Dance Center of Columbia College Chicago Presents Red Clay Dance — Picture Preview

Dance Center of Columbia College Chicago Red Clay Dance
Image courtesy of MReid Photography

WHEN:

April 17-19, 2025

WHERE:

Dance Center at Columbia College Chicago
1306 S. Michigan Avenue
Chicago

TICKETS:

$30+

For more information and tickets visit the Dance Center of Columbia College Chicago website.

Dance Center of Columbia College Chicago Red Clay Dance
Image courtesy of MReid Photography
Dance Center of Columbia College Chicago Red Clay Dance
Image courtesy of MReid Photography
Dance Center of Columbia College Chicago Red Clay Dance
Image courtesy of MReid Photography
Dance Center of Columbia College Chicago Red Clay Dance
Image courtesy of MReid Photography

A spokesperson describes the event as follows:

“...new staging of Written on the Flesh and a premiere by Bebe Miller—commissioned and set on Red Clay Dance Company dancers including Columbia alumni Amaya Arroyo (‘23) and Celeste Brace (‘23)...

When Written on the Flesh first premiered in 2016 at Chicago’s DuSable Black History Museum and Education Center, it had been sparked by a Ta-Nehisi Coates’ 2014 essay in The Atlantic where he wrote: “elegant racism is invisible, supple, and enduring.” In developing the dance work, Vershawn Sanders-Ward and the Red Clay Dance Company dancers were struck by how memories of direct, in-your-face bigotry were easy to call up and respond to, “But some of the underpinnings of the things that we just move through in our lives become a way of living,” says Sanders-Ward. “They are actually invisibilized. I was intrigued about how to make those things visible.”

This 2025 restaging takes the inquiry deeper, drawing additional inspiration from Isabel Wilkerson’s 2020 book Caste: The Origins of Our Discontents: “As we go about our daily lives, caste is the wordless usher in a darkened theater, flashlight cast down in the aisles, guiding us to our assigned seats for a performance. The hierarchy of caste is not about feelings or morality. It is about power—which groups have it and which do not.” Reimagining the work with the current dancers in the company, Sanders-Ward seeks to confront systemic racial inequities while searching for resilience, forgiveness, and love.

“There are systemic issues that we still don’t have the courage to really lay bare,” says Sanders-Ward. “Even when it’s bubbling up there’s still this powerful dynamic to suppress and suppress and suppress, not let’s address it head on no matter how disruptive it’s going to be. We see pockets of it. But are we willing to let it all come out?”..."

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