School of Dance alumni featured in Van Dyke theater inaugural performance

From the UNCG Campus Weekly:

The 2016 North Carolina Dance Festival, a 26-year-old annual showcase of modern and contemporary choreography by N.C. artists, will bring a meaningful closing performance to Greensboro November 12, after stops in Raleigh and Boone.

The performance will inaugurate the Van Dyke Performance Space, a newly created black-box theater in the Greensboro Cultural Center.

The NC Dance Festival has strong roots in UNCG’s dance department, and involves the efforts of many UNCG alumni. It is a program of the Dance Project, a non-profit organization founded by the late Dr. Jan Van Dyke, a celebrated choreographer, teacher, and community leader, a long-time faculty member and department head in the UNCG Dance Department, and an alumna herself. It has been operating in North Carolina since 1989, and it is now directed by Anne Morris and Lauren Joyner, both UNCG alumni.

The festival features choreographers from across the state as well as those from Greensboro, such as UNCG alumnae Renay Aumiller, Alexandra Warren, Danielle Kinne and members of the Van Dyke Dance Group. The Greensboro performance includes several guest performances, with a special dedication to the late Jan Van Dyke to honor her gift that made the Van Dyke Performance Space possible. The Van Dyke Dance Group will perform Full Circle, the first dance Van Dyke choreographed upon moving to Greensboro in 1989. The audience will also enjoy a screening of rare video footage of Jan Van Dyke performing a lively and sassy solo, part of her 1977 “Fleetwood Mac Suite.”

As part of the performance, UNCG MFA graduate Danielle Kinne will premiere “Greensboro Moves,” a new work made possible by a Spark Fund Grant from Action Greensboro and DGI. To produce this piece, Kinne and her dancers, also recent UNCG alumni, drew inspiration from members of the community at public events and local schools. Also performing is UNCG alumna Alexandra Joy Warren, who is the founding artistic director of JOYEMOVEMENT Dance Company, and she will present “Fit the Description,” a powerful solo danced by Emmanuel Mallette that examines the experience of being a suspect because of one’s association or physical appearance.

From complex relationships to minimalist movement, the festival presents the wide variety of contemporary modern dance being created in North Carolina.

Parking is available near the theater, in the Church St. and Davie St. parking decks, or on the street. General admission tickets are $20, and it’s $15 for students or seniors and $10 for children under 10 and for groups of 10 or more. In honor of this special first performance in the Van Dyke Performance Space, a limited number of Patron Tickets are available for $35 each; these include reserved seats with the best sight-lines and an invitation to a pre-show cocktail hour with the dance artists and community leaders. For ticket reservations visit http://ncdance.brownpapertickets.com. Tickets will also be available through the Dance Project website: www.danceproject.org/festival and at the box office the night of the performance.

Lindsey Kelley Brewer will also teach a free, open-level Modern Technique and Repertory master class on November 12 from 12-2pm (Greensboro Cultural Center, Studio 323). Find out more about upcoming classes, artist talks, and more on the website: www.danceproject.org.

Student Work @ The SE Center for Photography

Congratulations to Paula Damasceno de Oliveira (BFA Candidate) whose work, “The Nucleus of Us All #2”, was selected to be included in the upcoming Portal exhibition at The SE Center for Photography.  The exhibition is opened 12/2/16 through 12/31/2016.

The SE Center for Photography is an exhibition and education venue promoting the art and enjoyment of fine photography in Greenville, South Carolina

Leah Sobsey on WUNC radio

Listen to the interview of Leah Sobsey on WUNC radio’s the State of Things, about her exhibition that is currently at the Carrack Museum in Durham, NC.
Opening of the show is October 28th 6pm – 9pm. She will give an artist talk on Sunday, October 30th from 4-6pm.
http://wunc.org/post/things-my-mother-would-have-told-me-if…

A Profile of Darla Cheung, ’10

darlaweb

Darla Cheung (BM, performance, 2010), after completing her MM degree at Arizona State University, built a large and successful teaching studio in Houston, Texas. She especially enjoys starting beginning clarinetists. Currently, he teaches over 50 students who range from the 6th through the 12th grades. She also performs in churches, musical theater productions, and recently started a reed trio, which she hopes will perform in area schools and around the community.

 

Artistic Merit Award

Congratulations to Anthony Patterson, our most recent Artistic Merit Award winner! This award is an affirmation of Anthony’s hard work, talent, focus, and of the commitment he has already demonstrated to the challenging medium of painting.

The Artistic Merit award is made possible by the generosity of the professional painter William Mangum, a graduate of our department who lives and works in Greensboro.