WAC Newsletter 11 New
WAC Newsletter 11 New
WAC Newsletter 11 New
UCLA
Newsletter FALL
Volume 3
2011
Content:
Welcome!
Faculty ! Centers!
Acknowledgments!25-27
Greetings!
Welcome
to
WORLD
ARTS
AND
CULTURES
/
DANCE
Newsle7er,
vol.3
(Fall
2011)
Welcome
to
the
departments
third
annual
newsle7er!
The
department
also
welcomes
a
name
change
eecNve
this
fall
the
Department
of
World
Arts
and
Cultures
/
Dance!
The
name
change
signies
clarity
in
recognizing
Dance
as
a
discipline
at
the
university
and
at
the
same
Nme
acknowledges
that
our
departments
study
of
dance
is
in
partnership
with
and
informed
by
the
interdisciplinary
nature
of
the
broader
departmental
mission
the
study
of
arts
and
cultures
from
a
global
perspecNve.
The
department
has
grown
tremendously
since
its
incepNon
in
1995
aXer
the
merger
of
the
Department
of
Dance
and
the
IDP
World
Arts
and
Cultures.
We
are
at
a
stage
of
dierenNaNon
and
elaboraNon
of
our
mission
for
our
various
degree
programs
as
well
as
renewing
key
shared
goals.
The
name
change
serves
as
a
marker
for
our
growth
as
a
department.
AddiNonally
we
welcome
a
newly
designed
website
that
will
be
launched
soon
in
the
Fall
Quarter
please
visit
us
there
for
the
latest
news. We
have
had
another
successful
year
of
educaNon,
creaNon,
and
research
fostered
by
our
community
of
faculty,
students,
and
sta
with
generous
support
and
engagement
from
our
alumni
and
Friends
of
WACD.
The
goal
of
this
newsle7er
is
to
serve
as
a
conduit
for
connecNon,
re-connecNon,
reecNon,
and
informaNon
sharing.
Through
this
newsle7er,
we
hope
to
create
and
maintain
a
comprehensive
framework
for
communicaNon
that
connects
UCLAs
Department
of
World
Arts
and
Cultures/Dance
with
local,
naNonal,
and
global
communiNes
whether
alumni,
current
students,
or
Friends
of
WACD.
In
addiNon
to
providing
alumni
and
current
faculty/ students
updates,
this
ediNon
focuses
more
on
short
essays
and
photographic
documentaNon
about
the
various
projects
that
took
place
in
the
department
all
contributed
by
parNcipants
of
these
projects.
We
welcome
the
contribuNons,
staying
true
to
one
of
the
departments
mission
to
foster
a
vibrant
parNcipatory
community.
We
seek
to
reach
out
to
the
community
at
large
as
a
collaborator
in
informaNon
generaNon
and
educaNonal
leadership.
The
responsibility
we
all
have
as
arNsts
and
scholars
of
the
arts
in
the
United
States
and
world-wide
during
this
Nme
of
economic,
arNsNc,
and
cultural
landscape
shiXs
has
reinforced
our
mission
to
foster
the
formulaNon
of
criNcal
and
intercultural
insights
into
the
nature
of
human
creaNvity.
All
of
the
departments
faculty
members
are
engaged
in
their
respecNve
research
and
projects
to
further
the
departments
mission.
CongratulaNons
also
to
our
students
and
alumni
who
have
achieved
much
as
well.
To
view
the
many
accomplishments
and
accolades
of
our
students,
faculty,
alumni
and
sta,
please
page
through
this
newsle9er.
Despite
these
trying
Nmes,
the
department
conNnues
to
provide
its
extra-ordinary
programs
to
our
students.
Many
thanks
to
all
who
have
made
a
contribuNon
to
our
various
funds
in
support
of
programmaNc
needs
and
student
scholarships.
There
are
new
projects
and
iniNaNves
this
coming
year
from
Regents
Lecturer
Meredith
Monk
to
an
exciNng
concert
series
funded
by
a
very
generous
donaNon
(see
Updates:
HOT
OFF
THE
PRESS
secNon).
The
two
centers
housed
in
the
department,
Center
for
Intercultural
Performance
and
the
Art
|
Global
Health
Center
each
have
brought
an
immense
energy
through
their
respecNve
acNviNes
engaging
not
only
our
students
campus-wide,
but
also
our
Los
Angeles
community
and
beyond.
I
hope
to
hear
from
you
regarding
your
work
and
perspecNves
from
Nme
to
Nme.
Contact
us
at
wacinfo@gmail.com
as
well
as
be
sure
you
are
updated
on
our
WACD
Alum/FOW
email
list.
(Select
Join
our
Mailing
List
at
our
website,
www.wac.ucla.edu). Warmest Regards,
The creation and interdisciplinary study of dance and other body-based modes of performance.
2.
Mutually beneficial engagement with the diverse cultural and artistic communities of Los Angeles.
3.
Angelia Leung
Chair, Department of World Arts and Cultures/Dance For
informaNon
about
donaNng
online
please
visit
us
at:
h7ps://giving.ucla.edu/Standard/NetDonate.aspx?SiteNum=37
Newsletter Review
Ini5a5ves
and
outreach
highlights
from
last
year
--
Of signicance was the departments Regents Lecturer residency with Gregory Maqoma in February. The Regents of the UC established the Regents Professors and Lecturers Program which permits the appointment, on a visiNng basis, of disNnguished leaders from elds outside the tradiNonal boundaries of the academic world to enrich our instrucNonal programs. The residency took place in the winter quarter February 14-25, 2011. Vice Chair of Undergraduate Aairs Vic Marks spearheaded the 2-week residency of classes, performances and talks which brought together students and faculty from across the campus, as well as diplomats and members of the community. An internaNonally acclaimed choreographer, teacher, dancer, arNsNc consultant and creaNve director, Mr. Maqoma has taught and presented work all over Europe, Africa and the U.S. He also serves as Associate ArNsNc Director of Moving into Dance, ArNsNc Director of the Afro Vibes FesNval in the Netherlands, and is a founding member of MUISA (MulN Arts IniNaNve of South Africa). Laiye Weidman wrote of her experiences parNcipaNng in the Regents Lecturer residency here in this newsle7er. Vice Chair of Graduate Aairs David Shorter spearheaded the Maso Yi'iwa: Yoeme Indian, on May 5th 12:00 noon in the Kaufman Courtyard. This special Deer Dance and accompanying long table discussion on Dancing Deer in the City: heritage, staging ritual, tourism and Indian iden5ty" took place throughout the rest the day as well as on May 6. This program was funded largely by the Schools Arts IniNaNve as well as partners across campus.
The department also hosted numerous visitors from schools and prospecNve students and parents throughout the yearincluding the Project HeArt students from LA County Schools, Portola Middle School, among others. School of the Arts and Architecture now has an approved Arts Educa5on Minor for our undergraduate students, many of whom are from this department. This coming year the School received a generous grant from the Gluck FoundaNon which allowed the program to expand with more course oerings that include those that will be taught by our graduate students Anthony Bodlovic and Sarah Wilbur, and alums Carolina San Juan and Kevin Kane.
Quarter (June 3-4) with the presentaNon First Hand comprising of faculty choreographic projects (Harris, Marks, Popkin, Rousseve, Yu) involving over 40 undergraduate and graduate students. This was an iniNaNve lead by David Rousseve that we hope to conNnue on a regular basis.
Kudos to our 2011 gradua5ng classes, to Commencement Speaker Don Cosen5no and Graduate Speaker at the Commencement Rosemary Candelario (PhD 11) and congratulaNons go to our undergraduates and graduates for their accomplishments and recogniNons. We had students receiving awards, fellowships, and scholarships ranging from the Departmental scholarships, Deans scholarships to extramurally funded fellowships. See them in the Newsle7ers Student Accomplishments secNon.
Fond
farewells
took
place
at
the
end
of
the
Spring
Quarter
to
reNring
faculty
Don
Cosen5no,
Irma
Dosamantes-Beaudry,
and
adjunct
faculty
Lynn
Dally.
Also
leaving
for
another
posiNon
was
Student
Aairs
Oce
Assistant
Nicole
Fucich.
We
wish
them
the
very
best
in
their
next
chapters.
Don
will
go
to
Italy
having
received
the
presNgious
Rockefeller
Residency
Fellowship
at
Bellagio.
Irma
plans
to
return
to
her
home
in
New
Mexico,
to
conNnue
her
wriNng
projects,
while
Lynn
prepares
for
her
companys
(Jazz
Tap
Ensemble)
tour
to
Africa
as
part
of
the
invited
group
of
arNsts
represenNng
the
State
Department.
Lynn
recently
gave
an
informal
showing
of
her
work
at
the
Nate
Holden
Performing
Arts
Center
company
members
included
two
of
our
own
current
undergraduate
students,
BJon
Carter
and
Kenji
Igus.
During
this
summer
of
2011
the
department
hosted
its
5th
annual
High
School
Dance
Theater
Intensive
with
its
full
enrollment
of
44
students
from
very
diverse
backgrounds
and
geographic
locaNons
engaged
in
eight
very
intensive
days
of
classes,
workshops,
collaboraNve
project-making.
20
of
the
students
were
scholarship
students
funded
by
the
Flourish
FoundaNon
(thank
you!!).
Directed
by
Kevin
Kane,
assisted
by
Jackie
Lopez
and
Ally
Gray
with
returning
faculty
members
Kealil
Ceballos,
Derrick
Jones,
Breeze
Leigh,
Carolina
San
Juan,
Nehara
Kalev,
Olivier
Tarparga,
new
faculty
Nina
Flagg,
and
student
counselors
and
assistants
Leanne
Iacoveaa,
Kenji
Igus,
Genna
Moroni,
Myrrhi
Reed,
Chantal
Valenzuela,
Harry
Weston
all
drawn
from
the
department.
