DDP Talks To
"The Devil Ties My Tongue" by Amy Seiwert performed for the SKETCH Series, 2013. Photo by David DeSilva. Courtesy of Amy Seiwert's Imagery
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×"The Devil Ties My Tongue" by Amy Seiwert performed for the SKETCH Series, 2013. Photo by David DeSilva. Courtesy of Amy Seiwert's Imagery
“Is the sociology of the dance world changing? The last two years have brought many more commissions for female choreographers.
English National Ballet made a splash in 2016 with an entire program of new choreography by women. And this year’s “NOW: Premieres” program at the Vail Dance Festival here was subtitled “Celebrating Women Choreographers.” Does this sound like mere tokenism? It’s worth pointing out that all four of these female dance-makers — Michelle Dorrance (this year’s artist in residence), Lauren Lovette, Claudia Schreier and Pam Tanowitz — have worked at the festival before.”
In conversations over the years, one thing has always struck me: women in the workplace. Not just any workplace. I’m speaking specifically about the field of dance.
It might seem strange for people to believe that women are an underrepresented minority in dance. We associate dance companies and organizations as being full of women — whether by virtue of the fact that men are less likely than women to study it at a young age, or because dance so often associates in pop culture as pretty ballerinas leaping into the air.
Looking at the field closely, it stands to reason that dance was, and remains, a male-dominated field. A simple Google search reveals that dozens upon dozens of articles have been written on the subject, whether in matters relating to leadership or choreographic opportunities. Some of the smartest and most talented journalists today have gone to great lengths to document those discrepancies. And more often than not, they have succeeded in identifying an important issue that continuously goes unnoticed.
Over the last couple years, I began to wonder what a more deliberate analysis of such an issue might prove, and whether data might be a useful tool for informing how people think about dance more broadly. I was certain it could be done in a more analytical, calculated manner, driven by statistics. What we ended up with is the site you’re now visiting: The Dance Data Project.
Like any good resource, the Project aims to inform diversity by providing public information for the benefit of further study. As it stands, our staff is small and working to provide as much comprehensive data as possible, whether through independent research reports (the first of which you’ll see on the site) or through informational snapshots that include updated figures related to residencies, organizational makeup, and repertoires.
It’s a process. Our team is small but dedicated, our resources only now beginning to take shape. This is just a beginning. The Dance Data Project has a long way to go, but we’re very much looking forward to the ride.
“On Friday, The New York Times posted an article to its website titled ‘A Conversation With 3 Choreographers Who Reinvigorated Ballet,’ a joint interview with Justin Peck, Christopher Wheeldon and Alexei Ratmansky. It’s a delightful conversation at first, veering from process to style to musical choices—delightful, that is, until a question about the dearth of female choreographers in classical ballet arose.”
By Luke Jennings
19 March 2017
The Canadian choreographer Crystal Pite is one of the finest dance-makers on the world stage. Her works address the human condition with fearlessness and compassion, and find light in the darkest night of the soul. Unsurprisingly, Pite is one of the dance world’s most sought-after artists, so it is no small triumph that the Royal Ballet has commissioned a new work from her. Entitled Flight Pattern, the work deals with the plight of refugees and displaced communities. It’s an important piece, and Thursday’s first night was lent added significance by the astonishing and dismaying fact that Pite is the first woman to choreograph for Covent Garden’s main stage this century.
Read the full article in The Guardian.
The ballerina may be the visual symbol of the art form, but men wield most of the creative control.
“Ballerina Ashley Bouder is crying. She’s standing alone in a rehearsal studio in front of 20 or so dance journalists and several funders of her small self-titled ballet company, and she’s crying. And I’m pretty sure it’s my fault.
She’s just finished showing us a snippet of pas de deux that she choreographed, and that she’ll perform in just over a week’s time with her fellow New York City Ballet principal dancer Andrew Veyette. The entire evening of dancing is devoted to women choreographers and to women composers. In over 15 years of dancing with City Ballet, Bouder tells the assembled crowd, she’s danced works by about 40 choreographers and can count only seven women among them. She can’t name a single woman composer whose music she’s danced to ― not a single one.”
“Can ballet express a modern view of the sexes? In the Western contemporary world, women and men often hold equal status at work, as leaders, as voters, as breadwinners. This kind of equality, however, is precisely what ballet cannot show.
Instead, it creates an either-or dualism from the difference between man and woman. He does most of the partnering (traditionally, all of it). She rises onto point. When he does the same (seldom), the effect is comic. The foot is a relatively tiny part of the body; yet its significance becomes colossal.
The meanings that flow from ballet are not only about gender. Yet the use of pointwork places the woman on a different level of being.”
“Artistic director, star ballerina, lobbyist, wrangler, psychologist, spokeswoman. Tamara Rojo, the artistic director of English National Ballet, is one busy woman.
Ms. Rojo, 42, a Spanish-born former Royal Ballet principal dancer, has been in her current job for four years, and she has made a startling difference to English National Ballet — a London touring company of 67 dancers that has no home theater and has struggled for a long time to establish its identity in the shadow of the Royal. On Tuesday, her company began a sold-out run of Akram Khan’s critically praised ‘Giselle’ at Sadler’s Wells. Ms. Rojo commissioned the piece last year, part of her risk-taking approach.
She is also the company’s marquee ballerina (along with a fellow Royal Ballet alum, Alina Cojocaru), somehow managing to keep up her technical form and artistry while acting as a one-woman visionary, manager, cheerleader and glamorous high-profile ad for her organization.
Does she sleep?”
It has become a rarity for ballet companies to present works by women, despite the large number of women in the field and the pioneers of the 20th century.
“’Ballet,’ as the choreographer George Balanchine once said, ‘is Woman.’
But if women are still the symbols of ballet in the popular imagination, chances are it is as ballerinas performing dazzling, demanding steps that were devised for them by men. When it comes to choreography, at least at most major companies, ballet remains overwhelmingly a man’s world.”
“’Listen, I’ve lived in a women’s world my whole life,’ said Peter Martins, the ballet master in chief of New York City Ballet. ‘The last thing we are is sexist here.’
At the same time, the lack of female choreographers is glaringly obvious at City Ballet and other major ballet companies.
There is Twyla Tharp, the rare woman to succeed as an important choreographer in the ballet world, but few others. (Ms. Tharp, who prefers to be recognized as a choreographer, not a female one, declined to comment for this article.)
[ More on the underrepresentation of women in ballet choreography ]
People in the dance world have different ideas about the reasons behind the dearth of women in a field where, as Mr. Martins points out, women predominate in number. Certain issues, though, come up again and again.”
“Gender inequality has long affected artists and the cultural sector, but at a first glance this may not seem so apparent. More women than men study fine art. There are large numbers of female actors, dancers, musicians, arts managers, producers and creatives on the whole. But, in big decision making roles, prize winning works, names hitting the largest stages and recognition, more often than not the winners are men.”
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"The Devil Ties My Tongue" by Amy Seiwert performed for the SKETCH Series, 2013. Photo by David DeSilva. Courtesy of Amy Seiwert's Imagery