Fall 2024 Events
Dance and the Visual Artist
Wednesday, October 9
5 to 7
at the SLIPPAGE Lab
Zac Whittenburg, Chicago dance writer, moderates a conversation between Brendan Fernandes and bree gant, faculty and MFA student in Art, Theory & Practice
Embodied Meaning: a workshop in Expressive Performance
Saturday and Sunday
October 12-13 @ 10-4 pm
Links Hall, Chicago
$250
Alexandra Beller is hosting a 2-day workshop at Links Hall in mid-October on using Laban and Bartenieff, specifically Laban’s Effort material, for expressive communication in both speaking and moving.
This event is not hosted by the cluster, but is highly recommended by several cluster participants. For more information and to register, visit https://www.alexandrabellerdances.org/embodiedmeaningchi
CDSWG: “Inventing Abstraction? Modernist Dance in Europe”
Tuesday, October 22
5:30 to 7
at the Museum of Contemporary Art
The Chicago Dance Studies Working Group will host a conversation on Juliet Bellow and Nell Andrew’s essay “Inventing Abstraction? Modernist Dance in Europe.”
Visit the Chicago Dance Studies Working Group website here for access to readings.
Dance in the City: Streets, Stages, and Nightclubs
Monday, November 11
5 to 7PM
at SLIPPAGE Lab
A talk by Aishika Chakraborty
Once upon a time, the Black Town of nineteenth century Calcutta staged a richly speckled urban-popular-folk culture in its mehfil and bazar when trans-local dancers like bai, jhumur,
kobi and khyamta vied with each other for patronage of white masters and brown sahibs. At one and the same time, the White Town of the second city of the empire, hosted cabaret nights with itinerant exotic dancers as part of its nighttime pleasure. This paper will explore how erotic dancing bodies thrived through different economies in different nights despite the sudden changes of fortune suffered from the two world war(s), blackouts, famine,
independence and the partition (1947).
Moving forward in postcolonial times, the paper captures the shifts in space, style and clientele when the colonial club-culture gave way to the ‘vulgar’ (sub) culture of a plebeian nightlife. If old nightclubs sported cabaret nights with light-skinned bodies, the city’s Northern neighborhood started staging cabaret/porn theatres with a new rank of refugees, migrants and squatters. Not surprisingly, the state took a crack at the nightclubs in order to wipe out the underclass erotic bodies from Calcutta’s moral geography.
Did such erasures remove old threats altogether? If the creation of the moral nation mandated the expurgation of obscene dancers from its glorious inventory, it must also archive the
histories of such erasure. Bringing under focus the absent and provocative bodies of the dancing city, this paper returns to the lost stories of Calcutta’s night-dancers to write them
back into history.
About the Speaker:
Aishika Chakraborty is Professor and Director of the School of Women’s Studies, Jadavpur University, India. Her research straddles gender history, dance history and feminist performance. Her book, Widows of Colonial Bengal: Gender, Morality and Cultural
Representation (2023) is awarded the Hiralal Gupta Research Award for the Best Book by a Woman Historian in the Indian History Congress, 2023. A bi-lingual author, Aishika has authored two books on the changing faces of modern-contemporary dance of Calcutta, Kolkatar Nach: Samakaleen Nagarnritya (2019) and Kolkatar Cabaret: Bangali, Younata Ebang Miss Shefali (2020). Her forthcoming edited volumes are The Dancing Body: Labour, Livelihood and Leisure (with Urmimala Sarkar Munsi, Routledge, 2024) and Gendered Bodies, Social Exclusions: Contemporary Issues in Women’s Studies (with Nandita Banerjee Dhawan, Routledge 2025).
Aishika was a dancer-choreographer of Calcutta’s leading feminist contemporary dance institute, Dancers’ Guild.
CDSWG: “Ten Queer Theses on Abstraction”
Tuesday, December 3
5:30 to 7
at the Museum of Contemporary Art
The Chicago Dance Studies Working Group will host a conversation on David Getsy’s essay “Ten Queer Theses on Abstraction”.
Visit the Chicago Dance Studies Working Group website here for access to readings.
ANTARANGA: Between You and Me
Friday, December 6
7PM Performance by Ananya Dance Theatre
8:30PM Drinks on the Cluster!
at Links Hall
ANTARANGA: Between You and Me is set in a world in deep crisis (much like our own) where most people have lost their ability to sense the energy of other human beings and can no longer recognize or connect with each other. A few humsafar (Urdu for “fellow travelers”) remain, blessed with super-connecting and heart-opening powers. As they undertake perilous journeys, they forge connectivities that may yet heal the world. ANTARANGA is the first work in a duology, and explores themes of intimacy, connection, trust, and community among BIPOC women/femmes.
Click here to purchase tickets, starting at $16!
Winter 2025 Events
Moving Alternatives
Thursday, February 13
7:30PM
at Museum of Contemporary Art
Performance outing to see Anna Collod’s Moving Alternatives, a reperformance of material from Denishawn.
CDSWG: "Does Abstraction Belong to White People?"
Tuesday, March 4
5:30 to 7PM
at the Museum of Contemporary Art
The Chicago Dance Studies Working Group will host a conversation with Rafael Palacios on Miguel Gutierrez’s essay “Does Abstraction Belong to White People?”
