Video still from BRINK. 2019, Created and performed by Nickels Sunshine, Jmy James Kidd and Dezmon OMega Fair. Video Directed by Brian
Getnick 2019. Costumes by Jmy James Kidd. Sound Score by Dezmon Omega Fair.
“In three words I can sum up everything I’ve learned about life: it goes on.”
-Robert Frost
As fresh snow blankets the northeast, wrapping the land in a peaceful winter muffler, all around us too, the silent chaos of the pandemic reigns. The contrast of these two things, side by side, could not be more stark. The sparkling, reflective beauty of the first snow that brings with it the excitement of children and grown ups alike, and beside it, the pain, the fear, the continuing isolation of this global crisis as lives are lost and families kept from each other. Whatever the folly of
humankind, life indeed does go on.
Jmy James Kidd lives and works in California. She spoke to us in late October as the pandemic continued on. At the time she was working with her long time dance collaborator, Perin Hailey McNelis, on a piece called Believers. Although the duo has made many dances together in the past, working in close physical proximity
in this way felt familiar and yet unusual at this time. The pair have no performances lined up and do not know whether they ever will, but Kidd remarked that the dance not only feels like the right thing to do for her body it also helps maintain her mental health during this difficult time. Until recently, Kidd ran a dance studio in Los Angeles. When the pandemic hit, she and her wife decided to move to the high desert where she built and began working in a much smaller studio space. To hear how
she has adapted to this and more about her collaborative work including some words from her collaborator, as well as what made Kidd leave her previous work as a dancer in New York, listen to the complete interview.
Alissa Juvan spoke to us from Vermont in early December. In addition to the global pandemic, Juvan had a baby a year ago. Both of these things changed everything about her world and she describes the last year as a period of incubation in a sense. Before having her baby, she was teaching sensual movement workshops in combination
with her coaching work. Sensual movement is a floor based technique that is based on her work as a pole dancing instructor. Juvan teaches movements that can be called into action when the music brings them out. In her workshops, there is a strong emphasis on feeling safe and playful so that participants’ bodies can freely express. To hear more about Juvan’s work, as well as an in-depth discussion about the inherent shame that many people feel around their own sensuality and sexuality, listen to the complete interview.
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New Conversations with Negarra Kudumu
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Weekly Grants &
Resources for Artists
Emily Kennerk, installation, 2015
Every week you will find updated resources here to apply for grants, find residencies and more.
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Art creates and reflects meaning. It is an important part of the conversation and can often help inform far better than words alone. Throughout every struggle in history, image and symbol have played an integral role. This is no different today...
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A light at the end of the tunnel – as the world anticipates a vaccine and the ability to return to some semblance of normalcy, now is the perfect time to begin planning your next steps. There will be a time when we can once again move through...
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There is a certain gratitude in knowing that somewhere out there is the opportunity right for you. While you may find your path to this moment scattered with rejection, know that ultimately your efforts will pay off – it is simply a matter of persistence. Give yourself the chance to...
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What better way to celebrate the end of a difficult year than with the gift of opportunity? As the holidays approach, we find ourselves looking at a changed landscape, one where we may not be able to do the things we usually do to mark important...
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These are positive and / or negative reviews of galleries, art fairs, consultants, writers, online pay to play offers,
residencies and more – all written by artists so that other artists can beware of situations where institutions treat artists badly, or that end up costing the artist money or are outright scams.
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