We've said it before, but really, I don't think there's a limit on how many times you can say thank you. So we're saying it again and again.
Thank you. Thank you.
Thank you to the dancers and musicians whose artistry brought us joy, a sense of amazement, beauty, and lots to think about.
Thank you to audience members who showed up in studios, parks, theatres, and even at the Old Quebec Street Mall to bear witness to the art.
Thank you to the tech crews and lighting designer who did magic behind the scenes to make the performances magical for us.
Thank you to LIND design, who created such enticing promotional material.
Thank you to Barking Dog Studios, who helped salvage many a latenight website error!
Thank you to Anne Monkhouse, bookkeeper extraordinaire, for keeping us straight.
Thank you to Ashley Renee Photography and Emmanuel Skretas, for documenting our events.
Thank you to the many volunteers who did everything from handing out programs to serving beverages to loading up vans with tech equipment.
Thank you to the Guelph Dance Board of Directors who continue to guide us through the whole process.
Thank you to our partners who complemented our Festival in so many ways: Exhibition Park Neighbourhoood Group, Hanlon Creek Neighbourhood Group, Guelph Fab 5, RTO4, CanDance, and Visit Guelph.
Thank you to our funders: Department of Canadian Heritage, Canada Council, Ontario Arts Council, Ontario Trillium Foundation, City of Guelph, The Guelph Community Foundation, Community Fund for Canada's 150th, the Good Foundation, and the Rotary Club of Guelph-Trillium.
Thank you to our many sponsors, who are all listed below. With the help of media sponsors Intrigue Media, the Guelph Mercury Tribune, and CFRU, we were able to get the word out about all the amazing offerings of the 19th Annual Guelph Dance Festival. Of course, all of the sponsors contributed greatly in making our Festival the success it was.
Surely I've forgotten someone.
Which is why I'll continue to say thank you again and again.
Wednesday, 7 June 2017
Friday, 2 June 2017
Halifax and Guelph Youth = 40 Young Dancers in a Powerful Performance
The In the Park series this year includes a collaborative performance by the Young Company of Halifax Dance and the Guelph Youth Dance Company. We asked Gillian
Seaward-Boone, one of the rehearsal directors from Halifax, to tell us more
about the piece and the process that brought it together.
In the
Park takes place Friday, June 2, 6 pm (Hanlon Creek Park), and Saturday and
Sunday, June 3-4, 12 pm (Exhibition Park).
Detailed
information: www.guelphdance.ca
………………………
It's hard
not to be excited by the energy of nearly 40 young dancers in a studio throwing
themselves into a dynamic and fastpaced choreography, especially when you have
three short days to complete the work. On top of that, add the buzz of two
groups from different provinces finally meeting face-to-face after weeks of
texting and emailing, suddenly living together for 5 whole days. The first
chapter of the exchange between the Guelph Youth Dance Ensemble and Halifax Dance's
Young Company was exhilarating, exhausting and wonderful.
Our
two performance groups were brought together through an exchange with
Experiences Canada, an initiative of Canadian Heritage that looks to
provide Canadian youth with exchange programs that will broaden their understanding of
their community, local and national heritage and culture. Our goal was to build a
work that they could perform together at the Guelph Dance Festival this spring.
Serendipitously, Mocean Dance (a professional dance company based out of
Halifax, Nova Scotia) had just celebrated its 15th anniversary season in September
with a piece entitled 15 for 15 that
featured fifteen choreographers creating one minute mini choreographies for
fifteen dancers at a time. The end result was a huge success. So my co-director,
Sara, and I wondered what would happen if we transformed the vignettes and
placed them on 40 bodies moving at once? What resulted was Together We Rise.
Through a magical residency weekend at Ross Creek Centre for the Arts in Canning, Nova Scotia, we began to build a colossal body of work in a very short amount of time. Since the original Mocean piece involved fifteen different choreographers, most of whom are Canadian, we were able to educate the group on the Canadian dance community around them and teach them about some key players in the landscape. We adapted sections to make room for such a large group and we expanded sections to fill the outdoor space they would eventually perform in. Janet, Sara and I watched as our students worked together tirelessly to create something so exciting and so fun that it gave us
goosebumps.
Imagine the power of forty dancers vocalizing as loud as possible. Imagine the
actual wind they generate when they run through the space together. Imagine the
level of concentration it takes to stay focused with forty people in a studio!
To say we were proud of them would be a gigantic understatement. The end result
is a piece that somehow showcases each dancer's individuality while moving as a
cohesive team all at once. It's extremely accessible, playful and poetic.Through a magical residency weekend at Ross Creek Centre for the Arts in Canning, Nova Scotia, we began to build a colossal body of work in a very short amount of time. Since the original Mocean piece involved fifteen different choreographers, most of whom are Canadian, we were able to educate the group on the Canadian dance community around them and teach them about some key players in the landscape. We adapted sections to make room for such a large group and we expanded sections to fill the outdoor space they would eventually perform in. Janet, Sara and I watched as our students worked together tirelessly to create something so exciting and so fun that it gave us
We have missed our Guelph friends over the past few months, but the anticipation of finally having our groups together again grows every rehearsal. It's going to be a memorable weekend and we can't wait to share this journey with you!
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