Search Results for: Что если отношения зашли в тупик больше в insta---batmanapollo
Family in Site
Panching Photo by Jessica Swanson. [ID: Panching, an elder Filipina, is in profile to the camera. She looks out a window of an historic house at Fort Barry with a […]
A Love Letter to San Francisco: A Dancer’s Understanding of Home
Photo by Queering Beauty. [ID: Jesse stands in front of a red sequin curtain while wearing a checkered rainbow button up shirt. Jesse’s hands are inside his pockets as he […]
BABY BABY, COME ON HOME
Photo courtesy of Zoe Huey. [ID: A self portrait of a light-skinned, mixed-race Asian person with short hair in a blue long-sleeve button up shirt. The person is looking at […]
we done/come home: a ritual prayer for belonging
House/Full of Blackwomen Photo by Robbie Sweeny. [ID: A Black woman with her eyes closed sits in a blue armchair with her head slightly leaning to the side. On the […]
In Conversation with Melecio Estrella
In Conversation, a series of interviews exploring exchanges about dance and different folks’ relationship to dance. As we examine home and place and what community means, these questions presented themselves. […]
dancing close to home
My mom lives alone, about a thirty minute drive away, in the condo complex where my two sisters and I grew up. There’s a sprawling rosemary bush out front, planted […]
Weaving Wisdom in the Andes: Documentary explores the relationship between an ancient craft and brain health
Weaving is a full-bodied experience. It is a community choreography that capitalizes on strong bonds between generations and connections with nature.
A Letter to Our Multi-Marginalized Disabled Dancers
My beloved disabled dancers,
I am gazing at the shadows of trees dancing upon
gravel walls as the golden hour sun joins in.
It’s beautiful isn’t it?
Walking Backwards
I love dancers. More than actually dancing or dance itself, I love dancers.
In Conversation with Tonya Amos
In Conversation, a series of interviews exploring exchanges about dance and different folks’ relationship to dance. Tonya Amos received a BA in Cultural Anthropology from U.C. Berkeley & […]