West African Drumming & Percussion workshop 12/6 Lang Concert Hall

West African Drumming & Percussion Workshop

Traditional Rhythms of the Malinké

with Tara Tucker

DrumUpBig Australia

drums provided: no experience necessary—beginners on up.

December 6, 2012

4:15—5:30 PM

Lang Concert Hall

 

Please reserve a place (and a drum): email your

interest to Kim Arrow: karrow1@swarthmore.edu

or show up on the day

 

Tara is an internationally recognized djembe player.  She has performed with major artists such as Chris Berry (USA), Mamady Keita (Japan, Singapore, USA), Ganga Giri (Australia), Wala (Ghana), Ben Hakalitz (Papua New Guinea/Australia) and Kobya (Mazambique) among others.

Tara uses drumming and singing as a tool for community development, and for building cognition, self-esteem and identity in Australian Aboriginal communities throughout Queensland’s Cape York Peninsula and recently in the Dharavi megaslum  (Slumdog Millionaire) of Mumbai.

She is the only Australian certified as a Tam Tam Mandingue Teacher by Mamady Keita, Grand Master of the Djembe, and is one of only seven Examiners for the TTM Grading system for djembe and dunun.  Tam Tam Mandinge International School of West African Drumming consists of fifteen schools world-wide in seven countries.  Mamady Keita is author of Mamady Keita: A Life for the Djembé—Traditional Rhythms of the Malinké.

Call for Papers: DANCE MATTERS II Symposium

Dance Matters II: Frontiers of Performance Research

The School of Media, Communication and Culture at Jadavpur University, Kolkata, India is inviting papers for a two-day symposium titled Dance Matters II: Frontiers of Performance Research. The symposium will take place on July 19 and 20, 2013, at Jadavpur University. Selected papers from the symposium will be published in a book. Jadavpur University will provide local hospitality for the speakers at the university guesthouse. The event is sponsored by UGC University with Potential for Excellence Programme: Studies in Cultural Processes.

Cultures are dynamic. So the question arises: What should be preserved? How do we know what is worth preserving? This conference will interrogate these fundamental issues with a focus on dance. India, now synonymous with change, was not long ago identified with age-old traditions and socio-economic stagnation. In this fervor for newness and change the culture of dance and performance is experiencing a vibrant revitalization. There is greater awareness of and exposure to dance through new media and the circulation of new and traditional dances from live performances to Bollywood, music videos, youtube and staged performances, as well as through the interconnected networks of artists, presenters, and consumers. These conditions have increased the visibility of Indian dance in global culture. As established categories of high, low, classical, folk, contemporary, and commercial dissolve under the democratizing forces of markets and modernity, questions surrounding cultural preservation, heritage, innovation, and authenticity surface as urgent issues of the twenty first century. Art, culture, and history (despite contestations) connect communities to their past and help them to forge collective identities. But the rapid pace of culture change has negatively impacted some of the more enduring aspects of India’s performance traditions. Moreover, the Indian state’s lethargic attitude to cultural institutions and cultural policy continues to maintain the same bureaucratic power structures. As old buildings are demolished for new shopping malls, Bollywood item numbers crowd out every aspect of media and culture, and dance/art instrumentally connect to some politically correct social agenda, there is need to rethink and re-frame the place of dance and culture in the new Indian modernity. How can we re-imagine and renegotiate the old categories of performance research and infuse them with critique and analytical insight.

Dance and performance research have grown as an important interdisciplinary field of academic study in the past few decades. Interestingly, questions on modernity and subjectivities in the humanities and social sciences in recent years have shifted from the predominance of text and textual theories to questions of the body, senses, emotion/affect, and visual culture. Dance scholarship has much to research in these arenas. The recent scholarship on Indian dance has looked at dance in the context of postcolonial modernity, invention of tradition, national identity, critical history, subaltern historiography, diasporic identity, and gender and politics. Our previous conference titled “Dance Matters” and the anthology by the same name explored some of these key issues surrounding Indian dance and culture with an agenda of democratizing the inherent hierarchy and elitism associated with Indian dance both in theory and practice. This conference will build on the previous attempt at expanding the notion of performance research and deepen its scope by placing Indian dance at the frontlines of intellectual debates on culture, identity, and sociopolitical change as India plunges deeper into the messiness of markets and modernity. Some of the areas that may be explored are:

· The role of cultural heritage and preservation within the discourses of innovation and globalization.

