Dance DANC

Alumni Career Talk with Mark Stuver '97.5

Stuver has worked with BANDALOOP—a pioneer in vertical dance—for nearly two decades, touring worldwide. As a dancer, he has also performed his own work and with other companies in Dublin, Berlin, New York, and San Francisco. He currently works as a writer and puppeteer in LA. Stuver’s talk will focus on his professional journey, and how being open to other, possibly unexpected, disciplines, forms, and experiences has shaped his career path. 

Mahaney Arts Center Dance Theatre

Open to the Public

Lecture with Dr. Julia Basso '04.5: Rhythms of Body, Rhythms of Brain

Sponsored by:
Dance
Basso is a neuroscientist, dancer, alumna, and a Visiting Assistant Professor of Neuroscience at the College. Her work focuses on the body-brain connection and how we can use physical movement such as exercise and dance to alter brain function and physiology. This talk will focus on the relationship between the self-organizing nature of the brain and the self-organizing processes that drive the group behavior in Compositional Improvisation. Sponsored by the Dance Program. Free

Mahaney Arts Center Dance Theatre

Open to the Public

Kizuna Dance Performance

Sponsored by:
Dance
Described as “mesmerizing” [The Stewardship Report] and “brilliant” [Huffington Post], Cameron McKinney is a New York City-based choreographer, dancer, educator, and author. He founded Kizuna Dance in 2014 with the mission of creating works that celebrate the Japanese language and culture. Since then, he has received many awards and honors, including recently being named a participant in the Alvin Ailey Foundation’s New Directions Choreography Lab, provided through generous support from the Rockefeller Brothers Foundation.

Mahaney Arts Center Dance Theatre

Open to the Public

Julian Barnett's FootNotes

Sponsored by:
Dance
A lecture-performance about unfolding communication, language, subjectivity, practice, empathy, isolation and potential. Harnessing vocalization as an agent for choreography and the notion that ‘languages’ exist everywhere, the lecture/performance probes a philosophical thread offered by Roland Barthes’ ‘grain’ of the voice, or the body within the voice as it sings. For mature audiences. Sponsored by the Dance Program. Free and open to the public.

Mahaney Arts Center Dance Theatre

Open to the Public