Colorado Springs dance, art, music festival celebrates land, raises awareness of water crisis

Experiences will feature Ormao and other Colorado-based dancers and choreographers performing works specifically created for the Coyote, including Justice Miles’ flamenco offering in the Coyote teahouse; dancers in plastic-bagged tutus; Laura Treglia’s movements with a string of clothing; and Brazilian Rosely Conz, an assistant professor of dance at University of Colorado at Colorado Springs, doing work that speaks about immigration.

Read the entire article here: The Gazette.

Credit: Mary Ripper Baker

Balé em Foco - Percursos Formativos

Vamos conhecer os assuntos abordados e professores/artistas que estarão conosco?

Rosely Conz é bailarina, coreógrafa e criadora de danças para câmera. Ela possui graduação em Dança e Mestrado em Artes da Cena pela Unicamp e MFA em Dança pela University of Colorado at Boulder, EUA. Sua pesquisa foca no uso de métodos somáticos e processos de decolonização em dança na educação superior. Além disso, Rosely cria e produz danças para câmera tratando de temas como imigração e migração, além de maternidade. Seu filme "Uprooted" (2019) foi aceito em festivais nos Estados Unidos, Brasil, México, Irlanda, África do Sul e Portugal. Rosely é professora assistente na University of Colorado Colorado Springs nos EUA (a partir do segundo semestre de 2022), onde continua sua pesquisa acadêmica, criativa e pedagógica.

Se interessou? Os encontros da primeira fase serão às sextas no turno noturno e sábado, manhã e tarde entre os meses de agosto e outubro

E ainda uma segunda e terceira etapa de criação autoral e partilha entre os meses de outubro e novembro.

Deu vontade? Fique atento!

Inscrições: 01 de maio a 10 de junho

Início do curso: 06 de agosto

Acesse nossas redes sociais: @bale_em_foco e facebook/balé_em_Foco

Since “The Show Must Go On,” Dance Adapts to the Screen

With theaters closed, dancing for a camera became an alternative to choreographers and dance companies. Screendance is now more popular than ever.

(Original article:
Alma College Newsroom)

We don’t need to go in too deep about the many sad ways the pandemic impacted the arts community. You already know about movie theaters closing, live performances being canceled, and artists broadcasting their work online. This might not be “the new normal” forever, but it’s what we’re living through right now — and could be for a long time.

On the positive side, art and media have flourished in new ways during the pandemic. With so much of our time spent in our homes — and with so many people using their computer webcams and smartphones — more people than ever are dancing for the camera. Maybe you yourself have tried to produce a dance video for TikTok!

If so, you should check out an art form that is growing in popularity across the world, screendance. It’s like a deeper version of TikTok videos — an art form that combines dance with performance, visual arts, cinema and media arts to produce something truly provocative, interesting and beautiful. Some colleges and universities offer courses where you can make your own screendances; Alma College, in Michigan, is one of them.

Rosely Conz is a dancer from Brazil, choreographer and dance teacher, who also serves as an assistant professor in the theatre and dance department at Alma. We asked Rosely to share a few things she tells her students about screendance. Here’s what she said.

You’ve probably seen screendances before

Maybe you haven’t heard of screendance, but it’s actually been around for quite a long time. On the first day of her screendance class, Rosely likes to show her students a black and white film by filmmaker Maya Deren and dancer Talley Beatty, which was made all the way back in 1945. They utilize some techniques that were innovative and experimental for the time, like a slow-motion jump. Pretty cool!

These days, screendance lives on through music vídeos, like this one by Sia, commercials, like this one for Under Armour, and other forms of media.

Screendance is for people who love dancing …

Screendance will get you thinking about choreography and dance in ways you never have before. Depending on what you’re trying to say with your screendance, you can move fast or slow, with high energy or low. You can move with strength or fluidity, forward or backwards, in-place or all over your room. Think of your body like pieces in a puzzle, Rosely said — screendance is how you make it all fit together.

… as well as other forms of media!

Like we said earlier, screendance isn’t just about moving your body — it’s integrative with film and media arts. Screendance will make you think about the placement of your camera in ways like, “Is it above my subject’s head, or at their feet?” It will push you to consider the site where you’re filming, like, “How can my subject use the blue paint on that wall to tell a story?”

It will also get you to consider lighting. Rosely herself created a screendance, “Still Here,” at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic that made use of something called a “ghost light” — an electric light that is left energized on the stage of a theatre when the theatre is unoccupied and would otherwise be completely dark. What she was trying to say, symbolically, was that while live shows may not be happening right now, they will return eventually.

