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Bard Alumnus Arthur Aviles ’87 Awarded a Dance/USA Fellowship to Artists

Dancer and choreographer Arthur Aviles ’87 has been awarded a fellowship from national dance organization Dance/USA, a support organization that advocates for an inclusive and equitable dance world. " “Through their movement work, these [awardees] reimagine how we connect, care and build community,” said Ashley Ferro-Murray, program director for the arts at the Doris Duke Foundation, which funds the award.
 

Bard Alumnus Arthur Aviles ’87 Awarded a Dance/USA Fellowship to Artists

Dancer and choreographer Arthur Aviles ’87 has been awarded a fellowship from national dance organization Dance/USA, a support organization that advocates for an inclusive and equitable dance world. The Dance/USA Fellowships to Artists program supports movement-based artists with sustained practices in art for social change. One goal of the award is recognizing forms of social transformation that do not fit typical models of art funding, including community building and activism. “Through their movement work, these artists reimagine how we connect, care and build community,” said Ashley Ferro-Murray, program director for the arts at the Doris Duke Foundation, which funds the award.

Aviles’s previous honors include a New York Foundation for the Arts Fellowship, the Mayor’s Award for Art and Culture, and an honorary doctorate from Bard. He established the The Bronx Academy of Arts and Dance (BAAD!) in 1998. In 2021, he was named a NYU artist in residence.

Bard’s Dance Program is a varied, technique-based program that studies the dancing body in relation to ​​the broader, interdisciplinary contexts in which the art form exists. The curriculum includes practical and theoretical classes including studio courses in ballet, modern dance, and West African dance as well as courses in composition, dance history, dance science, performance and production, and dance repertory.
More About the Fellowship

Post Date: 12-16-2025

Bard SummerScape’s Pastoral Named in New York Times “Best Dance of 2025”

Pastoral, a dance performance by Fisher Center LAB Choreographer in Residence Pam Tanowitz which premiered at SummerScape last summer, was included in the New York Times’s list of top dance performances of 2025. “For years now, a Pam Tanowitz premiere at Bard SummerScape has pretty much guaranteed aesthetic pleasure,” wrote the Times. “Pastoral, her latest, did not disappoint. [Her] witty, complex choreography suggested not the storm and stress of nature, but nature contemplated in the tranquility of art.”

Bard SummerScape’s Pastoral Named in New York Times “Best Dance of 2025”

Pastoral, a dance performance by Fisher Center LAB Choreographer in Residence Pam Tanowitz which premiered at SummerScape last summer, was included in the New York Times’s list of top dance performances of 2025. Collecting ten favorite dance performances from the year, Gia Kourlas said the major theme of dance in 2025 was emotion. Pastoral, which responds to Beethoven’s “Symphony No. 6 in F Major,” incorporates bright costumes and backgrounds painted by artist Sarah Crowner. “For years now, a Pam Tanowitz premiere at Bard SummerScape has pretty much guaranteed aesthetic pleasure,” wrote the Times. “Pastoral, her latest, did not disappoint. [Her] witty, complex choreography suggested not the storm and stress of nature, but nature contemplated in the tranquility of art.”
Read the List

Post Date: 12-09-2025

Yebel Gallegos Awarded New York State Choreographers Initiative 2025 Award

Yebel Gallegos, assistant professor of dance at Bard, has been awarded a New York State Choreographers Initiative 2025 Award of $11,500 through the New York State’s DanceForce, a network of dance activists working to increase the quality and quantity of dance, in partnership with the New York State Council on the Arts.

Yebel Gallegos Awarded New York State Choreographers Initiative 2025 Award

Yebel Gallegos, assistant professor of dance at Bard, has been awarded a New York State Choreographers Initiative 2025 Award of $11,500 through the New York State’s DanceForce, a network of dance activists working to increase the quality and quantity of dance, in partnership with the New York State Council on the Arts. The award, which is designed to help awardees develop their choreographic skills by providing resources to advance their creative practice, will fund Yebel with a $2,500 stipend and paid support for both a mentor and creative time spent with dancers and other collaborators of his choice. Yebel’s choreography project will become a mini-residency designed to fit his specific artistic needs, and he has invited Dante Puleio, artistic director of the Limón Dance Company, to serve as his mentor. Puleio’s insight into how experienced dancers navigate inherited choreographic traditions makes him an ideal guide as Yebel explores new methods of movement generation with professionals in the field.