Reworking the Ballet La Bayadere
Thursday, March 13
5 to 7PM
Location TBD on Evanston Campus
Guest speaker Priya Srinivasan will give a performative lecture on her dramaturgy incorporating a 1838 visit of Indian dancers to Paris on revised staging of La Bayadere. Madison Mainwarring will respond and facilitate a post-talk discussion.
This event is co-sponsored by the Department of Performance Studies.
Workshop with Rafael Palacios
January TBD
Location TBD on Evanston Campus
A workshop with Rafael Palacios on Sankofa Danzafro.
Spring 2025 Events
CDSWG: “Blackness in Abstraction”
Tuesday, April 8
5:30 to 7PM
at the Museum of Contemporary Art
The Chicago Dance Studies Working Group will host a conversation on Adrienne Edwards’ essay “Blackness in Abstraction”
Curating Ailey
Wednesday, April 23
5:30 to 7PM
at Wirtz downtown, in Abbott Hall
Adrienne Edwards will give a lecture on “Curating Ailey”.
This event is co-sponsored by Art, Theory, and Practice and the Black Arts Consortium.
The Other Witch
May TBD
Location TBD on Evanston campus
Nejla Yatkin presents screen version of her dance The Other Witch, a reperformance of Wigman’s Witch Dance.
CDSWG: "Wrapping Up and Futuring"
Tuesday, May 27
5:30 to 7PM
at the Museum of Contemporary Art
The Chicago Dance Studies Working Group will host a social event to wrap up the year and plan for the subsequent year of Chicago Dance Studies Working Group.
Graduate Student Presentations
June TBD
Location TBD on Evanston campus
Students that are currently active in the cluster are invited to give reserach presentations as a dress rehearsal for sharing work at the Dance Studies Association’s annual conference, taking place on June 25-29 in Washington DC.
2024 Spring Events
Susan Ravn: Kinesthetia 'in action'
Wednesday, April 5 at 5PM
Slippage Lab, Louis Hall
Kinesthesia ‘in action’: a critically loaded phenomenological approach for analyzing the dynamic qualities of movement
Dance scholars have acknowledged the ways in which qualitative dynamics of movement are recognized, felt, and valued differently depending upon the ideals, techniques, and traditions of the dance practice. In somatic practices such as the Alexander and Klein techniques, participants’ feelings of movement dynamic are configured in close alliance with interoceptive sensations and imaginary work. With these scholarly works as point of departures, Ravn argues that dancers’ and somatic practitioners’ ways of turning to and engaging feelings of movement’s dynamic facilitate phenomenological descriptions of how kinesthesia can be deployed in skilled practices. Ravn considers the sense in which dancers’ feeling of the dynamic qualities of movement or their feeling of movement’s flux is preconfigured in subtle ways due to enculturation, deliberate cultivation, and the specificities of practice. The possibility of a pre-reflective (non-reifying) performative-oriented mode of being aware of one’s body is discussed to account for how kinesthesia can be in use, and thereby ‘in action’, in specialized and skilled ways.
Sponsored by Slippage Lab.
Halifu Osumare
Guest Talk by Halifu Osumare
April 23 at TBD
Black Arts Consortium Conference Room, Downtown Campus
Fraught Balance: The Embodied Politics of Dabke Dance Music in Syria
Monday, May 6 at 12:30PM
Kresge Hall
Lunch will be served at this event. Dabke, one of Syria’s most beloved dance music traditions, is at the center of the country’s war and the social tensions that preceded conflict. Drawing on almost two decades of ethnographic, archival, and digital research, Shayna Silverstein shows how dabke dance music embodies the fraught dynamics of gender, class, ethnicity, and nationhood in an authoritarian state. Her book situates dabke politically, economically, and historically in a broader account of expressive culture in Syria’s recent (and ongoing) turmoil.
Shayna Silverstein is an assistant professor in the Department of Performance Studies and faculty member of the Middle Eastern and North African Studies program at Northwestern University. Her teaching and scholarship broadly examines the politics and aesthetics of sound, movement, and performance in contemporary SWANA/Middle Eastern cultural production.
Sponsored by Middle East and North African Studies Program. Part of MENA Mondays!
Amanda Reid
Guest Talk with Amanda Reid
May 7-8
More information coming soon!
2024 Winter Quarter Events
Vivir Sabroso: Choreographies of Living in the Colombian Pacific
Works-in-Progress Series Talk by Prof. Melissa Blanco Borelli
This talk engages with critical dance studies, performance studies and Black studies to think about how theatre, dance, and archival memory projects reflect Afro-Colombian political and poetic philosophies of the everyday.
January 31st at 12pm
Northwestern Library, Room 3266
Sponsored by the Black Arts Consortium
Complexions Contemporary Ballet
Performance Outing
Complexions at Auditorium Theatre
Saturday, February 3rd 7:30PM
If you would like a complimentary ticket, please email Michael (MichaelLandez2027@u.northwestern.edu) no later than Friday, January 26th
Chicago Dance Studies Working Group Session
Museum of Contemporary Art
Tuesday, February 6th 5:30PM
A stimulating discussion focused on Complexions Contemporary Ballet and Desmond Richardson led by Tara Aisha Willis and Maggie Bridger.
"Erotic Resistance" Book Talk
Erotic Resistance: The Struggle for the Soul of San Francisco Book Talk with Gigi Otálvaro-Hormillosa
February 15, from 5-6PM
Norris University Center, Armadillo Room 2-287
Sponsored by SPAN, Gender and Sexualities Studies, and Performance Studies