Category Archives: Dance

Dance

Fall 2016 Dance Concert (12/2 + 12/3)

The Department of Music and Dance sends a warm invitation to all! This Fall concert will feature fall-dance-concert-posterdances and music from a variety of styles and from various cultural traditions including Ballet, Taiko, Modern, Tap and more!

Come celebrate our students and faculty with this joyous end of the semester showcase. Free and open to the public. All ages are welcome.

LPAC Pearson-Hall Theater

Friday 12/2 4:30PM
Saturday 12/3 8PM

There is a “Talk Back” Q & A panel immediately following the Saturday show. Please join Professor K. Elizabeth Stevens from the Department of Theater for a moderated discussion about dance.

Olivia Sabee presents choreography in Wallingford (10/28 @ 7PM)

postcardagoraThe fall Friday Night Live concert series at Community Arts Center, 414 Plush Mill Road, Wallingford, PA, continues with an evening of Brazilian jazz and more with Minas and visual art by Nicole Tymowczak, Anthe Capitan-Valais and a special dance performance by Agora Dance on October 28th at 7:00 p.m. 
 
Agora Dance presents 3 Minutes Max, a selection of bite-sized choreographic creations ranging from poignant, to playful, to humorous. Choreographers include Angela Guthmiller, Christopher K. Morgan, Olivia Sabee, and Meredith Stapleton.
This project was made possible by funding from Project Stream, a grant initiative of the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts that is regionally admnistered by the Greater Philadelphia Cultural Alliance. Additional support for Project Stream is provided by PECO.
For Facebook: 

Olivia Sabee presents choreography in Wallingford (10/28 @ 7PM)

postcardagoraThe fall Friday Night Live concert series at Community Arts Center, 414 Plush Mill Road, Wallingford, PA, continues with an evening of Brazilian jazz and more with Minas and visual art by Nicole Tymowczak, Anthe Capitan-Valais and a special dance performance by Agora Dance on October 28th at 7:00 p.m. 
 
Agora Dance presents 3 Minutes Max, a selection of bite-sized choreographic creations ranging from poignant, to playful, to humorous. Choreographers include Angela Guthmiller, Christopher K. Morgan, Olivia Sabee, and Meredith Stapleton.
This project was made possible by funding from Project Stream, a grant initiative of the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts that is regionally admnistered by the Greater Philadelphia Cultural Alliance. Additional support for Project Stream is provided by PECO.
For Facebook: 

Performance in the Age of Bollywood, a lecture with Pallabi Chakravorty (11/29 @ 5:30PM, Temple University)

Tuesday, November 29, 2016 //
5:30 pm to 7:00 pm
screen-shot-2016-10-20-at-4-12-12-pm
CHAT Lounge 10th Floor // Gladfelter Hall // 1115 W. Berks Street // Philadelphia, PA 19122
Kristina M. Lang // 215-204-7609

Dance Studies Colloquium presents
A lecture with
Pallabi Chakravorty, Swarthmore College
“This is How We Dance Now: Performance in the Age of Bollywood”

CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING AND CINEMATIC ARTS
All Dance Studies Colloquium events are free and open to the public. No tickets are required.
This event will be livestreamed at http://livestream.com/accounts/1927261

Performance in the Age of Bollywood, a lecture with Pallabi Chakravorty (11/29 @ 5:30PM, Temple University)

Tuesday, November 29, 2016 //
5:30 pm to 7:00 pm
screen-shot-2016-10-20-at-4-12-12-pm
CHAT Lounge 10th Floor // Gladfelter Hall // 1115 W. Berks Street // Philadelphia, PA 19122
Kristina M. Lang // 215-204-7609

Dance Studies Colloquium presents
A lecture with
Pallabi Chakravorty, Swarthmore College
“This is How We Dance Now: Performance in the Age of Bollywood”

CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING AND CINEMATIC ARTS
All Dance Studies Colloquium events are free and open to the public. No tickets are required.
This event will be livestreamed at http://livestream.com/accounts/1927261

“Making Change” celebrates Prof. Sharon Friedler (10/1 @ 3PM)

The Department of Music and Dance will host a public celebration to honor Professor Sharon Freidler’s work and retirement. This event, “Making Change for Better Communities Through Dance”, will include faculty, alumni, staff, and students.