Post Date: 06-02-2025
More Dance News
  • Bard Alumna Joanna Haigood ’79 Honored with Dance Magazine Award

    Bard Alumna Joanna Haigood ’79 Honored with Dance Magazine Award

    The 2024 Dance Magazine Awards honor Bard alumna Joanna Haigood ’79, alongside George Faison, Liz Lerman, Mavis Staines, Shen Wei, and Mikhail Baryshnikov, whose work with Baryshnikov Arts earned him the Chairman’s Award. From its first year in 1954, the Dance Magazine Awards have been given annually in appreciation of the artistry, integrity, and resilience that dance artists have demonstrated over the course of their careers. The theme for this year’s awards is “the stage and beyond”—the dancers, choreographers, and educators recognized are invested in work that often transcends the proscenium.

    “Since 1980 Joanna Haigood has been creating work that uses natural, architectural, and cultural environments as points of departure for movement exploration and narrative,” says the Dance Magazine Awards statement. “Her stages have included grain terminals, a clock tower, the pope’s palace, military forts, and a mile of neighborhood streets in the South Bronx. Her work has been commissioned by many arts institutions, including Dancing in the Streets, Jacob’s Pillow, the Walker Art Center, the National Black Arts Festival, and Festival d’Avignon. Haigood has had the privilege to mentor many extraordinary young artists at the École Nationale des Arts du Cirque, the Trinity Laban Conservatoire, Spelman College, Stanford University, the San Francisco Circus Center, and Zaccho Studio.”
    Read more in Dance magazine

    Post Date: 10-22-2024
  • Bard Dance Professor Yebel Gallegos Awarded MADarts Residency

    Bard Dance Professor Yebel Gallegos Awarded MADarts Residency

    Bard Visiting Assistant Professor of Dance Yebel Gallegos will spend the week of March 18– 22 in the MADarts Residency Program, which provides artists and their collaborators unlimited access to a dance studio and a quiet, comfortable living space at the Modern Accord Depot in Accord, New York. Gallegos will continue work on his long-term dance production project, MACHO Sensibilities, which critically examines the imposition of machismo on male-identifying dancers of Mexican and Mexican-American descent. During the residency, he will be developing a new section with his collaborators that is set to premiere at the Faculty Dance Concert, taking place in the Richard B. Fisher Center for the Performing Arts’ LUMA Theater at Bard College in spring 2024.The section will be a trio comprising three Mexican and Mexican-American artists including Gallego, costume and stage designer David Arevalo, and composer/sound designer/percussionist Jonathan Rodriguez. This research project is anchored in autoethnographic writing, oral history research, and movement analysis. “I define machismo as an exaggerated performance of a ‘man’s role’ as it is encouraged by the confines of heteronormativity and patriarchy. Machismo overshadows the individuality of gender representation, preventing the inclusion of diverse interpretations of masculinity in society,” writes Gallego.
    Learn more

    Post Date: 02-28-2024
  • Baye & Asa, Codirected by Sam Asa Pratt ’14, Wins Harkness Promise Award at 2023 Dance Magazine Awards

    Baye & Asa, Codirected by Sam Asa Pratt ’14, Wins Harkness Promise Award at 2023 Dance Magazine Awards

    Alumnus Sam Asa Pratt ’14 performed at the 2023 Dance Magazine Awards Ceremony, where Pratt received a Harkness Promise Award alongside Amadi Washington. Their dance company, Baye & Asa, was praised by Harkness Foundation for Dance Executive Director Joan Finkelstein for its ability to “create political metaphors, interrogate systemic inequities, and contemporize ancient allegories.” Accepting the award, Pratt said, “In a contemporary world, there’s a lot of pressure to put yourself into a camp, to distill, succinctly and uncompromisingly, what you believe and where you stand. I think dance is uniquely positioned as an art form that can liberate thought into indeterminacy and to widen toward multiplicity instead of narrowing towards one singular thesis. Art remains one of the most advanced pieces of technology we have as a species.”
    Read More in Dance

    Post Date: 12-19-2023
  • Bard College Dance Program Launches Two-Year Partnership with Villa Albertine

    Bard College Dance Program Launches Two-Year Partnership with Villa Albertine

    Beginning in fall 2023, the Bard College Dance Program is launching a two-year partnership with Villa Albertine, a cultural institution that supports exchanges in arts and ideas between the United States, France, and beyond. Each semester, artists selected by Tara Lorenzen, director of Bard’s Dance Program, and Nicole Birmann Bloom, Villa Albertine’s program officer for the performing arts, in collaboration with Centre National de la Danse (CN D, Pantin, France) and other French choreographic centers, will teach technique and repertory courses in Bard’s dance curriculum.

