Dance/NYC Symposium

A blue rectangle with whit text that reads 'Life cycles. Livelihoods. Legacies. March 17–19 2022 Virtual Platform Register at Dance.NYC @DanceNYC #DanceSymp'. W white Dance/NYC Symposium logo and two icons for closed captions and ASL are positioned on the far right.

2022 Digital Symposium


When: 
Thursday, March 17, 2022, 10:00 a.m. – 9:30 p.m.
Friday, March 18, 2022, 9:45 a.m. – 8:00 p.m.
Saturday, March 19, 2022, 9:45 a.m. – 8:00 p.m.

Where:

UPDATE: As of Wednesday, January 26, 2022, the Dance/NYC 2022 Symposium will be held entirely on a virtual platform.
 

Experience the 2022 Symposium


The Dance/NYC 2022 Symposium takes place from Thursday, March 17 to Saturday March, 19, 2022 as a virtual event convening on Whova, an all-in-one digital conference platform. As the only multi-day gathering of its kind for the dance community in the metropolitan New York City area, the Symposium is a meeting place for the dance field to exchange ideas, expand networks, sharpen organizational practices, and deepen the inquiry around New York City’s legacy and trajectory of dance-making.

**For Registered Attendees Only**



About the 2022 Symposium:

Dance/NYC’s 2022 Symposium: Life cycles. Livelihoods. Legacies., focuses on uncovering the generational continuum of lives in dance. Sessions explore career and life navigation, underscoring dance and artistic practice as core human needs while building understanding across generations of audiences and dance workers. This multi-day event invites participants to investigate topics of mentorship, advocacy, leadership, and equity, within an ethos of community care.

As the only multi-day gathering of its kind for the dance community in the metropolitan New York City area; the Symposium is a meeting place for the dance field to exchange ideas, expand networks, sharpen organizational practices, and deepen the inquiry around New York City’s legacy and trajectory of dance-making.
 



Accessibility:
 

Captioning (open and/or closed) and ASL interpretation will be available during the event. Sessions will be primarily discussion and presentation based with sporadic use of videos and/or slides. Audiences will interact through the Whova conference platform via chat functions or via video and audio presence for select sessions held through the Zoom meeting integration with the Whova platform. Captioning (open and/or closed) and ASL interpretation will be available during the event. Speakers will visually describe themselves and slides and images will be described. Video descriptions will be provided ahead of the event via the Symposium Participation Guide.

If the chat features are not accessible to you, contact our voice-only helpline at 212-966-4452, ext. 1 during the event for technical support, to propose questions, or to comment. For more information about accessibility or if you require additional reasonable accommodation, please contact Brinda Guha via email at sympcoordinator@dance.nyc.
 



Guest Curators and Symposium Programming Committee:

The guest curator program works to ensure that Dance/NYC is in alignment with, and amplifies the voices of, the communities it aims to serve and is made possible through the generous support of The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. The Symposium Programming Committee exists to advise Dance/NYC in the programming and direction of Dance/NYC’s yearly Symposium—and, by extension, further the dance field in NYC.

Guest Curators

George has brown skin, long grey hair, a smile and mustache and goatee.

George Emilio Sanchez, Performance Artist

x, a mixed raced, light-skinned Black agender person, is wearing dark gray coveralls.

x sennyuen rance, Transdiciplinary Artist

Symposium Programming Committee

Black and white headshot of Albert Blackstone

Albert Blackstone, Director, MOMEN; Faculty, Broadway Dance Center

Ami Scherson Headshot

Ami Scherson, Equity in Arts Leadership Prog. Associate, Americans for the Arts; Co-Chair, D/NYC Junior Committee

Picture of Ana "Rokafella" Garcia

Ana "Rokafella" Garcia, Managing Director, Full Circle Souljahs

Headshot of Eva Yaa Asantewaa, Photo Credit Scott Shaw

Eva Yaa Asantewaa, Consulting Curator, Freelance Writer and Editor

Picture of Juan José Escalante
Picture of Julia del Palacio

Julia del Palacio, Director of Strategic Partnerships, Kupferberg Center for the Arts

Laurel, a white woman with creamy skin, cropped silvery hair, and hazel eyes, looks thoughtfully to one side.

