tina Naim, Olandra Lickter, Gavin Scheurch, Woods Fairchild, Jazmine Taylor-Hughlett, and Laura Pietropaoli

Education Interns Timna Naim, Olandra Lickter, Gavin Scheurch, Woods Fairchild, Jazmine Taylor-Hughlett, and Laura Pietropaoli

“Everyone here has been so lovely it’s amazing that everyone working here is a dancer so there’s something that bonds us all regardless of our current roles here.”

Blake Caple is a 2016 Arts Administration/Photography Intern. From Somersworth, NH, Blake is entering his senior year at Goucher College where he studies Dance and Business with a concentration in Arts Administration.

 

“Being able to hold real responsibilities directed toward keeping the incredible dance education and live performance alive at BDF has reminded me of the important value of a strong community…At every step of my journey as an intern at Bates, I’m constantly grateful to be a part of an actively dance-driven and kind-hearted community of people who give back to the primary foundation and mission of the organization: to be a place where dancers come to connect and be together.”

Hailing from Santa Cruz, CA, Gracie Winston is a recent graduate of UCLA. Gracie is a 2016 Arts Administration Intern.

Tech Interns Rebecca Brill-Weitz, Liam Shaffer, Jason Ross, Joanna McLarnan, and Robin Ediger-Seto

Tech Interns Rebecca Brill-Weitz, Liam Shaffer, Jason Ross, Joanna McLarnan, and Robin Ediger-Seto

“When I heard about the Bates Dance Festival, the first thing that was said to me was “You will feel like you have a family.” I dare to say that is the most truthful statement that has ever been said to me, coming back this summer felt like I never left. It felt like coming back home!”

Originally from Ecuador, Fernando Chonqui is back for his second year as an Arts Administration intern and manager of the BDF store. Fernando is entering his senior year at the University of South Florida.

 

“Bates provided the perfect balance of service work, art making, dance training, and intellectual discussion. I have been supported from day one by caring staff, other interns, and dancers. Bates provided an intimate and safe, accessible learning environment that has helped shaped my artistry, goals, and ambitions.”

Arts Administration Interns (left to right) Nolan Hoppe-Leonard, Chava Lansky, Gracie Winston, Sydney Burrows, Blake Capel, and Fernando Chonqui

Arts Administration Interns (left to right) Nolan Hoppe-Leonard, Chava Lansky, Gracie Winston, Sydney Burrows, Blake Caple, and Fernando Chonqui

Jazmine Taylor-Hughlett is a 2016 Education Intern. Originally from Milwaukee, WI Jazmine is earning her BFA in Dance from the University of North Texas.

 

This post was written by Chava Lansky. Chava is the BDF Social Media Intern for the 2016 summer. 

]]>
PTP Student Profile: Leigh Lotocki https://www.batesdancefestival.org/ptp-student-profile-leigh-lotocki/ Fri, 05 Aug 2016 13:23:43 +0000 https://www.batesdancefestival.org/?p=5926 The roughly 150 students in the Professional Training Program include dancers from all backgrounds and walks of life. While some of these students are here for the first time, many are drawn back year after year. Leigh Lotocki attended BDF for the first time in 2008 and after a long break came back this summer for another dose of this inclusive dancing community.

Leigh Lotocki

Leigh Lotocki

BDF: Can you tell me a little bit about your dance background?

LL: I did ballet almost exclusively growing up, and then when I went to college I switched to modern. It seemed kind of like a natural progression but it was a big shift for me – I didn’t really know a ton about contemporary movement, but I had the sense that if I chose contemporary work or modern dance or even more experimental work I’d be dancing a lot longer than if I pursued ballet.

 

BDF: How did you hear about the Bates Dance Festival?

LL: I went to Ohio State University and I heard about BDF from everyone there. A bunch of my classmates had already been here and a lot of the BDF staff today were working at OSU or were there as grad students. Carrie Cox (Festival Production Manager) was our Production Manager at school, so she pulled me in. I ended up with a production work-study position my first year here in 2008. I had a blast — I was really busy, I had a full schedule of classes and I was working, but I got to see all of the shows from backstage which was a really interesting way to experience the Festival for the first time. I felt then a bit like how I feel now which is that I was meeting a lot of new people and also surrounded by some familiar faces, and it was a great experience. Bates has been a really comfortable network of people that both support and challenge each other, and it’s always really felt like a family atmosphere. I really like that BDF doesn’t have a competitive edge – it’s just not there, and any sense of competition is just from people seeing each other and saying “oh I can do that” or “now that I’ve seen someone do this I’m really inspired to do this other thing,” etc. That’s something I’ve always appreciated about Bates as opposed to other dance festivals.

 

BDF: What classes are you taking and what have you learned from them?

LL: I’m taking Paul Matteson’s technique (Modern V). I actually took his technique the first time I came as well and I just knew there was a lot there to work with and I had liked that class a lot. It was a cool realization to come back to it and remember how different my body was the first time. I’m also taking Pilates which again is something I’m kind of coming back to from old areas of training that I’ve since kind of moved away from. I’ve been really craving a mat practice I can do at home, so Pilates has a lot of utility for me in my life as a dancer in New York, not really having a lot of space in my apartment I can noodle around in or do a warm up in. In the afternoons I’m taking Doug Gillespie’s technique (Modern IV) and Kate Weare repertory. Doug’s class is all about physicality and finding clarity in your movement and a sense of movement initiation. I feel like I’m really finding power in my movement. Kate Weare’s rep class has been awesome and I’m learning a lot about her work with a great group. I’m really pleased with my classes.

 

BDF: What’s next for you in the dance world?

LL: I’m living in Brooklyn. I moved there a year and a half ago from Columbus, OH to start a new chapter. I make dances and I also still really enjoy performing for people. I’ve been interning at Center for Performance Research which has been a great experience with a small tight knit team with similar values to this place and a supportive environment focused around dance and art making. I moved to New York in part because I was really craving a community where I could have more dancers’ eyes on my work, and I wanted that kind of electric sense of inspiration from being among lots of dancers.

 

BDF: Why did you choose to come back to BDF this summer?

LL: For kind of similar reasons as to why I moved to NY. I knew this was a place where I have friends and I would make friends and more importantly it was a time that I knew I could really focus inwardly on my dancing and reinvigorate my physical practice. Anyone especially who’s in NY knows that dancing can get diluted by other things we have to take care of, especially for people doing contract based work. When you’re a freelance artist you really have to carve out time for your dance process and technique. I wanted to get a kick-start this summer in a supportive environment with a lot of good friends and have a really great time.

 

BDF: Can you share a stand out moment from your time at the Festival so far?

LL: I think what stands out is mostly the feeling that everyone at the Festival is really present, both on a day when they feel really great and are loving the class and on a day when they’re injured or frustrated. So many little moments stand out here in a way they don’t in my “regular life” – I really get more out of each day here at BDF.

This post was written by Chava Lansky. Chava is the BDF Social Media intern for the 2016 summer. 

]]>