Thank
you
to
all
who
made
the
program
run
so
well!
Read
Harrys
brief
report
on
this
intensive
in
this
newsle7er.
The
department
collaborated
with
UCLAs
First
Star
UCLA
Bruin
Guardian
Scholars
Summer
Academy,
directed
by
Wally
Kappeler
of
the
UCLA
Department
of
Student
Aairs,
funded
by
First
Star,
Inc.
We
provided
space
and
two
of
their
instructors
for
this
rst
Nme
oering
which
brought
30
ninth
grade
foster
youths
onto
campus
for
an
intensive
5-week
residenNal
summer
program.
The
purpose
of
this
program
is
to
provide
academic
support,
enrichment
and
encouragement
needed
to
assist
them
in
becoming
compeNNve
applicants
for
subsequent
admission
to
two
and
four
year
colleges,
including
those
within
the
UC
system.
WACD
adjunct
faculty
Jason
Tsou
and
Cari
Ann
Henderson
taught
Tai
Chi
and
Social
Media
respecNvely
to
these
young
students.
UPDATES!
HOT
OFF
THE
PRESS:
Through
the
vision
and
generosity
of
BRAD
TABACH-
BANK
who
has
spearheaded
and
commi7ed
substancial
contribuNons
towards
the
development
of
a
series
of
three
arNst
residencies
every
year,
the
department
will
launch
its
rst
residency
in
Spring
2012.
The
intent
of
this
project
is
to
bring
a
new
generaNon
of
outstanding
choreographers
to
Kaufman
Hall.
Under
the
direcNon
of
Victoria
Marks
(Vice
Chair
of
Undergraduate
Aairs),
the
pilot
residency
will
bring
performer
Faye
Driscolls
newest
work,
NotNot
(if
you
pretend
to
be
drowning
I
will
pretend
I
am
saving
you)
to
UCLAs
Kaufman
Hall
for
a
west
coast
premiere.
Workshops
with
our
students
and
outreach
into
LA
schools
in
under-served
areas
will
take
place
before
and
aXer
the
performances.
For
more
informaNon
on
how
you
can
play
a
role
in
this
exciNng
iniNaNve,
contact
UCLA
Arts
Development,
development@arts.ucla.edu.
STUDENT ACCOMPLISHMENTS/AWARDS
Congratulations!
to
the
undergraduates
and
graduates
awarded
Departmental
and
Deans
General
and
CompeNNve
Scholarships
for
the
2011-12
academic
year
many
thanks
go
to
all
who
have
contributed
to
the
departmentwhether
designated
to
specic
funds
or
to
the
general
Departmental
and
Chairs
DiscreNonary
Funds.
Your
contribuNons
have
made
a
dierence
in
the
lives
of
our
students! SOAA
Deans
General
Scholarships: Undergraduates: Lenna
Assaf,
Tehya
Baxter,
Perry
Fox,
Kris5n
Harkey,
Ivy
Hurwit,
Carmel
Lev,
Bridget
Murano,
Eliana
Nudell,
Myrrhia
Reed,
Madeline
Schwarz Graduates: Mana
Hayakawa,
Ana
Paula
Hoing,
Andrea
Wang SOAA
Deans
CompeNNve
Scholarships
Graduates: Mana
Hayakawa
(Edna
&
Yu-Shan
Han
Award);
Alexandra
Shilling
(Evelyn
&
Mo
OsNn
Performing
Arts
Award;
Elaine
Krown
Klein
Fine
Arts
Scholarship);
Rita
Mar5ns
Runo
Valente
(Moss
Scholars
Award) Departmental
scholarships/fellowships:
Undergraduates: Flourish
FoundaNon
Scholarships:
Allison
Kochakji,
Harry
Weston Hya7
Scholarship:
Ivy
Hurwit,
Carmel
Lev Jean
Irwin
Scholarships:
Jacob
Campbell,
Kenji
Igus Sandra
Kaufman
Scholarships:
Kevin
Le,
Madeline
Schwarz Carl
Patrick
Memorial
Scholarhips:
Ivy
Hurwit,
Carmel
Lev,
Eliana
Nudell
Students
Caitlin
Bechelli
and
Tamara
Kohan
(photo
above)
received
the
Soo
Jin
Kim
Dancing
Scholarships
awarded
this
year
two
$1000
awards
to
two
graduaNng
seniors
nominated
from
the
dance
concentraNon
BA
degree
program.
The
awarding
event
took
place
June
4,
2011,
with
Ms.
Kim
and
two
of
her
board
members,
Ms.
Kum
Ok
Park
and
Ms.
Moon
Hee
Chang. Newly
admiaed
students
Sarah
Esser
(Dance
concentraNon)
and
Marisa
Schwarz
(WAC
concentraNon)
received
the
Regents
Awards
for
2011. Graduate
Students: Department
of
WAC/Chairs
DiscreNonary
Fund:
Emily
Beade,
Anna
Creagh,
Alison
DAmato,
Elyan
Hill,
Neelima
Jeychandran,
Andrew
Mar5nez,
Olive
McKeon,
Lorenzo
Perillo,
Andrea
Wang ForN
Family
Scholarships:
Sarah
Leddy,
Alexandra
Shilling Hand
Scholarships:
Doran
George,
Anan
Paula
Hoing Alma
Hawkins
MFA
Fellowships:
Sarah
Jacob,
Meena
Murugesan,
Sharna
Fabiano,
Emily
Beade,
Carson
Erd Jean
Irwin
Scholarship:
Jose
Reynoso Medha
Yodh
Memorial
Scholarships:
Joseph
Small,
Meena
Murugesan
Congratula6ons also go to the many who received outside and campus-wide compe66ve scholarships and fellowships!!!
Tehya Baxter (dance concentraNon) was a recipient of the AsNn Civic Engagement Scholars Program which funds a select group of advanced students to conduct year-long civic engagement research in their eld of interests. Tehyas project, EecNveness of dance movement to further the verbal development of English Language Learners was conducted at the UCLA Community School.
Jacob Campbell (dance concentraNon) and Skye Serijan (WAC concentraNon) were recipients of the AsNn Civic Engagement Fellows Program, which oers an entry-level experience in civic engagement to a select group of sophomores who parNcipate in two-quarter projects. Jacobs project, EecNveness of photography to further the understanding of pre-exisNng classroom curriculum and Skyes project, Impact of the availability of college advice and resources for students were both conducted at the UCLA Community School.
Ana
Paula
Hing,
Jose
Reynoso,
CedarBough
Saeji Damola
Osinulu
(PHD
11)
will
be
joining
the
Michigan
Society
of
Fellows
for
a
3-year
postdoctoral
fellowship
and
a
3-year
concurrent
appointment
as
an
Assistant
Professor
in
the
Center
for
Afroamerican
and
African
Studies
(CAAS).
Building
on
his
doctoral
invesNgaNon
of
Pentecostalism
in
urban
Nigeria,
his
postdoctoral
research
will
examine
Nigerian
Pentecostalism's
journey
across
naNonal
borders
into
the
African
ciNes
of
Accra,
Johannesburg
and
Kinshasa.
This
research
is
intended
to
re-calibrate
discussions
of
global
ows
by
shiXing
our
focus
towards
the
exchange
of
ideas
and
pracNces
between
Africans
within
the
conNnent.
Neelima
Jeychandran
was
awarded
a
presNgious
Smithsonian
InsNtuNon
Graduate
Student
Fellowship
to
work
at
the
NaNonal
Museum
of
African
Art
for
ten
weeks
this
summer
with
the
Deputy
Director
and
Chief
Curator,
ChrisNne
Kreamer,
who
has
oered
to
make
a
wealth
of
resources
available
to
Neelima
that
directly
concern
her
research
in
Ghana
on
the
Cape
Coast
Castle
museum.
ara
Stranovsky
was
awarded
a
West
African
Research
AssociaNon
(WARA)
Pre-doctoral
Research
Fellowship
to
conduct
research
in
West
Africa
for
her
dissertaNon
project,
Batuko,
Community
and
InternaNonal
Exchange
in
SanNago,
Cape
Verde.