· Dance as art to dance as everyday cultural practice through ethnographic research and questions on subjectivity.

· The vernacularization of the classical and the reshaping of the performance landscape by market forces and visual culture. What are the new contemporary hybrid performances? Do they fit in the category of dance? who are the new performers/choreographers and the new audiences?

· The role of new authorities, institutions, and gatekeepers in India and the diaspora.

· Integration of performance and culture with developmental agendas through community participation.

· Impact of India’s economic growth and rapid urbanization on the folk dance traditions in villages.

· Traditional aesthetics reshaped through new sensory experiences in various urban and rural landscapes.

· Pedagogical shifts and the role of tradition and innovation in the expressions of embodiment, gender, and self identity.

· New dance narratives impacting on past gender codes and questions of sexuality. The renewed meaning of femininity and masculinity in contemporary dance culture.

· Dance as a social medium of communication, spectacle (the recent trend of hundreds of dancers performing together), civic engagement, and political procession.

Please send a brief abstract (350 words) including a title, name, address, email, phone number and institutional affiliation by March 30, 2013. Submit abstracts and direct queries to:

Dr. Nilanjana Gupta, Coordinator,
School of Media Communication and Culture
Jadavpur University, Kolkata, India 700032
Email: nilaguptaju_at_yahoo.com

Dr. Pallabi Chakravorty
Department of Music and Dance
Swarthmore College, Pa 19096, U.S.A
Email: pchakra1_at_swarthmore.edu

Student Dance Concert 12/7 & 12/8

The Swarthmore College Dance Program (Department of Music and Dance) presents the 2012 Fall  Student Dance Concert at 8PM on 12/7 and 12/8 in the LPAC Pearson-Hall Theatre.  Ballet, Taiko, Tap,  and Drum & Dance performances will be included this year.  Come celebrate the end of Fall semester and the hard work of all our dance students and faculty.  The concert, which is appropriate for all ages, is free and open to the public.

Kyle Abraham.in.Motion at Swarthmore 11/6 – 11/11

The Department of Music and Dance at Swarthmore College and the William J. Cooper Foundation present Kyle Abraham’s PAVEMENT on Friday November 9, 2012 at 8PM in the Lang Performing Arts Center’s Pearson-Hall Theater.  Abraham’s latest piece of work, PAVEMENT, pays homage to the bold, 1990’s backward-jeans-and-high-top-fade era in hip-hop, while examining a culture with a history plagued by discrimination, genocide, and a constant quest for a way out.

Inspired by John Singleton’s groundbreaking film Boyz N The Hood (1991) and essays of W.E.B DuBois’ The Souls of Black Folk (1903), Abraham’s PAVEMENT tells the story of a group of friends struggling to stay together while their community is being torn apart.  Set in the historically black neighborhoods of Pittsburgh, PAVEMENT depicts scenes of violence, love, male bonding, arrests, physical and emotional pain, all combined with sound bites from the film and operatic music.

Kyle Abraham — the 2012 Jacob’s Pillow Dance Award recipient and 2010 Bessie Award-winning choreographer — first discovered his love of performance at the Civic Light Opera Academy in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.  He then went on to receive his BFA from SUNY Purchase and MFA from New York University Tisch School for the Arts. Abraham has collaborated with David Dorfman Dance, Mimi Garrard Dance Theater, Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company, and is currently choreographing for Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater.

Kyle Abraham/Abraham.In.Motion will also be involved in several residency activities during the week with Swarthmore students and the public.  These activities include a screening and discussion of Singleton’s film Boyz N the Hood on November 6 at 7PM, a Lecture/Demonstration on November 7 at 7PM, a Dance as Identity workshop on November 11 at 1PM.