    “The Bard Dance Program is thrilled to partner with Villa Albertine,” said Lorenzen. “There has always been a robust exchange of innovative dance ideas between French-supported artists and the US and I look forward to continuing this tradition with the next generation of dance students here in Annandale.”

    During the spring semester, a choreographer will conduct a one week creative residency in the Luma Theater/Fisher Center with a public showing for the Bard community and masterclasses for the student body.  A unique component of this partnership allows Bard dance students to participate in the international dance platform CAMPING at the CN D in Pantin, France, each June. CN D is a public institution created in 1998, devoted to the preservation of choreographic and dance culture. Its distinctive CAMPING dance festival gives students the opportunity to work with choreographers from around the globe, perform their own choreographic projects, and develop teaching practices by conducting morning classes with their peers.

    The partnership is launching during Albertine Dance Season, the year-long exploration of dance from inception to performance that includes multi-city tours by French, France-based, African, and Caribbean companies, artistic residencies for up-and-coming choreographers, a dance-themed symposium featuring global leaders in the field, and more. 

    “The team at Villa Albertine shares with Bard College the deepest appreciation of the true value of educational exchange and the enduring cultural benefits of arts in education,” said Gaëtan Bruel, cultural counselor and director of Villa Albertine. ” We have the greatest confidence that this two-year partnership will uniquely support and sustain Bard students in the enrichment of their arts experience while at Bard and shape their future artistry.”

    Since 2009, the Bard Dance Program has hosted an in-residence dance company or performing arts organization bringing professional technique and composition to the academic program in the form of teaching, educational licensing projects, master classes, full-Company production residencies, and public performances.

    This fall, choreographers and performers Marcela Santander (Chile/France) and Volmir Cordeiro (Brazil/France) will join the Dance faculty in Annandale-on-Hudson. Wanjiru Kamuyu (Kenya/France/USA) will have a discussion on September 18, 2023, based on her current touring project “An Immigrant’s Story” and her unique creative process.

    Post Date: 08-29-2023
  • Maria Q. Simpson Launches Ballet Website for Educators

    Maria Q. Simpson Launches Ballet Website for Educators

    Maria Q. Simpson, professor of dance at Bard College, has launched Three Ballet Teachers... (3BT) in collaboration with Zvi Gotheiner and Hannah Wiley. 3BT is an online resource featuring video documentation of original ballet class choreography by the three contemporary ballet teachers. “The website provides teachers of all levels of experience with choreographed center-floor sequences that can be used in full or in part, or as inspiration for their own classes,” Maria said. The project came out of the mutual belief among Simpson, Gotheiner, and Wiley that ballet class choreography represents a huge body of unrecognized creative work, and that this work should be accessible. “3BT is looking to both highlight and exalt the training space and the choreography that occurs there as representative of the living history of the art form,”  Maria said.
    Learn More

    Post Date: 08-16-2023
  • New York Times Profiles Bard’s Fisher Center: At 20, an Upstate Arts Haven Keeps Breaking New Ground

    New York Times Profiles Bard’s Fisher Center: At 20, an Upstate Arts Haven Keeps Breaking New Ground

    The Fisher Center at Bard has become an incubator for commercially promising new work like Justin Peck’s Illinois, while holding tight to its experimental roots.
    For the New York Times, Jennifer Schuessler visits Bard’s Fisher Center in its 20th anniversary season, on the heels of a sold-out, extended run of Illinois, to talk with Fisher Center Artistic Director Gideon Lester, Illinois director Justin Peck, choreographer Pam Tanowitz, President Leon Botstein, and others about the Fisher Center’s past and future. “Since opening 20 years ago,” she writes, “the center’s Frank Gehry building has emerged as a hothouse for the creation of uncompromising, cross-disciplinary, and sometimes hard to describe hits.”
    Read More in the New York Times

    Post Date: 07-05-2023

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2022

Tuesday, November 15, 2022
  Body and Line: A Way of Contemplating the World – A Masterclass with the Company
Fisher Center, Felicitas S. Thorne Dance Studio  4:40 pm – 6:00 pm EST/GMT-5
This masterclass is a reflection of how La Serpiente engages the creative process—linking physical training to a particular compositional approach. With the students of Bard College, we are interested in conceptualizing the architecture of our bodies as a way to sensibly contemplate our world.