Screendance is not exclusive

It may be true that screendance is like a “deeper” version of TikTok videos, but it’s definitely not exclusive or high-brow. Screendance doesn’t turn its back on social media, Rosely says — it embraces social media. Borrowing a phrase from Karl Marx, Rosely says, dancers own the “means of production” like never before, and that translates into some really cool art. As technology has improved through the years, social media users have (perhaps unconsciously) been able to incorporate elements of screendance, like moving the camera around, into their own videos.

What screendance hopes to do — and what we hope you will do — is expand on what you already know, to continue making better and more interesting art!

Do you want to learn more? Read about the Alma College Dance program or contact Rosely at (989) 463-7141 or conzr@alma.edu.

Flatlands Dance Theatre presents "The Solo Series "

Choreographer Spotlight: Introducing Rosely Conz.

Rosely Conz is a Brazilian dancer, choreographer, and educator. She has an MFA from the University of Colorado at Boulder, an MA in Performing Arts, and a BFA in Dance from the University of Campinas-Brazil. For the past 15 years, Rosely has been performing and choreographing professionally for dance companies both in Brazil and in the USA. Rosely is on a tenure-track position at Alma College in Michigan where she continues her research on how to use dance to get involved in issues of foreignness, belongingness, and immigration.

Conz is working with dancer Molly Roberts to create a piece for "The Solo Series" - streaming online May 1-8. Tickets available at www.flatlandsdance.org/events

Flatlands.jpg

The Solo Series - Flatlands Dance Theatre

Save the Date!

"The Solo Series" Guest Artist Virtual Talkback and Q&A Session
Tuesday, May 4th | 7:00-8:30 pm CST via Zoom

Fifteen guest artists from around the globe set world premiere dance works on the Flatlands Dance Theatre company this spring. Join us for a unique opportunity to hear about their artistic perspectives and ideas about dance and their creative processes and discoveries in a virtual talkback. Moderated by Artistic Director Ali Duffy.

This event is free and open to the public. Visit www.flatlandsdance.org/virtualtalkback for more info and access to Zoom link on May 4th.

ARTIST JOB MARKET TRENDS: EXPERTS WEIGH IN ON WHAT TO EXPECT IN 2020

Given the change of course that has happened in the world during the beginning of the year, we wanted to provide expert opinions on what aspiring Artists can do to start off their careers in an uncertain economic climate. Key components are upcoming trends, important skills to learn, and if there will be any lasting effects on the job market.

We talked to professors from several universities to get their opinions on where the job market for Artists is heading, as well as how young graduates entering the industry can be adequately prepared. Here are their thoughts.

Rosely Conz - interview with Zippia - link

Alma College Dance student in the media

For many across the globe, guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that were publicized to help fight the spread of COVID-19 were seen as an obstacle to normalcy. For first-year student Audrey Plouffe of Flint, they represented an opportunity. “CDC Guidelines,” a film Plouffe created as an assignment in Rosely Conz’s choreography class at Alma College, is currently being showcased at “OUtBreaK!” — a curated, online-only festival organized by the dance publication Rogue Dancer Journal.

Read the rest on the Morning Sun (link)

Podcast Interview with Brad Willcuts from MSU

This podcast, done by Brad Willcuts, Assistant Professor Musical Theatre and Choreography at Michigan State University (MSU), is an educational project for the students of Integrative Arts and Humanities 241e, Social Dance: History and Contemporary Reflections.

During the interview, Rosely Conz speaks about capoeira as a form of art and political resistance, brought by enslaved people to Brazil in the 1500s.

Exchange Choreography Festival 2020

The Bell House, in Tulsa OK, is seeking original choreographic submissions for a weekend of artistic exchange of ideas and movement. The Exchange Choreographic Festival provides a meeting point for professional dancers to showcase their work and engage in dialogue about the process.

More information www.thebellhouse.info.

Exchange 2020.jpg

Uprooted - Official Selection RAD Fest 2020

The dance for camera Uprooted, done in collaboration with Professor Stephany Slaughter from Alma College, was selected for the 11th Midwest Regional Alternative Dance Festival (RAD Fest), March 6-8, 2020. It is an adjudicated dance festival, which showcases the best in live contemporary dance and screendance from around the country and around the world. RAD Fest boasts 6 different live performances, two screendance series, 8 master classes, discussion panels, and surrounding networking events.

2020 - Official Screendance RAD Fest.jpg