In Our Own Bodies Performance-Dancing Earth

Tuesday, April 2, 2019
6:30 PM - 9:00 PM (ET)
TANG Atrium
Event Type
Community
Contact
518-580-5530
Department
Tang Teaching Museum/Art Gallery
Link
http://ems.skidmore.edu/MasterCalendar/EventDetails.aspx?EventDetailId=25648

Join us on Tuesday, April 2 at 6:30pm for the first event in a multi-day festival celebrating activism in performance art. Organized by Cinthia Duran Larrea ’19, In Our Own Bodies kicks off with a performance and lecture from Rulan Tangen, the founder of Dancing Earth, and Dakota Camacho. A reception will follow.

About Dancing Earth

A unique force in world dance, Dancing Earth: Contemporary Indigenous Creations gathers Native collaborators who embody intertribal ecological philosophies to re-envision contemporary dance and assert its role in society as purposeful ritual. As indigenous dancers, composers, costumers, filmmakers, and poets, Dancing Earth honors dance’s essential function in personal, social, and environmental transformation. They dance the rich diversity of Native contemporary heritage with the intent to promote ecological awareness, cultural diversity, healing and understanding between peoples. Their aesthetic embodies earth’s inherent spirit, and is created by, with, and for the land and the peoples of the land.

About In Our Own Bodies

How do identity and ancestry inform our creative work? How can performance art be used as a medium for cultural revitalization, community empowerment and social justice advocacy? What are the untapped resources we hold within ourselves? Using the lens of dance, these are some of the questions this festival will invite us to explore.

In Our Own Bodies will include workshops and performances by Dancing Earth, Urban Bush Women and Skidmore Alumna Salomé Egas ’14. These guest artists will share their impactful performance work with the Skidmore Community, and will facilitate conversations and movement-based activities designed to bring forth the memory, knowledge and creative potential that is already present in our own bodies.

This is an Intergroup Relations (IGR) Independent study led by Cinthia Duran Larrea ’19 in collaboration with Julia Gillis ’19, Stuti Bagri ’21, Sarah Maacha ’19 and Dejon Bunn ’19, with support from the Tang Teaching Museum and The Office of Student Diversity Programs (OSDP).

In Our Own Bodies Events

Indian women kneeling in rock formations
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