There will be live dance, video, and the spoken word to offer a well-rounded glimpse into the numerous contributions that Sharon has made to the field of dance and to our community over the years.

Among the highlights: performances by four alumni of the Dance program who have gone on to distinctive international careers in the dance world; a presentation by a fifth alumna who is one of the leading dance scholars in the U.S.; and a performance by Sharon’s Dance for PD group (Parkinson Disease), accompanied by live music.

“Making Change” celebrates Prof. Sharon Friedler (10/1 @ 3PM)

The Department of Music and Dance will host a public celebration to honor Professor Sharon Freidler’s work and retirement. This event, “Making Change for Better Communities Through Dance”, will include faculty, alumni, staff, and students.

There will be live dance, video, and the spoken word to offer a well-rounded glimpse into the numerous contributions that Sharon has made to the field of dance and to our community over the years.

Among the highlights: performances by four alumni of the Dance program who have gone on to distinctive international careers in the dance world; a presentation by a fifth alumna who is one of the leading dance scholars in the U.S.; and a performance by Sharon’s Dance for PD group (Parkinson Disease), accompanied by live music.

Lecture by Sherrill Dodds, 10/6 @ 11:20AM

“Critical Choreographies of Michael Jackson’s Face”

A lecture with Sherrill Doddsimage of Michael Jackson Album cover

October 6, 2016

LPAC Cinema

11:20A – 12:35P

Sherril Dodds, Professor of Dance at Temple University, will discuss the scholarly and public attention devoted to the transformations of popular music celebrity Michael Jackson’s face, and the little consideration of how his face works choreographically. Drawing on the lenses of dance and popular music studies, first she will examine how his early career was characterized by a fixed smile, and secondly how he mobilized his face (through a frown and a scream) as his solo career developed to stage a critique of the popular music industry.

Professor Dodds has authored Dance on Screen: Genres and Media from Hollywood to Experimental Art (Palgrave, 2001), Dancing on the Canon: Embodiments of Value in Popular Dance (Palgrave, 2011), and co-edited Bodies of Sound (Ashgate, 2014). She is a founder member of the UK PoPMOVES research group, has been a visiting scholar at Trondheim University (Norway), Griffith University (Australia), and Stanford University (US), and was the recipient of the 2015 Gertrude Lippincott Award for her article “Facial Choreographies and the Choreographic Interface.”

Lecture by Sherrill Dodds, 10/6 @ 11:20AM

“Critical Choreographies of Michael Jackson’s Face”

A lecture with Sherrill Doddsimage of Michael Jackson Album cover

October 6, 2016

LPAC Cinema

11:20A – 12:35P

Sherril Dodds, Professor of Dance at Temple University, will discuss the scholarly and public attention devoted to the transformations of popular music celebrity Michael Jackson’s face, and the little consideration of how his face works choreographically. Drawing on the lenses of dance and popular music studies, first she will examine how his early career was characterized by a fixed smile, and secondly how he mobilized his face (through a frown and a scream) as his solo career developed to stage a critique of the popular music industry.

Professor Dodds has authored Dance on Screen: Genres and Media from Hollywood to Experimental Art (Palgrave, 2001), Dancing on the Canon: Embodiments of Value in Popular Dance (Palgrave, 2011), and co-edited Bodies of Sound (Ashgate, 2014). She is a founder member of the UK PoPMOVES research group, has been a visiting scholar at Trondheim University (Norway), Griffith University (Australia), and Stanford University (US), and was the recipient of the 2015 Gertrude Lippincott Award for her article “Facial Choreographies and the Choreographic Interface.”

May 2016 Dance Showings

Join us for showings in dance from our technique classes:
Dance Lab I 
Ballet Repertory students in excerpts from SWAN LAKE
Pointe and Partnering

Monday, May 2
5pm
LPAC Troy Dance Studio

Plus

The Performers: an experiment in progress
Directed and Choreographed by Erica Janko
Live music by Nirvaan Ranganathan
Advised by Jumatatu Poe

Monday, May 2 & Tuesday, May 3
4:15pm and 6:15pm
(with talkback after final showing on Tuesday)
LPAC Boyer Dance Studio

SEATING IS LIMITED for this showing and by reservation only, please email Erica Janko at ejanko1@swarthmore.edu for more information and reservations

A “performance” may be defined as all the activity of a given participant on a given occasion which serves to influence in any way any of the other participants.
– Erving Goffman, from The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life, 1959

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