Saturday, November 12, 2022
Tango Dance Party, All Welcome
Bertelsmann Campus Center, Multipurpose Room  8:30 pm – 11:55 pm EST/GMT-5
The Bard Tango Program is pleased to welcome Los Ocampo: Mónica Romero and Omar Ocampo's 30-year partnership of performing, teaching, and sharing Argentine tango and folklore around the world. Los Ocampo are masters of Argentine tango and Argentine folkloric dances, such as chacarera, zamba and malambo, and are official adjudicators at the international Tango Championships in Argentina. The Bard Tango Program pursues a space for freedom of expression, creativity, and human dignity within this art.

Come and dance with us!


Saturday, November 12, 2022
Bertelsmann Campus Center, Multipurpose Room  2:00 pm – 5:15 pm EST/GMT-5
The Bard Tango Program is pleased to welcome Los Ocampo: Mónica Romero and Omar Ocampo's 30-year partnership of performing, teaching, and sharing Argentine tango and folklore around the world. Los Ocampo are masters of Argentine tango and Argentine folkloric dances, such as chacarera, zamba and malambo, and are official adjudicators at the international Tango Championships in Argentina. The Bard Tango Program pursues a space for freedom of expression, creativity, and human dignity within this art.

Come and dance with us!


Saturday, November 5, 2022
Fisher Center, LUMA Theater  7:30 pm – 8:30 pm EDT/GMT-4
The Bard College Dance Program presents Fall/O me, featuring choreography by students of the Dance Program, Justine Denamiel and Elsa Wood, with special guest performances by Lisa Fagan ’11 and Maddie Hopfield ’17.


Saturday, November 5, 2022
Fisher Center, LUMA Theater  2:00 pm – 3:00 pm EDT/GMT-4
The Bard College Dance Program presents Fall/O me, featuring choreography by students of the Dance Program, Justine Denamiel and Elsa Wood, with special guest performances by Lisa Fagan ’11 and Maddie Hopfield ’17.


Friday, November 4, 2022
Fisher Center, LUMA Theater  7:30 pm – 8:30 pm EDT/GMT-4
The Bard College Dance Program presents Fall/O me, featuring choreography by students of the Dance Program, Justine Denamiel and Elsa Wood, with special guest performances by Lisa Fagan ’11 and Maddie Hopfield ’17.


Thursday, November 3, 2022
Fisher Center, LUMA Theater  7:30 pm – 8:30 pm EDT/GMT-4
The Bard College Dance Program presents Fall/O me, featuring choreography by students of the Dance Program, Justine Denamiel and Elsa Wood, with special guest performances by Lisa Fagan ’11 and Maddie Hopfield ’17.


Friday, October 21, 2022
An evening of tango, music, and laughter.
Bertelsmann Campus Center, Multipurpose Room  6:00 pm – 9:00 pm EDT/GMT-4
Free for Bard students!

Did you come to La Voz Harvest Moon and had a great time? Did you miss it?

Don't miss this last opportunity to celebrate the 18th anniversary of La Voz. Enjoy Argentine tango and folklore with Eduardo Parra, who will give a concert and will also teach us how to dance tango. We will also have the traditional Veracruz music Son Jarocho in the hands of the group Ameyal with Maria and Mateo. Of course, there will be food, and karaoke! Participate if you dare.

And most importantly, we will publicly recognize several members of the community who have been nominated by their peers for their dedicated service to the Hispanic immigrant communityof the Hudson Valley: Claudette Aldebot, Maria Cabrera, Víctor Cueva, Adelio Ramírez, Felipe Santos, and Joan Ruiz Werkema. It will be an unforgettable night.

Thank you to the sponsors of our anniversary celebrations.