Laurel Lawson, Choreographer, Kinetic Light; Artist-Engineer, Rose Tree Productions

Photograph of Nelida Tirado, Photo Credit by Chasi Annexy

Nelida Tirado, Artistic Director & Teacher of Nelida Tirado Flamenco/Arte 718

Brown-skinned Black woman with short curly dark brown hair shown from the chest up and wearing a v-neck satin black long sleeve

Niya Nicholson, Managing Director

MOVE|NYC|

Photo of Parijat Desai, Live performance of bird emerging from nest

Parijat Desai, Artistic Director, Parijata Dance Company

Picture of Remi Harris, Photo Credit by Marc Espinosa

Remi Harris, Associate Artistic Director

HERE Arts

Picture of Sydnie L. Mosley

Sydnie L. Mosley, Artistic & Executive Director, Sydnie L. Mosley Dances

Picture of Zavé Martohardjono

zavé martohardjono, Multidisciplinary Dance and Performance Artist

Leadership support is provided by The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation and the Howard Gilman Foundation. The Symposium is also supported, in part, by public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, in partnership with the City Council, from the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New York State Legislature, and from the National Endowment for the Arts.

 

Andrew Mellon Foundation

Howard Gilman Foundation logo

NYC Department of Cultural Affairs logo


National Endowment for the Arts Logo



SPONSORS & PARTNERS
 

PS Dance! Black sleek logo with two horizontal lines

Con Edison Logo

92Y Harkness Dance Center stacked black logo

Cataliotti Law P.C. logo Black and light blue 92Y DEL Dance Education Laboratory At the Heart of Teaching logo Dark grey and red Full Out Creative logo with a camera lens


 

Gibney black logo
 

Red orange and yellow Cumbe logo
 

  Black red and gold Ballet Hispanico logo
pink lime green and purple logo for Fit4Dance Red Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company logo with symbol and some grey text Blue and purple National Dance Institute Collaborative for teaching and learning logo
New York Live Arts Red and Yellow logo   Red and purple gradient bold JOYCE logo Black logo on white background; Tom O'Connor Consulting Group      
Accent Dance NYC black and green logo with a pink and blue heart black bold Alvin Ailey American Dance Theatre logo Dark grey American Ballet Theatre stacked logo
BAAD! Bronx Academy of Arts and Dance black and red logo Red and orange logo for Dance Parade Round Freelancers Guilded Cooperative logo with a yellow circular design and bold black font
Harkness Center for Dance Injuries Logo Homelight light blue and dark blue logo with a house Purple Hunter Dance logo with bold capital letters and a slant incorporated with
Black Jacob's Pillow logo with a mirror swirl design on the left Black Lincoln Center logo Maury Donnelly & Parr black white and red logo
Mark Morris Dance Group Logo in black with red design in the middle typewriter font Movement Research logo Gray gradient bold logo for New York City Ballet
PW in blue bold font, Parker | Waichman LLP in black sleek font Pentacle black and red logo Orange and black logo for Arts in Education Roundtable with NYC in the orange O of Roundtable

 


Cumbe Center for African and Diaspora Dance is Dance/NYC’s 2022 Symposium Official ‘Dance Break’ Sponsor.

Con Edison is Dance/NYC's 2022 Symposium Lead Corporate Sponsor.

 


 

JUSTICE, EQUITY & INCLUSION PARTNERS
 

 

Art Beyond Sight Logo
 

ArtSpace Sanctuary Logo
 


 
Center for Traditional Music and Dance Logo International Association of Blacks in Dance logo Lotus Music & Dance
Museum Access Consortium Logo National Association of Latino Arts and Cultures logo NYFA orange logo
   WOCA Logo  
 
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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