Dance in Process

Dance in Process Larissa Velez-Jackson

Dance in Process (DiP) is designed to provide extensive, holistic support for mid-career New York-based dance artists who are in the middle stages of work on a new project.

The application for 2022-23 Dance in Process (DiP) Residencies is now closed. Thank you for your interest.

The artists awarded the 2022-23 Dance in Process (DiP) residencies with generous support from The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation are: Ori Flomin, Antonio Ramos, Stacy Matthew Spence, Vangeline, Kate Watson-Wallace and Director’s DiP/AiR Recipient Sidra Bell. 

These artists make up the first of two cohorts funded by a generous grant from The Mellon Foundation to support Dance in Process over the next two years.

Mellon Foundation Logo in White

DiP ARTISTS

Past

Dance in Process 2021-22

Dance in Process 2019-20

Dance in Process 2018-19

Dance in Process 2017-18

Dance in Process 2016-17

DANCE IN PROCESS 2015-16

KIMBERLY BARTOSIK

Bessie Award-winning performer Kimberly Bartosik creates viscerally provocative choreographic projects that are built upon the development of a virtuosic movement language, rigorous conceptual explorations, and the creation of highly theatricalized environments. Her work, which is deeply informed by literature and cinema, involves complex plays on space, time, and audience perspective, dramatically illuminating the ephemeral nature of performance. Bartosik’s work has been commissioned and presented by New York Live Arts, Dance Theater Workshop, Gibney Dance Center (2016), The Chocolate Factory Theatre (2016-17), Abrons Art Center; The Yard (2015), Danspace Project, French Institute Alliance Francaise’s Crossing the Line Festival, Festival Rencontres Chorégraphique Internationales de Seine-Saint Denis (France), Artdanthe Festival (France), BEAT Festival, The Kitchen, La Mama, Mount Tremper Arts, Barnard College, University of North Carolina School of the Arts, Arizona State University, Purchase College Conservatory of Dance, and Movement Research. (Photo by Junenoire Mitchell)

NORA CHIPAUMIRE

Born in Mutare, Zimbabwe and based in New York City, Nora Chipaumire has been challenging and embracing stereotypes of Africa and the black performing body, art, and aesthetic for two decades. Chipaumire’s work has been performed throughout NYC, the US and in Africa, Europe and Japan. Fellowships and awards include 2014-15 Hodder Fellow at Princeton University, MANCC 2014, 2007-08; 2012 Alpert Award, 2011 US Artist Ford Fellow, 2009 AFROPOP Real Life Award for her choreography in the film, Nora, three “Bessie” Awards (2014, 2008, 2007), and 2007 Mariam McGlone Emerging Choreographer Award from Wesleyan University Center for the Arts.

BETH GILL

Beth Gill has received commissions from New York Live Arts, The Chocolate Factory, The Kitchen, and Dance Theater Workshop, and her work has toured nationally and internationally. Gill was given “Bessie” Awards in 2011 for Outstanding Emerging Choreographer and the prestigious Juried Award. In 2012 Dance Magazine named her one of the top 25 artists to watch. Gill is the recipient of a 2015 Guggenheim Fellowship, the 2015-2016 Hodder Fellowship at Princeton University, a 2015-2016 LMCC Extended Life Artist Residency, a 2013-2015 New York City Center Choreography Fellowship, and the 2012 Foundation for Contemporary Arts Grants to Artists Award. (Photo by Chris Cameron)

MIGUEL GUTIERREZ

Miguel Gutierrez lives in Brooklyn and makes performances. He is currently making a series called Age & Beauty. His work has toured internationally to a host of venues and festivals and has been supported by a variety of foundations. He writes songs and scores for his work and has sung with many great artists. His book WHEN YOU RISE UP is a collection of early performance texts. He is training to become a Feldenkrais Method practitioner. (Photo by Eric McNatt)

AMANDA LOULAKI

Amanda Loulaki was born in Crete. In 1990 she received a BA in Education from the Department of Pedagogy in Crete and in 2007 received an MFA in Dance from Hollins University. In 1994 Amanda was awarded a Fulbright Scholarship and moved to New York. Her choreography has been presented at Danspace Project, La MaMa, PS 122, DNA, The Kitchen, The Flea , CPR, DTW, The Chocolate Factory, 11th Biennale of artists of Europe, BucharEast.West International Dance Festival , Mediterranean Contemporary Dance Platform , ADF, MIT, the Choreographic Center Archauz , and ZVRK Festival.

