Deeply Rooted Dance Theater
DEEPLY ROOTED RECEIVES SUBSTANTIAL FUNDING FROM LOGAN FOUNDATION AND ARTS WORK FUND
TO BUILD CAPACITY, RECONFIGURE ARTISTIC LEADERSHIP,
ENVISION FUTURE OF DANCE ON CHICAGO’S SOUTH SIDE
TO BUILD CAPACITY, RECONFIGURE ARTISTIC LEADERSHIP,
ENVISION FUTURE OF DANCE ON CHICAGO’S SOUTH SIDE
Deeply Rooted Dance Theater (DRDT) announces
significant funding support from the Reva & David Logan Foundation
and the Arts Work Fund to support institutional capacity building that
will facilitate the first steps of a major initiative: creating a vision
for a potential new center for African-American dance education and
professional performances on Chicago’s South Side.
The Logan Foundation is providing $75,000 in general operating funds and
two matching grants—$25,000 and $20,000—to offer incentives for new
DRDT funders to support this capacity-building. “With these grants, the
Logan Foundation has taken a leadership position in helping Deeply
Rooted prepare for and define the next era for the company and dance in
Chicago,” said DRDT Co-Founder and Executive/Artistic Director Kevin
Iega Jeff. “The matching grants are to encourage the philanthropic
community to join us in sustaining our future as an organization as well
as our participation in considering and imagining this new resource.”
The Arts Work Fund/Idea Lab program is providing $25,000 for each of the
next two years to support the visioning process with current committed
partners, including the Logan Center for the Arts at the University of
Chicago, the Chicago Community Loan Fund (CCLF), and Studio One Dance
Theater, and possible new partners in the future. The goal is to build
upon the long tradition of dance on the South Side and develop new ways
to support professional, pre-professional, and avocational dance in
Chicago.
Creating a Vision for a South Side Dance Center
“While Deeply Rooted has served the South Side with our education programs and performances at the Logan Center—including our December 15 and 16 performances coming up this weekend—and
other locations, this is an unprecedented opportunity to lead the way,
with our partners, in establishing a stronger presence for dance in that
part of the city,” Jeff explained. “Shifting our base of operations to a
shared studio/office/performance facility on the South Side would help
us strengthen our talent pipeline for DRDT’s future by expanding arts
education and experiences for youth in South Side communities and
exposing them to pre-professional and professional training to accompany
the existing recreational opportunities. We are excited to begin the
process of envisioning additional space on the South Side to attract
more audiences for professional dance by increasing the number of
performances there.”
To launch the project, DRDT, the Logan Center, and other partners plan
to engage in a two-year Space Pilot beginning in 2019, working in
existing spaces on the University campus and across the South Side that
will help develop models for the ways a potential shared space might
operate.
“We hope a new space will support existing organizations and serve as an
incubator for new arts groups committed to fostering inclusion and
connecting art and creativity with social change,” Jeff said.
“We are pleased to continue deepening our partnership with Deeply Rooted
and other terrific dance organizations in Chicago that have been such a
vital part of the creative community on the South Side, across Chicago,
and beyond,” said Bill Michel, executive director of the Logan Center
for the Arts. “We look forward to working with Deeply Rooted and others
to build on their incredible legacy of dance education and performance
and envision potential new space that will expand the network of
facilities that support this vibrant community on the South Side.”
Artistic Leadership Evolution
Given the demands and challenges of this undertaking, Jeff is shifting
his focus with DRDT to developing the necessary long-term initiatives
and community relationships to cultivate the project. Additionally,
DRDT’s artistic leadership will change to an artistic rotational model.
Beginning in the 2019–20 season, Artistic Team member and Dance
Education Director Nicole Clarke-Springer and Artistic Team member and
Emerging Choreographers Showcase Producing/Artistic Director Joshua
Ishmon, also a dancer with the company, will serve as co-artistic
directors. Co-Founder and Associate Artistic Director Gary Abbott will
take over artistic leadership for the 2020–21 season. They will be
responsible for maintaining the company’s repertoire as well as bringing
in new choreographic voices, while Jeff supports their leadership by
continuing to serve on the Artistic Team.
DRDT has prepared for this capacity building through its Arts Management
Workforce Development Program, which launched two years ago to grow new
leadership; the Summer Intensive and Company Apprentice Programs; the
Chicago Community Trust-funded Smart Growth initiative for strategic
planning; the Smart Scope initiative, supported by the Arts &
Business Council, to implement ideas from the strategic plan; and
overall board development.
“The time has come for the company to become an institution, and a major
city like Chicago deserves a world-class, homegrown institution for
African-American dance, so I must adjust my priorities,” Jeff said. “Our
artistic team has grown and strengthened in competence and vision, and
they are ready for this challenge.”
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