Major sponsors: Hudson Valley Federal Credit Union, Radio Kingston, Ulster Savings Bank, St. Catherine Center for Children

Patron sponsors: M&T Bank, Nuvance, Sun River, SUNY Ulster

Community-level sponsors: Hudson Valley Hospice, RUPCO

***
¿Viniste a La Luna de la Cosecha de La Voz y la pasaste genial? ¿Te la perdiste?

No te pierdas esta última oportunidad de celebrar el 18 aniversario de La Voz. Disfruta del tango y folclore argentino con Eduardo Parra, quien dará un concierto y también nos enseñará a bailar tango. También tendremos la música tradicional veracruzana Son Jarocho en manos del grupo Ameyal de Maria y Mateo. Por supuesto, habrá comida, ¡y karaoke! Participa si te animas. 

Y lo más importante: reconoceremos públicamente a varios miembros de la comunidad que han sido nominados por sus pares por su dedicado servicio a la comunidad inmigrante hispana del Valle del Hudson: Claudette Aldebot, Maria Cabrera, Víctor Cueva, Adelio Ramírez, Felipe Santos y Joan Ruiz Werkema. Será una noche inolvidable. 

Gracias a los patrocinadores de la celebración de nuestro aniversario:

Nivel Luna Llena: Hudson Valley Credit Union, Radio Kingston, Ulster Savings Bank, St. Catherine Center for Children 

Nivel Cosecha: M&T Bank, Nuvance, Sun River, SUNY Ulster

Nivel Comunidad: Hudson Valley Hospice, RUPCO

 


Saturday, May 14, 2022
Fisher Center, LUMA Theater  7:30 pm – 8:30 pm EDT/GMT-4
Choreographed by rising artists in the Bard dance program, this concert of Senior Projects represents the culmination of four years of intensive choreographic inquiry and research. Their concepts have been realized with the support of a professional staff of designers.Choreography by
Leslie Morales
Jude Markey-Smith
Rose Xu


Saturday, May 14, 2022
Fisher Center, LUMA Theater  7:30 pm – 8:30 pm EDT/GMT-4
Choreographed by rising artists in the Bard dance program, this concert of Senior Projects represents the culmination of four years of intensive choreographic inquiry and research. Their concepts have been realized with the support of a professional staff of designers.Choreography by
Leslie Morales
Jude Markey-Smith
Rose Xu


Saturday, May 14, 2022
  Ludlow Lawn  3:00 pm – 4:30 pm EDT/GMT-4
Cetiliztli Nauhcampa is a cultural, spiritual, artistic, political, and educational circle made up of community and family members who carry on the ancient traditions of the Native peoples of this continent.

Join us for an outdoor ceremonial performance on May 14 at 3 pm on the Ludlow Lawn.

For more information, please email Professor Yebel Gallegos at [email protected].


Saturday, May 14, 2022
Fisher Center, LUMA Theater  2:00 pm – 3:00 pm EDT/GMT-4
Choreographed by rising artists in the Bard dance program, this concert of Senior Projects represents the culmination of four years of intensive choreographic inquiry and research. Their concepts have been realized with the support of a professional staff of designers.Choreography by
Leslie Morales
Jude Markey-Smith
Rose Xu


Friday, May 13, 2022
Fisher Center, LUMA Theater  7:30 pm EDT/GMT-4
Choreographed by rising artists in the Bard dance program, this concert of Senior Projects represents the culmination of four years of intensive choreographic inquiry and research. Their concepts have been realized with the support of a professional staff of designers.Choreography by
Leslie Morales
Jude Markey-Smith
Rose Xu


Friday, May 13, 2022
Fisher Center, LUMA Theater  7:30 pm – 8:30 pm EDT/GMT-4
Choreographed by rising artists in the Bard dance program, this concert of Senior Projects represents the culmination of four years of intensive choreographic inquiry and research. Their concepts have been realized with the support of a professional staff of designers.Choreography by
Leslie Morales
Jude Markey-Smith
Rose Xu


Thursday, May 12, 2022
Fisher Center, LUMA Theater  7:30 pm EDT/GMT-4
Choreographed by rising artists in the Bard dance program, this concert of Senior Projects represents the culmination of four years of intensive choreographic inquiry and research. Their concepts have been realized with the support of a professional staff of designers.Choreography by
Leslie Morales
Jude Markey-Smith
Rose Xu


Saturday, April 30, 2022
Fisher Center, LUMA Theater  7:30 pm – 8:30 pm EDT/GMT-4
A dynamic evening of choreography by the distinguished faculty of the Bard College Dance Program, performed by students in the program and guests of the faculty.Featuring Choreography by John Cage, Jean Churchill, Merce Cunningham, Yebel Gallegos, Maria Simpson, and Gibney Company Partnership Teaching Artist: Amy Miller.