JULIETTE MAPP

Juliette Mapp is a choreographer, dancer, and teacher and have been making my own work since 1999. Her dances have been commissioned and presented throughout New York including at Danspace Project and Dance Theater Workshop (now New York Live Arts).  She has received two “Bessies”: one for choreography (2006) and the other for dancing (2002). She has received numerous residencies including at MANCC and Movement Research and been a guest artist at Tanzquartier Wien, Barnard College, and George Washington University. She is currently on the faculty of The New School, Movement Research, and PARTS in Brussels, Belgium.

JULIANA F. MAY

Since graduating from Oberlin College in 2002, Juliana F. May has created twelve works including seven evening length works, commissioned and presented by The Chocolate Factory Theater, Dance Theater Workshop, New York Live Arts,  Barnard College, The New School, Joyce SoHo,  American Realness, I.C.E. and The Cleveland Repertory Project. May was a 2011-13 Movement Research Artist-in-Residence as well as a resident artist on Governor’s Island and at The Kaatsbaan International Dance Center.  In 2014 May received a MAP fund grant and a Jerome foundation grant towards the creation of ADULT DOCUMENTARY. In 2011 May received her MFA from The University of Wisconsin- Milwaukee. This summer May will be in residence on Governors Island through LMCC’s Process Space program.

TERE O’CONNOR

Tere O’Connor is Artistic Director of Tere O’Connor Dance. He has created over 40 works for his company and toured these throughout the US, Europe, South America and Canada. He has created numerous commissioned works for other dance companies, including the Lyon Opera Ballet, White Oak Dance Project and solo works for Mikhail Baryshnikov and Jean Butler. O’Connor received a 2013 Doris Duke Performing Artist Award, is a 2009 United States Artist Rockefeller Fellow, and a 1993 Guggenheim Fellow among numerous other grants and awards. His work has been supported by the National Endowment for the Arts, New England Foundation for the Arts/National Dance Project, The MAP Fund, and many others. He has received three “BESSIES”, New York Dance and Performance Awards. In October 2014, he was inducted into the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. An articulate and provocative educator, O’Connor has taught at festivals and universities around the globe for 25 years. He is a Center for Advanced Studies Professor of Dance at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign where he lives for one semester each year. O’Connor is an active participant in the New York dance community mentoring young artists, teaching, writing, and volunteering in various capacities. BLEED, premiered at BAM’s Next Wave festival in Dec 2013 and continues on a tour in the United States with upcoming stops at On the Boards in Seattle and The Walker Arts Center in Minneapolis. The company will present a week of encore performances of BLEED at Danspace Project in New York City, Dec 18-20. They will also present two works at the American Realness Festival in Jan 2015, Sister and undersweet in NYC.

DONNA UCHIZONO

Donna Uchizono’s work has been presented throughout the US, Europe, South America and Asia. 2015 marks the 25th anniversary of art-making, to be celebrated with an upcoming tour to Australia and the premiere of new work at Gibney Dance Center in 2016. Uchizono has created work for notables Mikhail Baryshnikov, playwright Paula Vogel, MacArthur Fellow David Hammons and Oliver Sacks. A Guggenheim Fellow and “Bessie” award winner, Uchizono has been recognized by the Alpert, NEA, NYFA, Creative Capital, NYSCA, NDP, MapFund, and Jerome among others. Uchizono is an active member of the dance community, supporting young artists through various programs.

PAVEL ZUŠTIAK

Pavel Zuštiak is a NYC-based choreographer/director and performer, and artistic director of Palissimo Company. Born in communist Czechoslovakia and trained at the SNDO/Amsterdam, his work merges abstract aspects of dance with evocative imagery of piercing emotional resonance into totalizing theatrical experiences. Zuštiak has been commissioned by Walker Art Center, Wexner, NYLA, PS122, La MaMa, Abrons, BAC, 92nd Street Y, Archa Theatre, Slovak National Theatre and State Theatre Kosice. Zuštiak is a 2015-17 Princeton Art Fellow, the winner of 2014, 2009, 2007 Princess Grace Awards, 2013 LMCC President’s Award for Excellence in Artistic Practice, 2012 NEFA/NDP Production Award and 2010 Guggenheim Fellowship. (Photo by Gabriel Kuchta)