It was the first project I would call my own. The Art and Global Health Center at UCLA asked me to coordinate a new idea for their high school sexual health education program and what followed was the first time I really saw the power of what art is capable of when a community takes action. The UCLA Sex Squads goal was to open a dialogue with Los Angeles teens about sex and sexual health. The group talked about condoms, HIV, pregnancy, LGBT bullying, and having the right to make your own decisions. At the end of the performance the high school students were asked if they knew where they could go for condoms or HIV testing nearby. Some knew. A lot didnt. Then came the reveal. Each school was presented with a mural that directed students to the nearest condom and testing locations from their schools. The graffiti-style murals were vibrant, colorful, and seamlessly blended into beautiful art with important information. Not only did the kids love the artwork, but also took note of the information to protect themselves. Creating the eleven site-specific murals was no easy feat. It took every bit of creative hustle we had and passionate support from the Los Angeles graffiti community. First it took an aggressive push to find the artists with the talent, time, and who really got what the project was about. Then, with a recommendation by a few Sex Squad members, we contacted Lanny Markasky- a professional muralist and tattoo artist. He immediately accepted and brought in another artist. But as the mural day approached, I was still very nervous, because we were two artists short. Lanny came to the rescue again. He brought in two more artists who, despite having no preparation or warning, immediately bought into the purpose of the project and were ready to go. And then the mural day was upon us. We were ready for whatever the day was going to bring. Except rain. And winds. The weather report had predicted a chance of late afternoon showers. Apparently late afternoon meant 9 am that day. We were running all around campus to cover the murals with tarps and try to figure out a solution. Acrylic artists Will Deutsch, Christopher Velasquez, and Danny Heller started inside. The aerosol artists waited for a change in the weather. With a slight break in the rain, they ran outside and started spray-painting the murals. Right away they fell into a rhythm and the murals started to come to life right before our eyes. And then the rain came back. We had to think of a Plan B, and then a Plan C as the artists sprinted with their murals for cover. We had artists under every awning we could find, taping tarps to every wall and pinning up the murals in every safe spot imaginable. We powered through with the shared goal, laughter, and creativity. It was amazing to see how despite unfortunate conditions, the power of community involvement made the day really enjoyable. The group finished the murals just after sunset around 6:30pm. Each artist interpreted combining school pride with themes of sexual health so differently. Each of the artists incorporated their styles and aesthetics into the mural. The murals first went up on display in Kaufman Hall so that they could be shared with the WAC community before departing to high schools. As each school approached on the tour, the murals were taken down from the lounge and sent with the Sex Squad to be presented to schools. The AMP It Up mural project was an opportunity to make a difference in the lives of thousands of youth. I feel blessed to have been given the opportunity to make this happen. Though Ive always believed in the power of art making, Ive never seen it actually happen so dramatically. I now truly believe that art can spark conversation across boundaries of cultures and traditions. This project has helped me remember that art can actually make a tangible difference in communities when its done with passion and originality by sparking conversation. Conversation leads to communication, which could eventually lead to change. In this case, the change is very much a reality. These students may walk down the hall of their high school and see that mural every day. And hopefully with every interaction they will be reminded of the potentially life saving information. Ivy Hurwit is a 4th year senior in the World Arts and Cultures concentraNon. With support from the department, Ivy has had the opportunity to work with faculty members David Gere and Dan Froot on a variety of projects such as AMP It Up!, Through PosiNve Eyes, and Whos Hungry Santa Monica. She looks forward to applying these undergraduate experiences to her post-graduate work.
On ValenNnes day, I gathered with twenty students and South African choreographer Gregory Vuyani Maqoma for the rst evening session of a 10-day intensive workshop at UCLAs Department of Dance/World Arts and Cultures. Gregory asked us to introduce ourselves by name and movement background. While the students talked solely about dance forms they had studied, Gregory spoke about the city of Johannesburg. He said that he would be drawing from this locaNon in our work together and that the energy of the city, its mulN- cultural and transitory nature, would infect our pracNce. There would be a showing at the end of the workshop, but he emphasized that our ulNmate goal was to enjoy our selves. The driving forces of our work will be honesty and playfulness, he said in a gentle voice. We then launched into dancing and did not pause for a couple of hours. He demonstrated each movement with relish and idiosyncraNc intensity. At the end of the evening, he cauNoned us: When people see African movement, they think they need to dance hard. Instead, he encouraged us to bring more lightness to the pracNce. The technique porNon of our sessions began standing in a demi-plie rst posiNon, pounding heels into the oor steadily while the arms and upper body extended and arched in syncopated rhythm with the feet. His teaching reects a rich technical training in several dance forms: Kathak, modern/post-modern, tradiNonal dances from South Africa, as well as pop styles and Hip-Hop from the clubs and streets of Johannesburg. He oXen taught simple movements rst and then elaborated them into highly physical and complex sequences. One evening, during a parNcularly dicult phrase fueled by gravity and momentum, he repeatedly called out, What are you afraid of? Dont hold back! In the choreographic part of our sessions, he taught us a movement seed that we sliced into smaller secNons or cells. We rearranged the cells mathemaNcally and developed them on our own, in groups, and under his direcNon into a 30-minute presentaNon on the nal day. We used this seed as a shared movement language, a structure to improvise with, and a tool to discover new relaNonships to one another and to space. He asked us to tell a story with the dance and to nd something new each Nme we repeated a movement. The material conNnued to change right up to (and through) the showing. Though it felt vulnerable to perform in such an unpolished state, sharing our process with others in the WAC department allowed me to see the depth and breadth of what we had explored in ten packed days. Going forward, I hope to integrate what I learned from Gregory more deeplyto risk giving more of myself in both class and performance, no holding back! Lailye Weidman is dance arNst in Los Angeles and a recent graduate of the Department of World Arts and Cultures/Dance. Her wriNng has been published in Contact Quarterly and Itch dance-zine.
How oXen do you gaze, unblinking, into the eyes of a stranger, asking for nothing, oering only your complete presence? Each Nme he introduces this exercise, one of the core exercises of his pedagogy, Guillermo Gmez-Pea reminds us that this exercise is performed regularly by shamans, babies, and lovers. It is a basic unit of social agreement: you see me, I see you, we are here together. It may seem simple, maybe even easy, but it is actually incredibly dicult, especially for self-conscious students. Its incredibly dicult, in my experience, to make myself available, to resist laughing, communicaNng, blinking, or mentally reviewing my shopping list. But then there are moments when I nd myself there, present, diving into the most beauNful pair of chocolate brown eyes Ive ever seen A San Francisco-based, Mexico-born performance ar5st (and celebrated author, spoken word poet, NPR contributor, MacArthur Genius Award winner), Gmez-Pea easily capNvates a rowdy lecture hall of 150 undergraduate students. He is funny, irreverent, unfailingly resplendent in ornate black and silver. His Art as Social AcNon (WAC 100A) class, made up of an equal number of trained arNsts (mainly of the visual and dance varieNes) and non-arNsts (athletes, economics majors, history majors, etc.), dealt with radical pedagogy, saNre, taboo, the acNvist power of the spoken word, and imaginaNon as a poliNcal tool, oXen using their performing bodies as the primary site for deeply personal invesNgaNons. Tears were shed, borders were traversed, and most importantly, everyone spoke up. This was a non-negoNable requirement, for Professor Gmez designed the class to be a weekly town mee5ng where everyone would be heard, no one would ever be censored, and anyone could challenge the class format or the professor at any Nme. Miraculously, the experiment worked. A much smaller group of grad students (myself included) worked with the arNst in greater depth, in a class called Embodied Theory: A Workshop in Decolonizing the Body (WAC 220). This workshop followed the Pocha Nostra method, developed collaboraNvely by Gmez- Peas company, La Pocha Nostra. On day one, placing himself among a circle of twelve experienced visual and performing arNsts, Gmez- Pea began to intone, his ngers snapping slowly in Nme, Performance is performance is. One by one we joined in, adding to the call and response chant, Performance is shiXing, ephemeral Performance is not representaNon, but being, becomingIt is not a parade of policemen Each week we returned to this chant-poem, adding layer upon layer of complexity. Next we got on our feet, and pracNced manipulaNng, shaping, and decoraNng each others bodies with care and reverence, respec|ully uNlizing another body as raw arNsNc material for bizarre intercultural tableaux and surreal choreographies. Next used our own bodies, naked or collaged with mulNvalent, overlapping props, makeup and costume, to develop performance material based on our own complex idenNNes, aestheNcs, and poliNcal tribulaNons. At the end of ten weeks that spilled out of the studio to occupy public spaces throughout Kaufman Hall and Wilson Plaza, we ended up in a theater with an audience. This public jam session was, in a way, a test for ourselves: How does the work change in front of an audience, under theatrical lighNng, with a live sound system? It was also a rare opportunity for outsiders to glimpse a bit of our process. My memories of the jam are blurry, like a watercolor in the rain. Feathers, leather, and endless lengths of bright fabric, masks and medical equipment, and the voice of our guide, our performance shaman, chanNng: Performance is not microwaveable Performance is not microwaveable Allison Wyper (MFA 2011) makes live performance that destabilizes the familiar from a feminist, acNvist perspecNve to reveal uncomfortable truths about our daily lives. She has been an associate of Guillermo Gmez-Pea and La Pocha Nostra since 2004, and was thrilled this year to assist in teaching Pocha workshops at UCLA and the Performance Art InsNtute (San Francisco). www.allisonwyper.com
by Harry Weston
10
It's Janelle from the summer theater intensive. I never got a chance to thank you that last day for the amazing experience I had at the program. Not only was I introduced to new styles of dance that I'm certain I will conGnue to learn about, I also gained a new outlook on myself as an ar6st and what I want to do with my future, and I met upwards of 50 new people that will have a major importance in my life. I'm sure I will never forget what I learned from my peers and the sta. It has furthered my interest in the power of the arts in the world and in the WACD program in parGcular. I am looking forward to audiGoning when the Gme comes! The sixth annual 2010 WAC Summer High School Dance Theatre Intensive was held on June 26- July 3, 2011 at WACD. Again, with the oversight of Chair Angelia Leung and directed by Kevin Kane (MFA 2003), the program brought together a diverse mix of high schoolers to our department. This year a total of 44 students, ages 15 through 18, parNcipated, coming from places such as Los Angeles, Southern and Northern California, Boston, Colorado, Oregon, and even as far as Turkey. The applicaNon and preparaNon processes, which began six months before student arrivals, consciously a7empted to gather a dynamic group of young arNsts, 20 of whom a7ended on full scholarship all sponsored by the Flourish FoundaNon. As for the eight-days of the program, the students engage in an incredibly jam- packed and intense experience where they a7end a stream of classes such as modern/post-modern, hip hop, Hawaiian and West African dance forms, as well as classes in ImprovisaNon and composiNon, Art as Social AcNon, acNng technique, and daily theatre rehearsals culminaNng in a collaboraNve performance project. AXer an incredible eight days of community building and art making, the students performed this years nal producNon, enNtled SNll Be Here, an hour-long, fully-produced mulNdisciplinary, meta-narraNve dance-theatre piece exploring such complex issues as personal and group idenNty and idenNcaNon, the role of the arNst in society, and featured intercultural perspecNves on collaboraNon. Performed in the Glorya Kaufman Dance Theatre to a standing-room-only house of parents, family members, friends, and teachers, it was a very exciNng, emoNonal, and inspiring day for all who a7ended. All in all, despite the various dierences between the 44 students, 6 counsellors, 2 directors, and 7 faculty members, the creaNve and social processes of the program facilitated the students to bond, live together, study, play, create, and perform together as a collecNve! Harry Weston was born in San Francisco in 1989 and has been dancing his whole life, from his mothers West African dance classes in his early years to hip hop during high school and now as an adult in LA and beyond. Now a student in the dance concentraNon at UCLA, and he expects to graduate in June 2012.
