Here are the performers, in alphabetical order:
Laura Baehr is a movement artist,
teacher, and researcher. She earned her dual degree in Dance and Neuroscience
from Muhlenberg College and joined the Philadelphia dance community in 2012.
Laura's performance experience includes concert dance, mask work and dance theater.
She is a contributing artist to The Embodiment Project and a member of Femme.
Collective of Philadelphia. In addition to performance and choreography, Laura
is a Pilates instructor, Dance for Parkinson Disease teacher, and currently
pursuing her Doctor of Physical Therapy degree at Temple University. She is so
grateful to take part in Breach: Left Behind.
Photo by Bicking Photography |
Katherine Kiefer Stark is a Philadelphia-based
dance artist, teacher, and the artistic director of The Naked Stark.
Katherine received her M.F.A. in choreography from the University of North
Carolina, Greensboro and her B.A. in dance from Connecticut College.
Katherine’s movement practice is founded on release-based movement techniques,
which appreciate and make space for the uniqueness of each mover’s body,
emphasize understanding initiations and pathways and are practiced through
discovering how one’s own body moves within the movement. She strives to
build complex dance works that take apart, redefine, and consider everyday
experiences of people, ideas and social phenomenon. Her work has been presented
in New York, North Carolina, West Virginia, and New Hampshire as well as
produced by a variety of presenters in Philadelphia including FringeArts,
Mascher Space Cooperative, and First Person Arts. Katherine received a
2012 Rocky Award, a peer-to-peer award for outstanding achievement in the
greater Philadelphia dance community, for her work Looking for Judy. Since
moving to Philadelphia in 2010, Katherine has performed with Eleanor
Goudie-Averill, Colleen Hooper, and Jessica Warchal-King among others as well
as collaborating with Loren Groenendaal and Marion Ramirez. Katherine has
taught as a guest artist at Muhlenberg, University of Texas, El Paso, and Enloe
High School, and as adjunct faculty at Bryn Mawr College. She is also an
Artist in-Residence at Mascher Space Cooperative where she rehearses and offers
a drop-in class for the Philly dance community.
Photo by Charles Stonewall |
Margaret Page has a Master's degree in
Expressive Therapy and is a Licensed Professional Counselor at Psychology
Associates of Bethlehem in Easton. For the past 13 years, she has worked with
various populations providing group, individual, and family counseling using
creative arts, dance therapy, and verbal therapy. Margaret feels dance is
healing, helps create community and is a way to tell stories. She grew up
dancing and performing with the Tennessee Children's Dance Ensemble. She is
honored to work with Jessica on this project.
Kelly Prentice, dancer, writer, yogini and
mother, has danced with the Ballet Guild of the Lehigh Valley, DeSales
University Dance Ensemble, DanceGing and Margo Clifford Ging, and most recently
with the Easton Dance Collective, an emerging group of Easton dancers who debuted
Carrie Rohman's work Night of Summer Stars at Alvin Ailey Dance Center. Kelly
is a registered yoga instructor who teaches vinyasa flow, prenatal yoga and
yoga for dancers. She recently launched a corporate yoga and meditation project
called Bija Initiative. Kelly is also coordinator for Lafayette College’s
Choreographers on Campus program.
Carrie Rohman is Associate Professor of
English at Lafayette College and former faculty at Contemporary Dance Theater
in Cincinnati, Ohio, where she taught modern technique and worked as an
independent choreographer. She is a scholar and teacher of literature,
animal studies, and dance/performance studies, and is affiliated with Sakshi
Productions. Most recently, she created a sound and movement performance
piece about the extinct passenger pigeon with Michael Pestel (2014), premiered
“No Taking That Back,” inspired by the work of colleague and celebrated poet,
Lee Upton (2015), and performed “To Know the Difference” at Ten Tiny Dances,
Bethlehem ArtsQuest (2015).
Nandini Sikand is a dancer, filmmaker and
anthropologist. She is the co-founder and co-director of
Sakshi Productions, a
neo-classical and contemporary dance company www.sakshiproductions.org. She has performed at many notable venues, including Lincoln
Center, the United Nations, Danny Kaye Playhouse, Hunter College, Brooklyn
Museum of Art, Pace University, John Jay College and The Graduate Center, CUNY
in New York. She is also the Associate Director/Choreographer of Harmattan
Theater, a performance group committed to an environmentally and
socially-engaged theater. Nandini Sikand is an Assistant Professor of an
interdisciplinary film and media studies program at Lafayette College, PA.
Plate 3 Photography courtesy of Birds on a Wire Dance Theatre |
Jennifer
D. Yackel is a Philly-based dance artist whose career has taken her from
ballet companies
such as the Richmond Ballet and the Ballet Theater of
Maryland, to contemporary companies such as Jeanne Ruddy Dance and the Ellen
Sinopoli Dance Company. In addition to her company work, Jennifer has
enjoyed projects with Mark Dendy, Adam Weinert, Bowen McCauley Dance, Chisena
Danza, Lior Shneior, Invisible River, Victoria Hutchinson, Stone Depot Dance,
and The Naked Stark. She has performed in notable venues such as The Kimmel
Center, Jacob’s Pillow, Kaatsbaan International Dance Center, and the Lincoln
Center Plaza.
Jennifer is currently part
of the NADINE Project, a choreographic collective under the direction of Janet
Soares and Libby Nye. Her choreography has been presented in festivals
and venues in New York, Pennsylvania, Virginia, and Maryland.
As an educator, Jennifer
has taught master classes at the American College Dance Association Festival
and Salisbury University. She is currently a teaching artist for the Rock
School for Dance Education.
Photo by Ellen Rosenberg |
(New for this week - the server is doing weird things with text, particularly for the folks involved in Breach: Left Behind. Thanks for reading and your understanding!)
the gathering of such beautiful souls...
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