Third Coast Review’s Kathy D. Hey reviews South Chicago Dance Theatre’s Lamentations of Peace. which premiered at the Dance Center December 6 and 7, 2025.
Senior Student Dev Saxman Reviews "Buscar A Través," the first week of our Student Choreographic Projects
Dance Center students reflect on our Fall 2025 Symposium: What is Contemporary?
We invited a few students to reflect on their experience of the What is Contemporary? Symposium, the fall 2025 edition of this annual gathering.
Kaleigh Dent looks back and synthesizes our Fall 2025 Symposium: What is Contemporary?
What Is Contemporary? Symposium 2025, hosted by the Dance Center of Columbia College Chicago, explored the idea of ‘contemporary’ and the many meanings it takes on in reference to dance. The conference acknowledged that the word contemporary has a definitive meaning - ‘belonging to or happening now’ – while also recognizing that when paired with the word ‘dance’ (i.e., contemporary dance), takes on vastly different definitions from artist to artist. In this three-day symposium, dancers, academics, and professionals in the dance field contemplated this word contemporary – and in term contemporary dance – to not define it, but to understand what the complexity of the word means for the dance industry. Kaleigh Dent synthesizes some of the conversations and threads that emerged over the course of the symposium and related events.
Meredith Sutton sits down with South Chicago Dance Theatre’s Kia S. Smith to talk about the company's first holiday show.
T. Ayo Alston, Artistic Director of Ayodele Drum and Dance, in Conversation with our Artistic Director Meredith Sutton
Review: Nora Sharp's COSMIC DOCKS on Sixty Inches from Center
Review: Jenn Freeman | Po'Chop's THICK on Sixty Inches from Center
The Chicago Reader Remembers Shirley Mordine
Kerry Reid of the Chicago Reader wrote a remembrance of Shirley Mordine, our founder. Mordine, 89, founded the dance department at Columbia College Chicago and the college’s influential Dance Center. During her 30-year tenure at Columbia, which began in 1969, she instituted the center’s Dance Presenting Series in 1974, which brought contemporary dance artists from around the country to Chicago, often placing them in conversation and collaboration with local talent.









