Enjoy the summer and stay tuned for Swarthmore Project updates!
Also, be sure to look for recent grads and Swarthmore alums at the Philly Live-Arts + Fringe in August and September!
Enjoy the summer and stay tuned for Swarthmore Project updates!
Also, be sure to look for recent grads and Swarthmore alums at the Philly Live-Arts + Fringe in August and September!
KOREresponse performs at Green Space’s Fertile Ground–Check out the latest rehearsal footage on Youtube!
Sunday, May 15 at 7pm
Green Space
37-24 24th Street 301 & 302
Long Island City, Queens
N/Q/7 to Queensboro Plaza
F to 21st Street-Queensbridge
Tickets are $12 or buy them in advance through the website: http://www.greenspacestudio.org/!
This event is part of the To The KORE Series
We’re bringing you one step closer to the company with the To the KORE Series.
Starting with interviews, soon we’ll post personal videos from each of the dancers.
www.koreresponse.com
KOREresponse is sponsored by FRACTURED ATLAS, a not-for-profit arts
service organization. All contributions are tax-deductible to the extent
permitted by law. You will
receive a tax receipt upon submission of your donation.
my Generation is a dance landscape created in collaboration with several dancers and coordinated by Kate Speer ’08 at Mascher Space Cooperative in Philadelphia.
Speer states “Building community, whether with dancers in the studio, between the audience and the performer, or within neighborhoods, is an important aspect of my work. my Generation is my second project to be performed
for Moffet Elementary School, a public school located directly across the street from our studio, Mascher Space Coop.”
Last year, grades K-2nd saw performances of The Walrus and the Camel and participated in workshops that played with improvisation and imagination exercises.
In this high speed, plugged in lifestyle, information overload is in full effect. my Generation creates a physical experience of saturation though high velocity and momentum that comes from the gut and extends beyond the reaches of the hand.
Prepare to be swept up in its vortex.
Featuring Christina Gesualdi, Emily Herchenroether, Lisa Rothstein, Carly Sinn, and Zornitsa Stoyanova
Friday, June 3rd at 8pm
Saturday, June 4th at 8pm
Mascher Space Coop
155 Cecil B. Moore
Philadelphia, PA 19122
Tickets: $5-15 sliding scale
Congratulations and best of luck to our graduating seniors as you venture forth from Swarthmore!
The Dance Program sends a warm invitation to all to join us for the Spring Student Dance Concert on April 29th and 30th at 8PM in the LPAC Pearson-Hall Theater. This term’s concert will feature dances and music in a variety of styles and from various cultural traditions including Kathak, African, Flamenco, Ballet, Tap, and Modern pieces will all be included. Senior Amelia Kidd will showcase some of the choreography she has worked on as part of her honors dance minor course work. Other student dancer/choreographers include Aaron Corral, Tanya Rosenblut, Jalisa Roberts, and Joy Heller. Families with children are especially welcome to attend.
Congratulations to the Winner of the first annual poster art contest for the Dance Program–Michelle Lin ’12.
Michelle’s poster was part of the poster art display during Arts Weekend 2011 and will soon be seen on campus announcing the upcoming Spring Student Dance Concert.
Thanks everyone for your exciting and beautiful entries and we hope that you submit again next time!
Beverly Naidus is an internationally recognized artist on the faculty at UW-Tacoma where she teaches courses in art for social change and
healing. Interdisciplinary to her core, she works in many mediums, allowing the content to determine the form. Themes in her work include
the ecological crisis, fear of difference, unemployment, nuclear nightmares and her dreams for a reconstructed world. She has displayed
her work on city streets, subways and buses, in major museums, libraries, hospitals, community centers, commercial and university galleries and alternative spaces.
For over three decades she has straddled the high art world and the activist art and community arts worlds, finding it important to share
ideas and art projects in all three, sometimes overlapping contexts. Her work has been discussed in books by Lucy R. Lippard, Suzi Gablik, Paul
Von Blum and Lisa Bloom, as well as in significant journals and newspapers. She is the author of Arts for Change: Teaching Outside the
Frame, New Village Press, 2009 as well as two artist’s books, One Size Does Not Fit All and What Kinda Name is That.
She has taught at Carleton College, Goddard College, Hampshire College, the Institute for Social Ecology and California State University, Long Beach. She shares a home and garden on Vashon Island, Washington with Bob Spivey(founder of SEEDS) and their teenage son, Sam.
Her websites are beverlynaidus.net and www.artsforchange.org and her blog for her current eco-art project is www.edenreframed.blogspot.com
Beverly will be joining us on campus April 5th and 6th. Her public lecture will be April 6th at 4:15PM in the Keith Room of Lang Center. She will share a slide presentation on aspects of contemporary activist art practice that have influenced her.
The Department of Music and Dance and the Japanese Section of Modern Languages at Swarthmore College presents the Tamagawa University Taiko Drum and Dance Group in the Lang Music Building Concert Hall on April 3, 2011 at 7PM.
The renowned Tamagawa Taiko Drum and Dance Group returns to Philadelphia for a week of performances as part of the Greater Philadelphia Cherry Blossom Festival (March 4- April 15) sponsored by the Japan America Society and the Japan Foundation. Heart-pounding drum rhythms intermingle with elegant dances in breath-taking fashion to create unforgettable memories. Experience the relentless energy and stunning visuals as Tamagawa takes you on a journey through ancient and modern Japan.
Taiko drumming has been a feature of the College’s dance and music offerings for nearly a decade, thanks largely to the efforts of Associate Professor of Dance Kim Arrow. This event showcases the significant relationship between the College and Tamagawa University in Japan. Arrow, an accomplished dancer and choreographer, is the recipient of two Fulbright Fellowships and a Pew Fellowship in the Arts for choreography, among other awards. He joined Swarthmore’s faculty in 1991 and teaches a taiko repertory class.
The event is free and open to the public without advance reservations. For further information, contact Geoffrey Peterson at gpeters1@swarthmore.edu.
The Dance Program and the Department of English invite you to a dialogue with Daniel Singh, founder of the Dakshina Dance Company on April 7th at 2:40PM in the Troy Dance Lab.
Daniel Phoenix Singh is the artistic director of his DC based dance company that performs Bharata Natyam, Modern Dance and their own syncretic style that builds on the two idioms. The company is well known for presenting issue based work that is socially relevant and for their own innovative, expressive style of movement. Singh holds an MFA in Dance from the University of Maryland, has a Certificate in Movement Analysis from the Laban/Bartenieff Institute of Movement Studies, and studied Bharata Natyam for many years with Guru Meena Telikicherla. More information on Dakshina/Daniel Phoenix Singh Dance Company can be found at www.dakshina.org.
The Department of Theater and the Dance program now have Facebook pages.
Please ‘friend’ or ‘like’ us and check frequently for updated events announcements and other news!
Theater Department:
http://www.facebook.com/pages/Swarthmore-College-Department-of-Theater/167097723340268
Dance Program:
http://www.facebook.com/pages/Swarthmore-College-Dance-Program/200840063275757