For further information about these events, contact Tara Webb at 610-328-8260 or lpacevents@swarthmore.edu. The performance is free and open to the public without reservations.

 

 

Making Moves with idiosynCrazy

Making Moves

This fall Swarthmore College’s Dance Program continues an exciting partnership with Philadelphia dance/theater company, idiosynCrazy productions.  Performers from idiosynCrazy productions will work collaboratively with Swarthmore students in the exploration and discussion of methodology, performance, practice, and creation of dance.  This year, the focus will be on the process of dance creation and rigorous performance tools.  The project will culminate in a Spring semester showing/sharing in Troy Dance Studio.

Beginning in November 2012, this project will span both the Fall and Spring semesters. The process will create an opportunity for involved Swarthmore dancers to: develop meaningful relationships with professionals in the city, experiment with dance and performance collaboratively in a concentrated environment, and deepen understanding of what it means to be a professional dance artist.

Credit is available for those who are involved in this unique repertory opportunity.  A dance technique course should be taken concurrently.

Participants should expect rigorous creation and practice of movement material and compositional structures, utilization of vocal techniques in relation to movement practices, use of both set and improvised material within performance structures, and engagement of theatrical sensibilities.  Several directed sessions/workshops will be included with professional choreographers from Philadelphia and NYC, including Kyle Abraham of Abraham.In.Motion and Jane Comfort of Jane Comfort and Company.

All dancers are invited to join the Dance Program and idiosynCrazy productions for a conversation about the project on Monday, October 8th, at 9pm in Troy Dance Studio.  You may also consult dance faculty member Jumatatu Poe at jpoe1@swarthmore.edu for more information.

Window on the Work: Lela Aisha Jones/Flyground on 10/22/2012 at 6PM

Join the dance program for a showing with Lela Aisha Jones and Flyground in the Troy Dance Lab on October 22, at 6PM.

The dancers will be featuring some excerpted work from the STREET GRACE SERIES. This Flyground Series is a contemporary collection of movement performance works that cleverly blur textual and bodily memories as they are uncovered in the histories of African/Afro/Black diasporic shared experiences in the US.  Currently the Series includes Native Portals of Lynching and Love, which is an abstract cultural narrative that transforms our relationship with the noose as an active agent in lynching through jolts of comedy and intensity.  It puts the image of the noose front and center for everyone to work through in their bodies and systems.  It starts internal and external conversations based on what has been missing or excluded as a part of our historical education in theUS—namely visibility, accountability, and healing.

*Lela Aisha Jones* is a native of Tallahassee, Florida and is at home when creating.  While in movement she found her entry point as an artist, she cannot be defined by one discipline or practice; her experiences have lead to a more nomadic existence. She is the founder of FlyGround—her creative home, co-founder of The Requisite Movers, and development coordinator as well as member of Mascher Space Co-op. Lela walks with her transitioned as well as living family; she is humbled and so thankful for all those who have nurtured her, especially her grandfather, mom, dad, and sister.

*FlyGround* experiences are in a genre of their own but never too far from home. Since 2009, it is a movement performance company that artistically archives and rethinks the intersecting lineages of the African/Afro/Black diaspora and US black lived experiences through abstract, physical and cultural narrative.  The work is a spiritual sanctuary that asks hard questions in safe spaces and honors the body and embodied experience as real landscapes that know life.  We walk coherently through cultures and traditions meeting where we can and realizing where we are varied.  We are grounded in native US vibes.  We are home grown traces of many.  We are consciously here.

Tavia Odinak ’09 in NYC with “Meaning Irregular Volumes: Study III”

Tavia Odinak ’09 will be showing some of her new, in process material Measuring Irregular Volumes: Study III on Friday, September 28, 2012 @ 8PM at 100 Grand St., New York, NY. The evening will also include the work of three other choreographers: Gemma Peramiquel Borjas, Lindsey Drury, and Megan Byrne.

Tavia writes, “This Study is a taste of my work in it’s research stage. I would love to hear feedback, so if you are able to come and have thoughts or questions after the showing, please feel free to share them with me. I hope you will join me! ”

www.taviagrace.com