Saturday, April 30, 2022
Fisher Center, LUMA Theater  7:30 pm – 8:30 pm EDT/GMT-4
A dynamic evening of choreography by the distinguished faculty of the Bard College Dance Program, performed by students in the program and guests of the faculty.Featuring Choreography by John Cage, Jean Churchill, Merce Cunningham, Yebel Gallegos, Maria Simpson, and Gibney Company Partnership Teaching Artist: Amy Miller.


Saturday, April 30, 2022
Fisher Center, LUMA Theater  2:00 pm – 3:00 pm EDT/GMT-4
A dynamic evening of choreography by the distinguished faculty of the Bard College Dance Program, performed by students in the program and guests of the faculty.Featuring Choreography by John Cage, Jean Churchill, Merce Cunningham, Yebel Gallegos, Maria Simpson, and Gibney Company Partnership Teaching Artist: Amy Miller.


Friday, April 29, 2022
Fisher Center, LUMA Theater  7:30 pm – 8:30 pm EDT/GMT-4
A dynamic evening of choreography by the distinguished faculty of the Bard College Dance Program, performed by students in the program and guests of the faculty.Featuring Choreography by John Cage, Jean Churchill, Merce Cunningham, Yebel Gallegos, Maria Simpson, and Gibney Company Partnership Teaching Artist: Amy Miller.


Friday, April 29, 2022
Fisher Center, LUMA Theater  7:30 pm – 8:30 pm EDT/GMT-4
A dynamic evening of choreography by the distinguished faculty of the Bard College Dance Program, performed by students in the program and guests of the faculty.Featuring Choreography by John Cage, Jean Churchill, Merce Cunningham, Yebel Gallegos, Maria Simpson, and Gibney Company Partnership Teaching Artist: Amy Miller.


Thursday, April 28, 2022
Fisher Center, LUMA Theater  7:30 pm EDT/GMT-4
A dynamic evening of choreography by the distinguished faculty of the Bard College Dance Program, performed by students in the program and guests of the faculty.Featuring Choreography by John Cage, Jean Churchill, Merce Cunningham, Yebel Gallegos, Maria Simpson, and Gibney Company Partnership Teaching Artist: Amy Miller.


Thursday, April 21, 2022
by Rena Butler
Fisher Center, LUMA Theater  7:30 pm – 8:30 pm EDT/GMT-4
Gibney Company makes their Fisher Center debut for a work-in-progress showing—a culmination of its Spring residency in the LUMA Theater at Bard.This event marks the second year of the company’s partnership with the Bard College Dance Program. The program includes the most recent work-in-progress—Re | Build | Construct—by Gibney Company Choreographic Associate and celebrated performer, Rena Butler.Please join us in a Q&A after the performance.


Wednesday, April 20, 2022
  A Conversation
11:50 am – 1:10 pm EDT/GMT-4
Dance is one of the oldest known art forms but also one of the most evanescent. How do we study dance in premodern cultures like ancient Greece and Rome? What questions can we ask, what sources are available to us, and what methodologies do we employ? How can scholars and practitioners create a more fruitful and creative dialogue between past and present in Dance Studies?

Please join Lauren Curtis (Bard College) and Karin Schlapbach (University of Fribourg), two members of the international research project IDA (Imprints of Ancient Dance / Improntas de danza antigua) to discuss their work in a roundtable conversation hosted by the Dance Program and Classical Studies Program.


Wednesday, March 30, 2022
  Bertelsmann Campus Center, Multipurpose Room  5:30 pm – 6:00 pm EDT/GMT-4
CRANIAL FRACKING 
Dance/Theater performance
Created by Jean Churchill 
Text by Ian Frazier
Music by Kyle Gann
Performance by Marguerite San Millan 

The performer is Marguerite San Millan, a teacher, director, choreographer, and actor. The work is choreographed and directed by dance professor Jean Churchill and set to music by Bard music professor Kyle Gann.

The narrator in Ian Frazier's "Cranial Fracking" is thrilled to have signed a lease to allow a major oil company drill into her head in the search for natural gas. This extraordinary satirical essay provides the script for a solo performance piece in which the performer describes what her life has been like ever since they discovered methane in her head, and after she agreed to let the oil company begin the cranial fracking.