11
Dana
Lea
Marterella
M.F.A.
CalArts
2000 UCLA
WACD
Culture
and
Performance
PhD
program,
2nd
year h7p://lXblank.blogspot.com Dana
Marterella
is
an
associate
professor
at
Glendale
College
where
she
teaches
English
and
HumaniNes.
Her
research
focuses
on
themes
of
queer
diaspora
in
LaNn
American
literature,
visual
art
and
street
acNvism.
The groundbreaking symposium Between Experiment Form and Culturalism: Butoh in History and Contemporary PracNce convened May 20-22nd at UCLA, the rst-ever interdisciplinary symposium dedicated specically to Butoh performance and history in the United States. Co-organized by WAC graduate students Rosemary Candelario (PhD 2011), Alissa Cardone (MFA 2011), Micheal Sakamoto (Class of 2012), and Allison Wyper (MFA 2011), along with Professor William Maro~ of UCLA Dept of History, it kicked o with a sold out performance at REDCAT that featured the enigmaNc & legendary Akaji Maro of Dairakudakan, internaNonally acclaimed dancer/ choreographer Katsura Kan and US-based Butoh pracNNoner Joan Laage/Kogut. With over 75 parNcipants from the United States and Japan, the symposium united scholars, criNcs, audiences and arNst pracNNoners of the Japanese post-WWII dance form Butoh in vibrant discussions that centered around the proliferaNon of Butoh training and performance in Japan since the 1970s and across the globe since the 1980s. In addiNon to performances, there was a lm screening, 4 movement workshops hosted by WAC in Glorya Kaufman Hall, and a full day of presentaNons and discussions. A panel dedicated to contextualizing Butoh in history featured talks by Naomi Inata (Showa University, Japan), Bruce Baird (UMASS Amherst), and Susan Blakely-Klein (UC Irvine). An arNst pracNNoner panel included Akaji Maro (Japan), Katsura Kan (Japan), Joan Laage (USA) and Shinichi Iova-Koga (USA) and was followed by break-out discussions and a report back on various topics. By examining the various histories, methodologies, and implicaNons of Butoh as a simultaneously transnaNonal and culturalist phenomenon, the symposium aimed to break new ground in dance, performance, theater, history, and cultural studies scholarship and establish Butoh as a prime case study for this nexus of interdisciplinary thought and pracNce. Alissa Cardone (MFA 2011) is an experimental movement arNst and choreographer, co-founder of Kinodance Company, and has been making cross-genre interdisciplinary projects for the stage, lm, and gallery since 1999 that have been presented both naNonally and internaNonally. She has performed and/or collaborated with arNsts such as Akira Kasai, Yoshito Ohno, Elaine Summers, Xavier Le Roy, Ann Carlson, and was a member of Paula Josa-Jones/Performance Works from 1998-2003. h7p://www.kinodance.org
12
13
This lm could not have happened without Kenji and his father Darrow Igus and it is my giX to them. It also could not have happened without the fabulous crew, whom inspire me always and I thank from the bo7om of my heart for their passion, creaNvity and sacrices to make this lm so beauNful, Kyle Ruddick, Ross Riege, TK. Broderick, Will Pellegrini, Phil Abrams, Reyanna Vance and April Rose.
3)
What
were
some
of
the
challenges
and
obstacles
in
making
this
lm,
and
how
did
you
overcome
them?
When
it
came
Nme
to
choose
a
camera
to
shoot
SAND,
the
Canon
5dMark
ii
was
the
buzz
and
everyone
was
talking
about
the
cameras
ability
to
shoot
video,
but
no
one
I
knew
had
tried.
I
was
researching
cameras
and
the
5d
kept
popping
up
so
we
decided
to
test
it
out
on
Kenji.
We
shot
the
5d
next
to
the
Panasonic
HVX
200,
another
camera
that
we
owned
and
were
considering.
One
of
my
students
at
UCLA
had
a
5d
so
we
had
him
bring
it
in.
When
we
got
the
footage
side
by
side
there
was
no
doubt
in
my
mind
which
camera
we
would
use
to
shoot
the
lm.
My
D.P,
Ross
Riege
went
to
work
researching
the
camera
and
it's
sensibility
to
light.
Since
I
wanted
a
3
camera
shoot,
Ross
had
the
challenge
of
matching
up
3
cameras
and
lighNng
specically
for
the
5d
and
its
jumpy
light
sensiNve
image
sensor.
Ross
also
pulled
in
the
big
guns
lens
wise
and
ordered
up
two
long
lenses,
500mm
meant
for
high
speed
sports
photography
to
punch
in
on
the
feet
of
the
dancers.
At
the
end
of
our
rst
day
when
we
were
checking
footage,
my
producer
Kyle
Ruddick,
Ross
and
I
noNced
that
we
had
a
2-3
frame
freeze
in
our
footage
that
was
occurring
every
12
frames,
caused
by
a
camera
hack
to
help
control
light,
leaving
our
footage
completely
useless. As
the
director,
I
made
a
quick
and
steadfast
choice
to
not
tell
the
rest
of
the
crew
and
Kenji
and
his
fa7er
that
we
had
lost
all
but
an
hour
of
our
rst
day
of
footage.
We
pressed
on
the
next
day,
to
get
the
lm
shot
in
only
one
full
day.
For
comic
relief
we
started
referring
to
the
camera
as
"the
wild
horse". This
small
disaster
helped
me
in
the
edit
as
I
didn't
have
too
many
choices
or
too
much
footage
to
fall
in
love
with.
But
ht
edit
was
for
me
the
hardest
part.
I
love
to
edit,
but
ediNng
SAND
was
one
of
the
most
dicult
tasks
of
my
life.
I
truly
cut
my
teeth
on
it,
and
cut
some
other
things
in
the
process
tootee
hee
hee.
I
had
driX
issues
with
the
sound
synch,
the
camera
runs
fast,
which
was
new
for
me,
and
it
was
a
hell
of
a
Nme
converNng
the
footage
for
playback
in
FCP
and
it
took
me
a
long
Nme
to
line
up,
synch
sound
and
render
all
three
cameras
before
I
could
even
get
started
ediNng.
I
believe
I
took
about
six
months
to
edit
the
lm,
which
is
a
ling
Nme
for
a
10
minute
doc.
But
I
needed
it
and
the
lm
deserved
it.
I
really
wanted
the
rhythms
and
the
dance
to
speak
louder
then
the
words.
I
gave
it
my
all,
at
Nmes
I
was
so
aected
by
the
edit
I
would
get
nauseous
or
dizzy.
It
had
a
very
strong
physical
eect
on
me.
My
dreams
were
full
of
rhythms
and
my
sleep
was
sparse
and
erraNc.
I
wouldn't
trade
that
Nme
of
my
life
out
for
anything.
It
was
epic,
transformaNve,
I
learned
so
much,
and
every
moment
along
the
way
I
had
a
strong
sense
that
it
was
more
then
just
making
a
lm,
it
was
a
sensaNon
of
purpose
that
I
just
can't
explain
with
words.
I
couldn't
really
talk
to
anyone
about
it,
when
they
asked,
I
would
just
smileit
was
profound,
absolutely
surreal,
and
that
to
me
is
the
power
of
art.
4)
How
did
your
vision
for
the
lm
change
over
the
course
of
the
pre-produc6on,
produc6on
and
post-produc6on
processes?
My
vision
for
the
lm
in
its
infant
stage
was
just
a
single
image
that
carried
with
it
a
strong
space
for
history
and
revelry,
dance
and
a
father/son
relaNonship.
I
knew
that
I
wanted
Kenji
&
his
father
Darrow
to
tell
their
story,
but
I
also
wanted
to
show
them
"doin'
the
sand".
So
trying
to
strategize
how
to
put
the
two
together
was
a
long
progressive
process
that
mostly
occurred
in
my
head.
We
doc
lmmakers
have
to
be
so
though|ul
and
strategic
in
how
we
approach
our
subjects,
in
choosing
the
quesNons
we
pose
in
posiNoning
ourselves
and
our
cameras
into
our
subjects
lives
in
order
to
remain
invisible
and
just
let
it
bethere's
a
lot
of
le~ng
go,
and
a
lot
of
thinking
that
you
do
alone,
conversaNons
with
yourself.
14
5)
As
youve
screened
Sandwhether
on
the
fes5val
circuit,
or
in
screening
rooms,
or
in
living
roomshow
have
audiences
reacted
to
the
lm?
What
has
been
most
surprising
or
unexpected
about
their
reac5ons?
The
rst
Nme
I
screened
SAND
was
in
Los
Angeles
at
the
James
Bridges
Theater
at
UCLA.
It
was
a
preview
of
the
lm,
for
all
of
my
friends,
cast
and
crew.
I
don't
remember
much
from
that
night,
but
there
was
one
comment
my
friend
Michael
Sakamoto
said
to
me
that
stuck.
