Opening the season is RCDC’s fall performance series, featuring the world premiere of EKILI MUNDA|What Lies Within, choreographed by Sanders-Ward and Jonas Byaruhanga, founder and director of Keiga Dance Company
in Kampala, Uganda. The evening-length work seeks to unearth the
cultural history and knowledge around identity that is archived in the
body and the unapologetic liberation of this knowledge. EKILI MUNDA|What Lies Within represents
the culmination of the TransAtlantic Project, a yearlong cultural
exchange between the two internationally recognized dance companies.
Performances take place November 8–10, 2018 at 7:30 p.m. at the Dance
Center of Columbia College Chicago, 1306 S. Michigan Ave., Chicago.
Tickets are available at dance.colum.edu.
A post-show fundraiser Tukwaniriza (“Welcome” in Luganda, the primary
language in Kampala) reception takes place November 10 at 3 Flytes Loft,
2635 S. Wabash Ave., Chicago.
RCDC’s Academy and Youth Ensemble concludes its fall term with a Winter
Sharecase on December 15, 2018 at Fuller Park Auditorium, 331 W. 45th
St., Chicago. RCDC’s Academy, which offers year-round instruction, led
to the development of the Youth Ensemble, which has begun to handle its
own operations: the high school-age company members curate the concert,
secure a performance space, plan the budget, and determine and execute
all of the concert’s technical needs.
The third edition of La Femme, a festival of work by black female
choreographers, takes place February 28–March 2, 2019 at the South Shore
Cultural Center, 7059 S. South Shore Dr., Chicago, a partnership with
the Chicago Park District’s Night Out in the Parks. RCDC will issue a
call for artists on August 1.
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In May, RCDC presents the world premiere of Sanders-Ward’s Art of Resilience 2.0,
a co-presentation with the DuSable Museum of African American History.
The three-part evening-length work explores the theme of embodied
resilience that lives inside of the black bodies found in Chicago’s
historically disenfranchised communities. The work explores the history
and culture behind Chicago’s unique house music and dance scene and
represents multiple Chicago locations. Performances take place May
16–18, 2019 at the DuSable Museum of African American History’s
Roundhouse, 740 E. 56th Place, Chicago. RCDC’s Paint the Town Red, a
post-show fundraiser, takes place May 18 on the Roundhouse’s outdoor
patio. Tickets will be available in early 2019.
Concluding the season will be RCDC’s “Dance4Peace Youth Concert &
Community Hug Awards” June 1 at 5 p.m. at Benito Juarez Community
Academy, 1450 W. Cermak Rd., Chicago.
An important component in RCDC’s education programming is a workshop
series, “Making the Artivist,” which cultivates the process of making
art and combining it with activism. “We guide participants in activating
their voice and civic engagement through movement or other art-making,”
Sanders-Ward explained. RCDC has conducted this program at the Cook
County Juvenile Detention Center for the past five years. This summer,
the program expands into several South Side communities, including
Roseland, Pullman, and Washington Park. |
Red
Clay Dance Company lives to awaken “glocal” change through creating,
performing, and teaching dances of the African Diaspora—change that
transforms cultural and socioeconomic imbalances in our local and global
community. Founder Vershawn Sanders-Ward conceived the idea of RCDC
while on her first trip to Senegal, West Africa, when she became
fascinated by the interconnectedness of dance and everyday life. The
name Red Clay comes from her childhood memories of playing in red earth
during her summers in Mobile, Alabama.
RCDC’s 10th anniversary season is supported by the Chicago Community
Trust, the Field Foundation, the MacArthur Fund for Arts and Culture at
the Richard H Driehaus Foundation, the Gaylord and Dorothy Donnelley
Foundation, the Springboard Foundation, the Polk Bros. Foundation, the
Illinois Humanities Council, and the Illinois Arts Council Agency. The
creation of EKILI MUNDA |What Lies Within is supported by the International Connections Fund at the MacArthur Foundation.
The
10th Anniversary Season Host Committee includes Ebony Ambrose, Jessica
Bell, Amy Clark*, Belinda Farr*, Leslie Guy, Tam Herbert*, Kesha
Jackson*, Jeff Perkins*, Jada Russell, Brea Sanders, Marilyn A. Sanders,
and Ira Staples (* denotes RCDC board member).
For more information about RCDC and the 10th anniversary season, visit redclaydance.com.
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