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American Dancing Bodies Symposium: The New Orleans Original BuckShop Workshop with Michelle Gibson

The New Orleans Original BuckShop Workshop by Michelle Gibson

Friday, October 20, 2023 from 10:30 - 11:50 a.m.

Tickets: $15, General
Free for Columbia College Chicago Students

Preceeding the workshop Dr. Thomas F. Defrantz will give a talking dance entitled “Danced to Deliverance: Black Structures of Form Animating Dance” at 10:00 a.m.

Rooted in New Orleans' unique spiritual and cultural traditions, The New Orleans Original BuckShop workshop provides not just a window, but a doorway into practices that have sustained communities through joy, rhythm, and resilience.

An exploration of the unifying power of the Black Church and Black syncretic practices, the workshop aims to share the essence of Black New Orleans culture in a format that benefits every participant. These spiritual and communal elements have historically knitted together a potentially fragmented Black community, nourishing a collective identity and fostering resilience through shared rituals and beliefs.

Through her Second Line Aesthetic, Michelle N. Gibson's workshop focuses on improvised movement, interpretation, defined footwork, full body articulation, authentic self, and the embrace of communal ritual. With hips leading the torso and feet, legs bent at the knees, and steps that strut, Gibson invites participants to share lived experiences, embodied spiritual unification, harmony, rolling on the same rhythms together, and moving forward as a way to heal the world.

Talking Dance
Danced to Deliverance: Black Structures of Form Animating Dance
Dr. Thomas F. DeFrantz

Preceeding the workshop Dr. Thomas F. DeFrantz will give a talking dance entitled “Danced to Deliverance: Black Structures of Form Animating Dance” at 10:00 a.m.

This talking dance explores the founational structure of Black Faith as foundational to many forms of dance in the 21st century. Selected examples from historical spiritual dancing, contemporary ballet, and house dancing suggest moving beyond linear space and time as methods to recognize American dance in its many diasporas.

photos (above, and banner): Michelle Gibson, by: 16 Script Studios.


Michelle N. Gibson is a Mother, Choreographer, Cultural Ambassador, Curator, Professor, Performing Artist, and Spiritualist. She received her BFA in Dance from Tulane University and her MFA from Hollins University in collaboration with the American Dance Festival at Duke University. Currently, Gibson is as a Professor of Practice in Dance at Southern Methodist University in Dallas, Texas and recently completed her 14th year on faculty with the American Dance Festival’s Pre-Professional Intensive at Duke University.


Michelle N. Gibson is a consummate storyteller, employing body and mind to build a bridge between the culture and academia, but most importantly, humanity. On stage and in the classroom, Gibson intricately intertwines Black African American dance traditions, choreography, and associated scholarship linking the vibrant heritage of New Orleans through the Caribbean to the vast expanses of Africa, evoking the social, political, economic, and spiritual understandings central to building bonds within and across cultures. This journey, steeped in both tradition and innovation, encapsulates Gibson’s unwavering commitment to heal the world through the culture.


Support

The American Dancing Body Symposium is made possible in part by Alphawood Foundation, the Richard H. Driehaus Foundation, Illinois Arts Council Agency, and is partially supported by a Chicago Arts Recovery Program grant from the City of Chicago Department of Cultural Affairs & Special Events.