He
grabbed
me
and
he
said
"Cari
Ann!
SAND!
It
took
my
breath
away,
I
was
literally
holding
my
breath
when
I
was
watching
it!
Incredible!"
So
that's
my
favorite
feedback
moment
memory.
People
love
the
lm.
When
it
screens
it
really
charms
audiences
and
makes
them
feel
something
special,
and
they
fall
in
love.
It's
a
real
lovable
lm.
Alumni Updates
Below are a few updates
from WACD alumni....
15
Joshua
Freedman
B.A.
1992 www.6seconds.org AXer
WAC,
he
found
himself
loving
educaNon
and
became
a
middle
school
teacher.
That
led
to
the
creaNon
of
a
nonprot
to
teach
about
teaching
emoNonal
intelligence,
and
now
he
has
oces
in
11
countries
and
he
nds
himself
using
those
WAC
insights
frequently
as
he
work
with
people
around
the
globe
to
use
emoNons
as
a
fuel
for
posiNve
change.
Gretchen
Schneider
B.A.
1965,
M.A.
1968 B.F.A.
2006
in
Media
Arts,
M.F.A.
in
Film
2010
from
San
Francisco
Art
InsNtute
gretchen.schneider@granadaarts.com Gretchen
has
received
the
Kodak
Award
and
has
recently
exhibited
at
the
San
Francisco
Museum
of
Modern
Art.
Presently
she
does
lms
and
photography,
research
for
lmmakers,
consulNng
on
historical
styling,
and
volunteers
at
the
Pacic
Film
Archive
in
Berkeley,
CA.
Marcia
Melkonian
B.A.
1984
Ethnic
Arts
/
Folklore
and
Mythology
M.Ed
1991 MLIS
at
UCLA
in
progress marciaw3@juno.com
Phil
McAbee
M.A.
1995 adultballet@la.com Phil
currently
is
the
manager
of
the
On-Line
Learning
Management
System
at
L.A.
InternaNonal
College.
He
also
conNnues
his
dance
teaching
at
Adult
Ballet.
D.
Chase
Angier
B.A.
Dance
1987 www.angierperformanceworks.com Chase
is
arNsNc
director
of
Angier
Performance
Works
and
Associate
Professor
of
Dance
at
Alfred
University
in
New
York.
She
specializes
in
mulN
disciplinary
site
specic
performance.
(Photo
below
of
Chase
by
John
Laprade)
Andy
Vaca
M.F.A.
1995 Andy
is
now
serving
as
Chair
of
the
Dance
Department
at
CSU
Long
Beach.
Chris5ne
Echeverri
B.A.
1997
WAC
Art
History
emphasis wacd@alchememe.com AXer
graduaNng
from
college,
ChrisNne
started
and
ran
her
own
oral
design
business
based
in
Pasadena
for
8
years.
During
that
Nme,
she
also
completed
an
M.A.
in
Economics
from
Cal
State
LA.
Currently,
I
am
a
stay
at
home
mom
with
my
3
kids.
Norma
Adler
B.A.
1979 toradler@yahoo.com Norma
moved
to
Massachuse7s
in
1979,
lived
in
New
York
City
for
12
years,
and
has
been
back
in
beauNful
western
Massachuse7s
for
the
past
17.
Shes
been
an
editor,
and
theatre
and
dance
writer;
currently
I
am
a
legal
aid
a7orney
in
the
poorest
area
of
the
state.
She
has
been
with
her
wonderful
wife
Susan
since
1992.
Alumni Updates...
Melissa
Teodoro
M.A.
1997
Dance
Ethnology M.F.A.
2003
Dance,
U
Hawaii
melissa.teodoro@sru.edu Melissa
is
an
Assistant
Professor
Department
of
Dance
at
Slippery
Rock
University
(Western
PA)
since
2003.
16
Joe
Nguyen
B.A.
1999
WAC,
B.A.
History josephnguyen@gmail.com Joe
is
Sr.
Director
of
Sales
for
an
online
media
company.
Michael
Richter
M.A.
2003
Dance mikeydance@yahoo.com Michael
is
teaching
ESL
at
the
Technological
InsNtute/University
here
in
La
Paz,
Mexico
using
performance
games
to
make
the
teaching/learning
dynamic.
He
enjoys
having
the
same
students
all
semester
or
all
year,
aXer
many
years
of
doing
short
term
arNst
residencies
and
then
moving
on
to
new
schools.
Jo
Parkes
M.F.A.
Choreography
1998 www.mobildance.org/ Jo
was
invited
by
the
Gedenkst7e
Berliner
Mauer
to
create
a
dance
piece
to
mark
this
event.
The
piece
features
a
cast
of
25
mainly
non-professional
performers
aged
11
65
and
is
being
created
in
the
two
weeks
leading
up
to
the
memorial
event
at
the
Gedenkst7e
Berliner
Mauer
on
August
13th.
Created
in
collaboraNon
with
co-choreographers
Fiona
Edwards
and
Anna-Luise
Recke
with
original
music
for
solo
cello
by
Wassily
Gerassimez,
Between
the
Bricks
makes
visible
the
stories
of
those
people
living
in
and
around
Bernauer
Strae
in
1961.
Angela
Maaox
B.A.
1999 Angela
has
been
named
the
new
ArNsNc
Director
of
PICA
(Portland
InsNtute
for
Contemporary
Art).
She
steps
into
her
new
posiNon
aXer
an
8-year
tenure
as
a
performing
arts
curator
with
the
Yerba
Buena
Center
for
the
Arts
in
San
Francisco.
Seda
Aybay
2003
B.A.
WAC
Summa
Cum
Laude www.kybeledance.com Currently
Seda
is
working
on
a
new
piece
with
her
company
Kybele
Dance
Theater,
while
teaching
contemporary
classes
for
adults
and
teens
at
Katnap
Dance
Center,
YNS
and
Yuri
Grigorieve
School
of
Ballet.
Rebecca is a founding member and educaNon director for the Bay Area Children's Theatre (BACT) in Northern CA. Founded in 2004, BACT brings high quality theater to family audiences, specializing in literary adaptaNons of great children's books. She direct the educaNon program for children ages 5 - 16 which focuses on ensemble performance and learning life-skills through theater.
Alumni Updates...
At WAC/D, we pride ourselves
on the unconventional infrastructure that
17
Hanni
Ress
B.A.
2005
WAC
hanni.rosenfeld@gmail.com Hanni
is
living
in
JoBurg,
South
Africa
with
partner
in
crime,
Gavi
Ress.
While
wriNng
away
the
hours
to
nish
an
M.A.
in
African
Studies,
Hanni
co-manages
a
small
NGO
which
organizes
weekly
food
parcels
to
about
560
local
Jewish
families
in
need
and
volunteers
part-Nme
with
an
Art
Therapy
organizaNon.
community
new piece/process for Cornerstone Theater's "Hunger Cycle". In October she will go to Hawaii (Maui and the Big Island) to present Bahu-BeN-Biwi, and to the Painted Bride in Philadelphia in February. She is apart of the steering commi7ee for Artwallah, the South Asian arNsts collecNve here in L.A. (Photo below of Sheetal by Chris Rady)
Contact US!
Alongside the alumni initiatives, we are constantly updating out FOW database in an effort to communicate and connect the community at large with WAC/D happenings and news. Whether you are a
Sarri
Sanchez
B.A.
2005
WAC inexdanceproject.com renarts.org Sarri
is
currently
in
her
sixth
year
of
teaching
at
Renaissance
Arts
Academy,
an
L.A.,
a
public
charter
school
for
dance
and
music,
where
I
co-direct
the
dance
program.
She
also
conNnues
to
create
and
perform
with
fellow
WAC
alumni
Ally
Voye,
Maya
Zellman,
and
Eva
Wilder
as
IN/EX
Dance
Project.
student, alumnus, faculty, staff, or Friend of WAC/D, WE want to hear from you and be
connected with
current
YOU!
Vanessa
Verdoodt
B.A.
2006
WAC
M.A.
2010
Performance
Studies
NYU www.worldancearound.com Vanessa
has
been
teaching
dance
and
theatre
in
school
and
aXer-school
at
Bushwick
Community
High
School
for
three
years
while
also
touring
universiNes
and
theatres
across
North
America
with
Hip
Hop
Theatre
Dance
company
Illstyle
and
Peace
ProducNons.
Ali
Owens
B.A.
2009
WAC
Akowens73@gmail.com
Ali
is
the
MarkeNng
&
PromoNons
Coordinator
for
Broadway/L.A.
Pantages
Theatre.
Her
responsibiliNes
include
managing
markeNng
materials
and
communicaNons
for
Broadway/L.A.
presentaNons.
I
also
coordinate
special
events,
promoNons
and
grassroots
eorts
while
overseeing
sponsors
of
the
Pantages
Theatre.
Please visit our website and click on the link Join Our Mailing List to be plugged into our singularly unique community of artists and scholars here at UCLA.
www.wac.ucla.edu
Sheetal
Gandhi
M.F.A.
2009 sheetal@sheetalgandhi.com Sheetal
recently
premiered
a
new
one- woman,
mulN-media
dance
theater
piece
called
"Human
Nature"
as
a
part
of
the
COLA
Grant
that
she
received
this
year.
The
performance
was
held
June
17th
at
Grand
Performances
in
downtown
L.A.
Currently
she
is
compleNng
a
residency
in
Vermont
collaboraNng
with
Dan
Froot
and
Dan
Hurlin
on
their
latest
puppet-theater
project,
"Who's
Hungry?
-
Santa
Monica".