Consider joining us at 4:45 pm for a FREE Low Carbon Dinner at MPR followed by our Worldwide Climate/Justice Teach-In at Olin Hall beginning at 6:15 pm. Program Details Here


Saturday, March 12, 2022
Fisher Center, LUMA Theater  7:30 pm – 8:30 pm EST/GMT-5
Choreographed and performed by Bard students, assisted by professional lighting and costume designers, this concert gives students a chance to explore new territory in dance making. Some dances are presented in partial fulfillment for acceptance into the Dance Program.Choreography by
Justine Denamiel*
Itzel Herrera Garcia
Hannah Herschend*
Antonia Salathe *submitting work in partial fulfillment for moderation into the Dance Program


Saturday, March 12, 2022
Fisher Center, LUMA Theater  7:30 pm – 8:30 pm EST/GMT-5
Choreographed and performed by Bard students, assisted by professional lighting and costume designers, this concert gives students a chance to explore new territory in dance making. Some dances are presented in partial fulfillment for acceptance into the Dance Program.Choreography by
Justine Denamiel*
Itzel Herrera Garcia
Hannah Herschend*
Antonia Salathe *submitting work in partial fulfillment for moderation into the Dance Program


Saturday, March 12, 2022
Fisher Center, LUMA Theater  2:00 pm – 3:00 pm EST/GMT-5
Choreographed and performed by Bard students, assisted by professional lighting and costume designers, this concert gives students a chance to explore new territory in dance making. Some dances are presented in partial fulfillment for acceptance into the Dance Program.Choreography by
Justine Denamiel*
Itzel Herrera Garcia
Hannah Herschend*
Antonia Salathe *submitting work in partial fulfillment for moderation into the Dance Program


Friday, March 11, 2022
Fisher Center, LUMA Theater  7:30 pm – 8:30 pm EST/GMT-5
Choreographed and performed by Bard students, assisted by professional lighting and costume designers, this concert gives students a chance to explore new territory in dance making. Some dances are presented in partial fulfillment for acceptance into the Dance Program.Choreography by
Justine Denamiel*
Itzel Herrera Garcia
Hannah Herschend*
Antonia Salathe *submitting work in partial fulfillment for moderation into the Dance Program


Friday, March 11, 2022
Fisher Center, LUMA Theater  7:30 pm – 8:30 pm EST/GMT-5
Choreographed and performed by Bard students, assisted by professional lighting and costume designers, this concert gives students a chance to explore new territory in dance making. Some dances are presented in partial fulfillment for acceptance into the Dance Program.Choreography by
Justine Denamiel*
Itzel Herrera Garcia
Hannah Herschend*
Antonia Salathe *submitting work in partial fulfillment for moderation into the Dance Program


Thursday, March 10, 2022
Fisher Center, LUMA Theater  7:30 pm – 8:30 pm EST/GMT-5
Choreographed and performed by Bard students, assisted by professional lighting and costume designers, this concert gives students a chance to explore new territory in dance making. Some dances are presented in partial fulfillment for acceptance into the Dance Program.Choreography by
Justine Denamiel*
Itzel Herrera Garcia
Hannah Herschend*
Antonia Salathe *submitting work in partial fulfillment for moderation into the Dance Program


Thursday, March 10, 2022
  Reception and dancing follows the lecture
Olin Humanities, Room 102  7:00 pm – 8:30 pm EST/GMT-5
This lecture highlights the representation of tango in global film, television, and nonfiction narratives. While the dance is accorded a superficial treatment in mass media (i.e., tango=sex), the essence of tango is rooted in a deeply human and universal longing for community and connection. The transcendent meaning at the core of tango’s origins remains more relevant than ever within our global pandemic present.


GRAHAM STUDIO SERIES:
NEW@Graham with Baye & Asa

Be the first to see a preview of a brand new work created for the Company by Baye & Asa that will premiere at the Joyce Theater this April!
The evening will include a full rehearsal runthrough of the new work, as well as a conversation with the choreographers and comments from the dancers who have been part of the creative process! 
IN-PERSON and LIVE-STREAMED
from the Martha Graham Studio Theater, NYC

MARCH 14-15
at 7:00PM (eastern time)

View More > >

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