Home #Hwoodtimes “National Water Dance 2024: Moving Forward Together”

“National Water Dance 2024: Moving Forward Together”

Dancers from 30 States at 56 Different Locations Dance Across America

WHAT: 6th Bi-annual National Water Dance

WHEN: Saturday, April 20th, 4 pm EDT / 1pm PDT (Live streamed)

WHERE: Rainmaker Fountain at Frances Stevens Park

TICKETS: Free & Open to the Community

INFORMATION: Constance Clare-Newman, 510-219-5097

[email protected]

For bios of dancers and more info about us:

http://desertmovementarts.weebly.com/

Desert Movement Arts

presents

As It Is, And As It Could Be

For the 6TH Annual National Water Dance

April 20, 2024, 1 pm PDT

Coming together on Saturday, April 20 at 1pm PDT / 4 pm EDT are hundreds of dancers from across the country to perform a site-specific dance at a river, a bay, the ocean, a fountain or any water site nearby. From Seattle to Mississippi, Maine to California, Wisconsin to Florida dancers of all ages and experience will join others in uniting to celebrate and collectively take responsibility for protecting our Water.

With live music by Lorah Yaccarino, Desert Movement Arts will present their 20-minute piece As It Is, And As It Could Be at the uptown water sculpture fountain, Rainmaker by artist David Morris at Frances Stevens Park.

This year, Desert Movement Arts addresses the problem of access to bodies of water without an entrance fee. Here in the desert, there is nowhere we can rehearse and perform near a body of water that is not privately owned. The 35-foot-tall stainless steel Rainmaker water sculpture is in a public park. Different from our usual movement choices, some of this piece is quite architectural.

We are aware that water is a commodity—contrived, controlled, consumed—not unlike women’s bodies. A section of the work confronts this. The closing section is an imagining what we dream is possible—respect, reverence, reciprocity.

Quote from dancer:

“I love our heartfelt discussions about water and women in this current climate changing world. Exploring with movement as well as words, I feel connected and engaged.” says Constance Clare-Newman, of Desert Movement Arts.

Mission
Our mission is to create collaborative movement art that builds
embodied expression in the desert environment.

Vision
Our vision is to create somatic movement work and community education that explores communal forms of immersion in a specific site or land. We invite active community involvement. We collaborate with musicians and artists to create original compositions and visual or sculptural art in our site-specific work.

Practices
Our practices are inspired by the desert environment, postmodern dance, activist art, queer and feminist explorations, contact improvisation and site-specific choreography. Our bodies are in a rich ecology of human, non-human, animate and inanimate objects. Our eco-somatic work moves toward care, community, connection and regeneration.

This spring, Desert Movement Arts offered several community workshops:

Embody Wholeness 

with the Alexander Technique

and Constance Clare-Newman

www.constanceclare.com

www.betterdressageseat.com

[email protected]

510-219-5097

Desert Movement Arts