In
August
and
September
she
will
be
choreographing
for
Cal
State
Northridge's
upcoming
musical
"The
25th
Annual
Putnam
County
Spelling
Bee",
and
she
is
being
commissioned
to
create
a
Alumni Updates...
Arianne
Homann
M.F.A.
2010
Choreography
ari@showboxla.org showboxla.blogspot.com Besides
making
new
work,
Ari
works
alongside
Meg
Wolfe
to
nurture
SHOW
BOX
LA,
a
new-ish
non-prot
that
rocks
your
world
with
ANATOMY
RIOT,
itch
dance
journal,
and
other
stunts.
Interested
in
volunteering?
Please
apply
to
work
with
us!
18
WACUS
Philip
Nguyen
B.A.
2011
WAC,
B.A.
Earth
and
Environmental
Science Phil
is
doing
an
M.S.
in
Agricultural
Sciences
starNng
fall
2011
at
Kyoto
University
in
Japan.
He
is
sNll
dancing
of
course.
:)
House
house
house!
by Leanne Iacovetta
This
past
year,
the
World
Arts
and
Cultures
Undergraduate
Society
(be7er
known
as
WACUS)
strove
to
bring
more
performance
opportuniNes
to
Kaufman
than
before.
Inspired
by
all
the
tools
learned
in
our
composiNon
classes,
we
wanted
more
outlets
besides
the
classroom
to
showcase
our
work
and
arNsNc
craXs.
So,
WACUS
developed
"Open
Marley
Night,"
an
informal
showing
of
student
work
in
its
preliminary
stages.
Open
Marley
Night,
in
tandem
with
Culture
Crossing
and
Pau
Hana,
was
one
of
the
main
performance
opportuniNes
for
undergrads
in
the
fall,
and
was
highly
successful
for
a
rst
run.
With
a
desire
to
collaborate
and
learn
from
each
other,
WACUS
hosted
a
series
of
master
classes,
known
as
the
"WAClass"
series.
WAClass
featured
classes
taught
by
the
undergraduate
WAC
students
themselves
who
wanted
more
experience
teaching
and
learning
foreign
styles
of
dance.
In
the
winter,
undergrads
parNcipated
in
the
11th
annual
undergraduate
showcase,
WACsmash!
Last
years'
show
was
headlined
by
undergraduate
choreographers,
dancers,
and
performance
arNsts
from
the
whole
department,
and
this
years'
show
will
be
even
bigger
and
more
diverse.
WACsmash
2012
will
take
place
on
February
10th,
11th,
and
12th.
In
the
spring
quarter,
seniors
shared
their
blood,
sweat,
and
tears
to
the
community
in
the
annual
Senior
Showcase
Ntled
"Alluvium."
Undergrads
from
all
classes
performed
in
the
show
with
their
peers.
The
undergrads
were
also
thrilled
to
get
the
chance
to
work
with
WAC
Faculty
in
the
174B
series.
The
"First
Hand"
Showcase,
which
featured
performance
pracNcums
with
Vic
Marks,
David
Rousseve,
Lionel
Popkin,
Rennie
Harris,
and
Cheng-Chieh
Yu,
was
a
great
way
to
end
the
year!
The
undergraduates
are
thrilled
that
the
department
will
be
bringing
back
the
faculty
/
guest
faculty
showcase
in
spring
2012!
We
look
forward
to
next
year
and
its
challenges
and
joys!
Student Updates
2011 Summer Hothouse!
UCLA Department of World Arts and Cultures held its fth annual Hothouse Program this year July/ August 2011. The Hothouse concept was developed by UCLA faculty VICTORIA MARKS to support the creation of new work by Los Angeles choreographers and to encourage interactive exchange during the creative process.
19
WACUS
by Ivy Hurwit
Ari Hoffman
Vickie Mendoza
Stephanie Nugent
During
the
2010-2011
school
year,
World
Arts
and
Cultures
majors
with
a
concentraNon
in
Culture
(WACWAC)
were
involved
in
a
variety
of
projects,
performances,
and
installaNons.
With
year-round
promoNonal
outreach
and
uncondiNonal
support,
the
department
encouraged
WAC
WACs
to
share
their
arNsNc
talents
and
visions
within
welcoming,
collaboraNve
environments.
Gema Sandoval
Lailye Weidman
Kevin Williamson
Sara Wookey
Hothouse provides a residency for the creation of new work for six local choreographers at UCLA's Glorya Kaufman Hall. Each choreographer/performance artist is invited to use studio space free of charge for 4 hours/day for three weeks. In exchange for the Hothouse residency, artists are required to share their work through informal presentations on the final day of the residency. Some artists may be further asked to share some part of their work/ creative process with WACD students and faculty during the subsequent academic year. www.wac.ucla.edu/hothouse.php
Students
performed
in
shows,
helped
co-produce,
provided
photo
documenta5on,
and
volunteered
for
Art
and
Global
Health
Center
projects
such
as
48
Hours
to
Ac5on,
AMP
it
Up!,
and
Through
Posi5ve
Eyes.
WAC
WACs
also
showcased
their
work
through
student-run
events
such
as
Open
Marley
Night
and
WACsmash!
Selected
seniors
displayed
their
art
at
the
senior
showcase,
Ntled
Alluvium,
and
were
oXen
involved
with
MFA
works
that
debuted
at
the
Fowler
Museum.
Specic
courses,
such
as
WAC
121
IntroducNon
to
Field-Based
Research,
and
WAC
C184
ProducNon
Arts
Seminar,
also
strongly
encouraged
WAC
WACs
to
create
their
own
works.
These
classes
helped
students
develop
original
works/projects
that
focused
on
each
students
individual
interests,
advancing
their
ideas
through
an
organized
format
of
both
research
methods
and
producNon
techniques.
All of these projects and courses are just a few of the many experiences in which WAC WACs shared their arNsNc and scholarly talents with the World Arts and Cultures community and the UCLA campus at large.
Faculty Updates
Our faculty here at UCLA
are
constantly
breaking
new
boundaries
in
their
research
and
publicaNons
year-round.
Below
is
but
a
minute
oering
of
what
WACD
professors
have
been
up
to
this
past
year...
20 Susan
Foster
Susan
Foster
was
appointed
CreaNve
Fellow
,
a
joint
appointment
with
University
of
Utrecht
and
Spring
Dance
FesNval
(April
2011).
She
delivered
the
keynote
address
at
the
Conference
on
Dance
and
Theory
at
Frei
Universitaet
in
April
2011,
and
presented
performances
of
danced
lectures,
sponsored
by
Dance
Advance,
Philadelphia
(
March
2011).
Janet
OShea
Professor
OShea
just
nished
her
rst
foreign
language
publicaNons.
It's
for
an
anthology
edited
by
Yvonne
Hardt
and
MarNn
Stern,
enNtled
Choreography
and
InsNtuNon.
Anurima
Banerji
Received
leave
in
November-December
2010
to
do
eldwork
in
India,
to
begin
the
work
of
converNng
her
PhD
dissertaNon,
Odissi
Dance:
Paratopic
Performances
of
Gender,
State,
and
NaNon,
into
a
book
manuscript.
She
received
UCLA
Faculty
Research
Grant,
Center
for
the
Study
of
Women
grant,
and
the
Hellman
Fellowship
to
support
archival
and
ethnographic
research
that
will
enhance
the
analysis
for
the
new
book.
Gave
an
invited
talk
at
Center
for
India
and
South
Asia
(CISA)
in
May
2011,
ExcepNonal
Embodiments:
GoNpuas
and
Gender
Performance
in
Odissi
Dance.
This
illustrated
talk
historicized
the
goNpua
tradiNon
in
Orissa,
India,
where
young
boys
are
trained
to
perform
as
female
dancers
on
stage,
taking
on
a
temporary
transgender
idenNty.
She
discussed
the
emergence
of
the
goNpuas
in
the
context
of
the
rise
of
the
BhakN
movement
and
its
complex
relaNonship
to
the
category
of
the
feminine.
She
has
begun
work
on
editorial
team
for
the
online
journal,
Manushi:
A
Journal
on
Women
and
Society,
based
in
New
Delhi,
India.
She
has
been
invited
to
write
for
a
special
issue
of
About
Performance;
book
reviews
for
American
Anthropologist,
the
Journal
of
Inetercultural
Studies,
and
Canadian
Journal
of
Women
and
Law.
Lionel
Popkin
This
past
year
Lionel
Popkin
toured
There
is
an
Elephant
in
This
Dance
to
Minneapolis,
Sea7le,
and
Guongzhou,
China.
He
received
grants
from
the
Pun
FundaNon,
the
CHIME
Program
as
a
mentor
(funded
by
the
Irvine
FoundaNon),
and
the
City
of
Santa
Monica
Arts
Fellowship.
Dan
Froot
Dans
performances
of
"Who's
Hungry
-
West
Hollywood"
were
presented
at
the
9th
InternaNonal
Toy
Theater
FesNval
at
St.
Ann's
Warehouse
(NYC).
Grants
received
for
"Who's
Hungry
-
Santa
Monica"
included:
the
NaNonal
Endowment
for
the
Arts
Challenge
America,
MAP
Fund,
Doris
Duke
Charitable
FoundaNon,
Meet
The
Composer
Commissioning
Music/USA,
USA
ArNsts
Project
Site.
Victoria
Marks
Victoria
Marks,
Vice
Chair
of
Undergraduate
Aairs,
recently
returned
from
South
Africa
where
she
parNcipated
in
the
NaNonal
Arts
FesNval.
Marks
has
just
completed
Medium
Big
Inecient
Considerably
Imbalanced
Dance
which
will
be
performed
at
the
REDCAT
NOW
FesNval
September
22-24,
and
Smallest
Gesture/Grandest
Frame
which
will
be
performed
at
Cal
Arts
Commuter
FesNval
October
6
and
7.