DANCE IN PROCESS 2014-15

WALLY CARDONA

Wally Cardona is a choreographer, dancer, teacher and the artistic director of WCV, Inc. He is the recipient of a Bessie award, Guggenheim Fellowship, New York Foundation for the Arts Fellowship, Asian Cultural Council Fellowship and Doris Duke Artist Award. For several years, Wally Cardona created group works that demanded highly controlled working conditions in order to be made. His current cycle of work cultivates a practice of undoing, creating intimate yet crowded collaborative conditions. (Photo by Christy Pessagno)

JEANINE DURNING

Jeanine Durning is a dance artist working broadly through choreography, performance, teaching and writing. She is the recipient of a New York Foundation for the Arts award and the Alpert Award for Choreography. Her choreographies have been commissioned for Dance Theater Workshop and Danspace Project and have been presented throughout NYC and Europe. She has been faculty at SNDO/Amsterdam and HZT/Berlin on and off since 2009, in addition to teaching throughout NYC and across the U.S. Her work often incorporates seemingly disparate elements in order to get at the plurality and complexity of human behavior, relation and ontology. (Photo by Snorri Sturluson)

MARJANI FORTÈ

Marjani Fortè was a touring and teaching member of Urban Bush Women Dance Company for five years and is now an independent choreographer and co-founder of LOVE|FORTÈ A COLLECTIVE. Fortè has taught master classes and workshops across the U.S., Germany, England, Colombia, Brazil and Venezuela. She has presented choreographic works for Bronx Academy of Arts and Dance, New Orleans McKenna Museum, DNA Raw Material and DanceNOW. Fortè premiered EGO at Dance Theatre Workshop as a 2010 Fresh Tracks Resident Artist while concluding a choreographic residency and lecture series at Loyola Marymount University. She has also been a Research Artist-In-Residence and premiered Here… for Danspace. (Photo by Heritage Works)

KEELY GARFIELD
IN ASSOCIATION WITH DANSPACE PROJECT

Keely Garfield Dance’s work has been presented at many theaters and festivals both nationally and internationally. In addition to a Bessie nomination for Twin Pines, she received a Bessie award for My Mother Was A Four-Alarm Fire and other mostly true stories. Garfield has created work for ballet dancers, antique puppets, musical theater, children, students and MTV. From 1997 to 2010, she curated Dance Theater Workshop’s Family Matters series, served as the chair of DTW’s artist board and was a co-author of the Dancers Forum Compact. KGD has also received commissions and presentations from Celebrate Brooklyn!, Milwaukee Danceworks, Philadelphia Dance Projects, The Southern Theater, Danse Vernissage, Spring Loaded and Tanzmesse, among others. (Photo by Julieta Cervantes)

PATRICIA HOFFBAUER

Brazilian-born/New York-based artist Patricia Hoffbauer has been shown in the US, Venezuela and Brazil. NYSCA, NYFA, NEA, Map Fund and CUNY and Princeton’s Lewis Arts Center support her work. She currently teaches at Hunter College and Princeton University’s dance programs. Barnard College’s dance program commissioned a new work premiering at NYLA this fall. A founding member of Yvonne Rainer’s “Raindears,” she performs current works and early solos. Her writings have appeared in New Museum’s New Vision book, Writings on Dance 25A Journal of Performance and Art (PAJ) and she is a contributing writer to the upcoming Pew Foundation book Bodies as Archive. Hoffbauer was also a curator of Danspace Project’s 2013 “Judson at 50″ Platform. (Photo by Ian Douglas)

SILAS RIENER

Silas Riener graduated from Princeton University with a degree in Comparative Literature and certificates in Creative Writing and Dance. Riener completed his MFA in Dance at NYU’s Tisch School of the Arts in 2011 and is currently on faculty at NYU’s Playwrights Horizons as well as Gallim Dance’s Clinton Hill Arts Center. He has also taught workshops and techniques classes at Concord Academy SummerStages and throughout Turkey at several universities. He has worked with Chantal Yzermans, Takehiro Ueyama, Christopher Williams, Jonah Bokaer and Rebecca Lazier’s TERRAIN, and is currently dancing for Tere O’Connor. Since 2010 he has collaborated with poet Anne Carson and choreographer Rashaun Mitchell, with whom he continues to develop new projects. He was a member of the Merce Cunningham Dance Company from November 2007 until its closure at the end of 2011. (Photo by Michael Williams THE IMAGISTA)

