Dance. Workforce. Resilience. Initiative

Wednesday, April 25, 2018

Center Line: Decolonizing Dance

 

This event has already occurred. Enjoy event details below. 

When: Wednesday, April 25, 2018, 6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.
Where: Gibney, 280 Broadway, New York, NY, 1007, Studio V
Register: Free. Registration is required. Register online today


Accessibility:   Gibney is an accessible venue. Wheelchair ramps and elevators are available via the 280 Broadway entrance. All restrooms are gender inclusive and wheelchair accessible. Second-floor restrooms are wheelchair accessible through the dressing rooms. Studios and rooms are lit by fluorescent lights. If you require reasonable accommodation, please contact Hannah Joo at least two weeks prior to the event via email at hjoo@dance.nyc or call 212.966.4452 (voice only).

About: Join Dance/NYC and Gibney on April 25, 6:30 - 8:30 p.m., for Center Line: Decolonizing Dance, presented by Gibney at 280 Broadway, Studio V. Center Line, a community conversation series curated and facilitated by Eva Yaa Asantewaa, adopts performance artist Lois Weaver’s non-hierarchical Long Table format to encourage “informal conversation on serious topics.” Continuing a conversation started at the Dance/NYC 2018 Symposium, questions around Decolonizing Dance will be centered throughout the evening. How has colonization manifest in dance training, making, presenting, critiquing, documenting and theorizing? Who are the colonizers and the colonized? What initiatives could be launched to decolonize these sites of power imbalance? 

Three people sit smiling looking to the left.

Photo: Eva Yaa Asantewaa and J. Soto by Albin Lohr-Jones

Core Participants:

  • Moderated by Eva Yaa Asantewaa

  • Alicia Ohs

  • Alexis Convento

  • Johnnie Cruise Mercer

  • Jerron Herman

@DanceNYC  

 


Dance/NYC's diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives are made possible with leadership support from The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation and Booth Ferris Foundation. Dance/NYC convening is also made possible, in part, by public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, in partnership with the City Council, and from the National Endowment for the Arts.

       

 


 


 

Dance/NYC seeks partners and speakers with a variety of viewpoints for its events with the goal of generating discussion. The inclusion of any partner or speaker does not constitute an endorsement by Dance/NYC of that partner's or speaker's views.


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A dancer in a black tutu and leotard and pointe shoes stands on one leg, with the other leg extended behind the body in a straight line. One arm is raised above the head and the other extended to the back parallel to the extended leg. The school director is opposite the dancer and wears a red DTH logo t-shirt and black pants and ballet slippers. She holds the hand of the arm raised above the dancer’s head with one arm and her back arm is extended and she is smiling at the student.

 

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A dancer in a black tutu and leotard and pointe shoes stands on one leg, with the other leg extended behind the body in a straight line. One arm is raised above the head and the other extended to the back parallel to the extended leg. The school director is opposite the dancer and wears a red DTH logo t-shirt and black pants and ballet slippers. She holds the hand of the arm raised above the dancer’s head with one arm and her back arm is extended and she is smiling at the student.

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