Recent
projects
in
the
department
included
serving
as
the
faculty
coordinator
of
the
departments
UC
Regents
Lecturer
residency
of
Gregory
Maqoma
overseeing
all
aspects
of
the
residency,
public
events,
and
liaison
with
the
south
african
consulate
and
community.
She
also
produced
Cotes
dIvorian
arNst
Michel
Kouakou
and
Mozambiquian
arNst
Panaibra
Canda
bringing
them
into
WAC
classes
and
culminaNng
in
performances
at
Highways
Performance
Space
in
Santa
Monica.
Victoria
was
the
faculty
coordinator
of
the
departments
7th
annual
summer
Hothouse,
a
residency
program
to
support
LA
arNsts
in
the
creaNon
of
new
work.
Five
of
the
nine
Hothouse
arNsts
were
WAC
alumna.
New
projects
upcoming:
AcNon
ConversaNons
(Vermont),
a
movement/lm
project
bringing
unwed
teen
mothers
and
stake
holders
in
their
community
together
for
movement
and
conversaNon;
and
a
new
work
If/Then
for
AXIS
dance
company
in
Oakland.
David
Gere
Professor
David
Gere
on
sabbaNcal
leave
this
academic
year
to
complete
his
wriNng
project.
This
book,
yet
to
be
Ntled,
is
focused
on
developing
substanNal
chapters
regarding
ve
discrete
projects
based
on
MAKE
ART/ STOP
AIDS
foundaNons
he
has
engaged
in
these
past
years.
Along
with
conNnuing
his
directorship
of
the
Art|Global
Health
Center,
Gere
will
be
working
closely
with
his
sta
in
his
projects,
AMP
IT
UP,
48
Hours
to
AcNon,
Through
PosiNve
Eyes,
among
others.
He
also
serves
as
the
faculty
sponsor
for
visiNng
Fulbright
Scholar,
Parthiv
Shah,
who
will
be
teaching
a
Fiat
Lux
course,
and
Photography
and
Human
Rights
topics
course
for
the
department.
Gere
recently
was
the
featured
faculty
in
the
UC
RESEACRH
PROFILES
site
h7p://research.universityofcalifornia.edu/ proles/2011/08/david-gere.html.
Faculty Continued...
Allen
Roberts
Dr.
Roberts
book-in-progress,
A
Dance
of
Assassins:
Performing
Early
Colonial
Hegemony
in
the
Congo,
was
awarded
a
contract
by
Indiana
University
Press
and
is
scheduled
for
publicaNon
in
late
2012.
He
oered
talks
at
Boston
University,
Columbia
University,
and
Ohio
University,
and
this
summer
he
will
present
results
of
ongoing
research
with
Dr.
Mary
Nooter
Roberts
at
an
invitaNonal
conference
at
the
InternaNonales
Forschungszentrum
KulturwissenschaXen
of
Vienna.
Dr.
Roberts
helped
organize
the
15th
Triennial
Symposium
on
African
Art
at
UCLA
(March,
2011),
and
co-chaired
a
triple
panel
called
ArNstry
of
African
and
Diaspora
Blacksmiths
in
anNcipaNon
of
a
major
traveling
exhibiNon
and
publicaNon
program
on
the
topic
that
he
is
planning
with
three
prominent
US
scholars.
Several
of
Dr.
Roberts
papers
were
published
over
the
course
of
the
year,
including
co-authored
with
Dr.
Mary
Nooter
Roberts)
one
for
the
book
accompanying
the
exhibiNon
La
Fabrique
des
images
(Muse
du
Quai
Branly,
Paris,
over
in
summer
and
fall,
2010).
The
Robertses
contributed
painNngs
and
images
to
this
exhibiNon,
as
well.
21 David
Roussve
David
Roussve
just
completed
the
dance
lm
Two
Seconds
AXer
Laughter.
Wri7en,
directed,
and
co-choreographed
by
Roussve
and
shot
in
Java
by
WAC
MFA
Cari
Ann
Shim
Sham*,
Two
Seconds
creates
a
dialogue
on
the
noNon
of
home
in
a
transnaNonal
world
by
following
the
journey
of
WAC
MFA
Sri
SusilowaN
from
Indonesian
to
America.
The
lm
will
soon
begin
playing
dance
and
short
lm
fesNvals.
This
summer
David
also
completed
a
residency
at
the
Krannert
Center
at
the
University
of
Illinois
in
Urbana- Champaign,
IL,
and
began
rehearsals
for
a
new
full-evening
dance/theater
piece
for
his
company
REALITY.
David Shorter
In
the
Fall
of
2010,
Shorter's
book,
We
Will
Dance
Our
Truth,
won
the
presNgious
Chicago
Award,
co-presented
by
the
University
of
Chicago
and
the
American
Folklore
Society
for
the
best
folklore
book
of
the
year.
He
was
a
recipient
of
a
2010
Arts
IniNaNve
grant
and
a
2011
InsNtute
of
American
Culture
faculty
grant.
This
la7er
grant
will
fund
his
current
research
on
Yoeme
Indian
healing
pracNces
and
language
usage.
Cheng-Chieh Yu
Cheng-Chieh
Yu,
received
a
2010
Cultural
Exchange
InternaNonal
Award,
and
a
Taiwanese
Cultural
Council
Grant.
In
2010
Yu
presented
work
in
China,
Taiwan
and
Germany.
In
2011
Yu
will
be
returning
to
China
to
complete
a
repetoirie
commission
with
the
Guangdong
Modern
Dance
Company,
and
is
invited
to
premiere
"The
Good
Person"
a
dance
for
camera
at
the
Jumping
Frames
Dance
Video
FesNval
in
Hong
Kong.
Simone
ForN
Simone
performed
her
early
works
at
the
Hayward
Gallery,
London
(Oct
2010)
and
the
Haus
der
Kunst,
Munich
(Feb
2011).
She
also
had
a
full
evening
of
new
and
early
work
at
the
Los
Angeles
Museum
of
Contemporary
Arts
(Jan
2011).
She
also
eceived
a
Yoko
Ono
Lennon
Courage
Award
in
the
Arts
(Feb
2011).
Centers
UCLA
CENTER
FOR
INTERCULTURAL
PERFORMANCE Judy
Mitoma,
Director
www.wac.ucla.edu/cip
22
The Center for Intercultural Performance (CIP) is dedicated to performing arts research and experimentaNon that promotes be7er understanding and appreciaNon across cultures, emphasizing internaNonal exchange, creaNve collaboraNon, research and publicaNons, and lm/video documentaNon. WORLD FESTIVAL OF SACRED MUSIC October 1 16, 2011 Throughout Los Angeles Recognizing music as an expression of humanity's most profound aspiraNons and as a way to transcend borders of all kinds linguisNc, naNonal, cultural, ideological, racial and religious the 2011 World FesNval of Sacred Music is the result of an outpouring of interest and enthusiasm from community partners and arNsts who parNcipated in past FesNvals in 1999, 2002, 2005 and 2008. The World FesNval of Sacred Music, sixteen days with thirty-two events, is founded on the belief that sacred music has the ability to bring forth our shared human values of peace, understanding, and respect for all living things. The FesNval is not a commercial venture, nor does it promote or endorse any poliNcal or religious agenda. Oering an alternaNve, community-oriented model to the corporate values that dominate the entertainment culture of Los Angeles, the FesNval provides opportuniNes for people to come together and invesNgate issues of tolerance and diversity within our complex, urban environment. For more informaNon visit www.fesNvalofsacredmusic.org or use your smart phone and click on the QR code below and be connected directly to the website.
WATER IS RISING Ar5st Alphabet and Panel on the Environment Thursday, October 13, 2011 TBA Kaufman Hall Room 200 Free Admission World Premiere Performance Saturday, October 15, 2011 7 p.m. Royce Hall For 5ckets call 310-825-2101 or visit www.uclalive.org
Performance
and
purpose
collide
in
this
powerful
American
stage
premiere
that
illuminates
the
plight
of
the
Pacic
Islands.
ScienNsts
report
the
vulnerable
coral
atolls
of
KiribaN,
Tokelau,
and
Tuvalu
are
already
experiencing
rising
sea
levels
as
a
result
of
global
warming
and
climate
change.
Thirty-six
dancers
and
musicians
express
their
deep
connecNon
to
nature
and
their
ancestral
past
through
mulN-part
harmonies,
poetry,
and
gracious
movement
cascading
over
dynamic
rhythms
inspiring
us
all
to
be
be7er
stewards
of
our
shared
planet.
Water
is
Rising
harnesses
the
power
of
performance
art
in
an
impassioned
plea
for
global
awareness
and
environmental
change.
AXer
the
Royce
Hall
performance,
Water
is
Rising
conNnues
on
a
14-city
U.S.
Tour
to
conNnue
the
global
awareness
of
these
atolls. A
project
of
the
UCLA
Center
for
Intercultural
Performance
in
collaboraNon
with
FoundaNon
for
World
Arts,
UCLA
InsNtute
of
the
Environment
and
Sustainability,
and
EarthWays
FoundaNon.
For
more
informaNon
on
Water
is
Rising
and
the
countries
represented
and
issues
related
to
climate
changes,
please
visit
our
website
www.waterisrising.com
or
use
your
smart
phone
and
click
on
the
QR
code
below
and
be
connected
directly
to
the
website.
UCLA CENTERS
UCLA
CENTER
FOR
ART
AND
GLOBAL
HEALTH David
Gere,
Director
h7p://artglobalhealth.org/
23
Last year, the UCLA Art and Global Health Center produced a variety of projects centered in Los Angeles that would combat health issues with the power of art. AMP it up! started preparaNon in Fall 2010 and by winter quarter was ready to embark on a journey around the LA area. AMP it up! is an arts-based sexual health educaNon program inspired by the AIDS Performance Team and World AIDS Day. The project connected with eleven LAUSD high schools and provided HIV-posiNve speakers, condom demonstraNon and negoNaNon workshops, and a humorous educaNonal performance by a group of UCLA undergraduates, newly named The UCLA Sex-ed Squad. The UCLA Sex-ed Squad performed for over 2,000 9th grade students while the speaking groups lectured to over 1,500 9th grade health students. To include visual art to the AMP it up! project the Center collaborated with professional graN arNsts to execute a mural project for each parNcipaNng school. The murals turned out to be absolute works of art and included direcNons to the nearest tesNng clinic as well as the nearest place to obtain condoms from each high schools neighborhood or campus. These murals were given to each high school and were placed in a visible area on each campus. The Art and Global Health Center stepped away from LAUSD to conNnue a dierent project that was enacted prior to this year in Brazil, Mexico and South Africa. It was Nme to execute Through PosiNve Eyes in Los Angeles. Reaching out to the HIV-posiNve community of Los Angeles, they promoted an inspiraNonal HIV photography workshop to a diverse group of individuals living with the HIV/AIDS epidemic. Once chosen, the parNcipants were given a camera and several workshop days with the renowned photographers Gideon Mendel and Crispin Hughes, where they learned to tell their stories through photography. The project was based on the belief that challenging sNgma against people living with HIV/AIDS is the most eecNve method for combaNng the epidemic and that art is the most powerful way to do this type of work. At the end of the ten days, families and friends of the parNcipants came together to view an exhibiNon of the nal work in UCLAs Kaufman Hall, where they shared stories, photography and delicious Thai food. As the new school year approaches, the Art and Global Health Center is excited to expand both the AMP it up! and Through PosiNve Eyes projects. The AMP it up! project will reach double the amount of LAUSD schools and hopes to receive a grant that will allow for a full-edged research opportunity for the program. The Center also has plans to expand the AMP it up! project to three UniversiNes in the U.S. South in fall of 2012. StarNng from scratch, the program will be reworked to challenge the sexual health and HIV/AIDS issues that arent currently addressed around the U.S. South. Goals for Through PosiNve Eyes plans include the planning of a U.S. traveling exhibit as well as becoming an online source for the AMP it up! project. The expansions of these projects will conNnue to make a dierence in even more ciNes providing art as a method for social change and posiNve health.
Giving!
24
GIVING
TO
WAC/Dance Join
in
Giving
to
WAC/D:
Your
gixs,
small
or
large,
will
make
a
dierence
in
the
lives
of
our
students
and
our
future
in
the
elds
of
arts
&cultures
and
dance.
To
make
a
giX,
please
designate
the
desired
fund
on
your
check
made
payable
to
UCLA
Founda5on
send to:
10920
Wilshire
Blvd.,
Suite
1100,
Los
Angeles,
CA
90095-6516. For
informaNon
about
donaNng
online
please
visit
us
at:
h7ps://giving.ucla.edu/Standard/ NetDonate.aspx?SiteNum=37
There
are
both
specic
scholarship
and
general
funds
that
you
may
designate
where
your
contribuNons
should
go.
The
following
are
departmental
scholarship
funds
that
you
have
generously
contributed
to
in
the
past
(and
into
the
future!): 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Department
of
WACD
Scholarship
general
scholarship
support
for
undergraduate
or
graduate
students;
nancial
need
and
merit-based. Department
of
WACD
Fund
(Unrestricted)
-
Chairs
discreNonary
support
of
departmental
programs
and
scholarships. Department
of
WAC/Friends
of
Folklore
Fund
unrestricted
support
of
programs
and
acNviNes
sponsored
by
Friends
of
Folklore
under
the
auspices
of
World
Arts
and
Cultures/Dance. Carl
Patrick
Memorial
Scholarship
Fund
general
scholarship
support
for
undergraduate
or
graduate
students;
to
honor
Carl
Patricks
unagging
devoNon
to
educaNon
at
UCLA. Flourish
FoundaNon
Scholarship
For
excepNonal
undergraduate
dance
students,
whose
work
demonstrates
a
focus
on
community
arts,
social
jusNce,
and/or
dance
educaNon.
Jean
Irwin
Scholarship
for
talented
graduate
and
undergraduate
dance
students
from
underrepresented
backgrounds,
with
a
concern
and
awareness
of
social
jusNce
in
the
world. Medha
Yodh
Memorial
Scholarship
-
fellowship
support
for
graduate
students
from
non-western
dance
backgrounds
in
the
Department
of
World
Arts
and
Cultures/Dance. emphasis.
Type to enter text
8. Sandra Kaufman Memorial Scholarship For undergraduate or graduate students with a dance
Acknowledgements
Thank
you
to
all
who
have
contributed!
25
The Department gratefully acknowledges your support as alums, current students, parents of students, faculty, emeriN, and friends of World Arts and Cultures/Dance and associated centers. We especially acknowledge the Flourish Founda5on whose scholarship contribuNons provide individual quarterly registraNon fees for selected students, and to the Stars donors noted below who have commi7ed signicant funding in support of the Art | Global Health Center. Much appreciaNon goes to the parents of our students who have conNnued the tradiNon of supporNng their children throughout their childhood to their current studies here: from PTAs to team sports, to arts clubs your contribuNons make a dierence! The following below details and acknowledges donaNons received from July 2010 - August 2011.
Donors
2010-2011
Friends ($10 to $299)
Ms.
Lisbeth
C.
Bagnold Ms.
Michelle
E.
Boehle Ms.
Kristin
L.
Brown Mrs.
Marryl
D.
Cahill Campbell
Communications Mr.
Ernest
Castro,
Jr. Miss
Eveline
D.
Chang Ms.
Tania
Chelnov-Snitow
Mr.
Wei
Chen
Mr.
Vincent
M.
Cummings Mrs.
Paula
J.
Donahoe The
Doyle/Logan
Company Ms.
Diane
Duncan Ms.
Janine
Elliott Mrs.
Brenda
Freiberg Mr.
Howard
M.
Gordon Ms.
Cheryl
Groah Ms.
Celisse
G.
Johnson Ms.
Sandra
Jung
Mr.
Kevin
S.
Kayse Mr.
Tom
Keegan
Ms.
Casey
K.
Kim Mr.
Steve
C.
Kimball Angelia
Leung/Hap
Palmer Ms.
Mary
A.
Lombardo Mrs.
Jeanette
E.
Marbert Ms.
Judith
Mitoma Mrs.
Christina
L.
Ngo
Ms.
Dara
M.
Paprock Mrs.
Sharon
Parker-Frazier Ms.
Mysoon
Rizk Ms.
Kate
Rosloff David
Rousseve Ms.
Sarri
A.
Sanchez Mr.
David
A.
Smith Mrs.
Madeleine
B.
Stanicci Mrs.
June
T.
Watanabe Ms.
Rebecca
Y.
Wei Dr.
Katrina
Dornig
Flourish
Foundation Mrs.
Lori
Buffalow
Fonzi Gilead
Sciences,
Inc. Mr.
Jim
L.
Hooker
Jewish
Federation
of
Nashville
&
Mid
Tennessee
Cavalier
Fd Johnson
&
Johnson Ms.
Soo
Jin
Kim Ms.
Cynthia
J.
Moe
Resnick
Family
Foundation,
Inc Soros
Foundations
Network Mr.
Bruce
Vaughn
(Beyond $10,000)
Clarence and Ann Dillon Dunwalke Trust The Ford Foundation The David & Linda Shaheen Foundation The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts The Herb Ritts Foundation
IS:
Staff
Arsenio
Apillanes,
Facili5es
Manager Tony
Arias,
Video
Lab
Manager Larry
Blanco,
Student
Aairs
Ocer Ginger
Holguin,
Public
Events
Manager Daniel
Millner,
Management
Services
Ocer Muriel
Moorhead,
Accoun5ng/Payroll Silvily
Thomas,
Scheduling
and
Academic
Personnel Lorrie
Snyder,
Technical
Support Lilian
Wu,
Assistant
to
Chair
Vice-Chairs
Victoria Marks (Undergraduate Affairs) David Delgado Shorter (Graduate Affairs)
Faculty
Anurima
Banerji Susan
Leigh
Foster Dan
Froot David
Gere Angelia
Leung Victoria
Marks Peter
Nabokov Janet
O
Shea Lionel
Popkin Allen
Roberts Mary
(Polly)
Roberts David
Rousseve Peter
Sellars Aparna
Sharma David
Delgado
Shorter Christopher
Waterman Cheng-Chieh
Yu
Emeritus
Donald
CosenNno Lynn
Dally Elsie
Dunin Irma
Dosamantes-Beaudry Pia
Gilbert Michael
Owen
Jones Judy
Mitoma Colin
Quigley Marta
Savigliano Allegra
Fuller
Snyder Emma
Lew
Thomas
Robert Gordon, Program/Outreach Coordinator Lauren Gould, Producer Elisabeth Millicam, Oce Coordinator
Photography Credits: Rose Eichenbaum www.rosesfoto.com Jorge Vismara www.jorgevismara.net Lillian Wu Je Poirier
Many thanks to all the students, faculty, and staff for their unending devotion and leadership that create the unique environment of inclusive learning and activism so unusual in WAC/Dance.
Editors
Elizabeth Terschuur Angelia Leung 2009/2011 Sara Wookey Angelia Leung 2010
Graphic Design
Elizabeth Terschuur (2009, 2011) Sara Wookey (2010)