ROBBINSCHILDS

robbinschilds was formed by choreographers Sonya Robbins and Layla Childs in 2003. Though trained in and rooted by a background in dance, robbinschilds often works outside of that discipline, engaging in site-specific and installation-based performances containing elements of video, sound and sculpture that explore the juncture between architecture or place and human interaction. Their live work has been presented in NYC at Art in General, The Kitchen, PS 122, Dance Theater Workshop, MoMA PS1, The New Museum, Movement Research at Judson Church, Danspace Project at St. Mark’s Church and the Autumn Skate Bowl. In addition to their live work, robbinschilds’ video art has been exhibited in New York, Los Angeles, Bulgaria, New Zealand, China, and Spain. robbinschilds has been commissioned to create work by the Performa 07 festival and for David Byrne’s 2008/2009 world tour. In 2010, they received an Art Matters grant to work in Iceland, and in 2011 they were awarded a MAP Fund production grant for recent performance project I came here on my own(Photo by Peggy Jarrell)

ANNA SPERBER

Anna Sperber is a performer and choreographer. As a performer she has worked with many New York-based choreographers including Luciana Achugar and Juliette Mapp. She is a co-founder of classclassclass and has taught at Movement Research, Dance New Amsterdam, Gibney Dance, American Dance Festival, Hunter College, classclassclass and as a guest artist at George Washington University. She founded and ran BRAZIL, a studio and intimate performance space in Bushwick. Anna has been an Artist in Residence at Brooklyn Arts Exchange, Gibney Dance Center, Lower Manhattan Cultural Council at Governors Island, Movement Research and Sugar Salon. Her work has been supported by NYSCA Dance Program Public Commissioning Funds, DCA Re-grants through the Brooklyn Arts Council, a Live Music for Dance Grant and a grant from the Mertz-Gilmore Foundation. She was also a Co-Curator of the 2008 Movement Research Spring Festival.

DAVID THOMSON

David Thomson has worked as a collaborative artist in the fields of music, dance, theater and performance with such artists as Trisha Brown, Jane Comfort, Bebe Miller, Susan Rethorst, Remy Charlip, David Roussève, Ralph Lemon, Muna Tseng, Sekou Sundiata, Meg Stuart, Dean Moss/Layla Ali, Alain Buffard, Tere O’Connor and Marina Abramović among many others. He was also a founding member of the acclaimed a capella performance group, Hot Mouth. Thomson is a Bessie award-winning artist, a 2012 USA Ford Fellow, a 2013 NYFA Fellow in Choreography and a 2014 MacDowell Fellow. He has served on the faculties of NYU’s Experimental Theater Wing, Sarah Lawrence, The New School and Movement Research. An ongoing advocate for dance and the empowerment of artists, he was one of the founding members of Dancer’s Forum and has served on the boards of Bebe Miller/Gotham Dance, Dance Theater Workshop and presently New York Live Arts. (Photo by Sylvain Guenot)

KOTA YAMAZAKI

Kota Yamazaki was first introduced to butoh through the teaching of Akira Kasai in Japan. Following an invitation in 2001 from Germaine Acogny to create a work for her Senegal-based company, Jant-bi, Yamazaki disbanded his Tokyo-based company Rosy Co. During his six residencies in Senegal, Yamazaki created the work FAGAALA in collaboration with Acogny for which he received a Bessie Award and a nomination for Alpert Award. Yamazaki is also a recipient of the Foundation for Contemporary Arts Award. Since 2002, he’s been based in NY and has been presenting work as Kota Yamazaki/Fluid hug-hug. His ensemble has nationally and internationally performed at PICA/TBA Festival, Warhol Museum, Miami Light Project, The Dance Center at Columbia College Chicago, Melbourne International Arts Festival, DTW, Danspace Project and others. Yamazaki also has been invited to teach at universities and for communities around the world.

DANCE IN PROCESS 2013-14

NETTA YERUSHALMY

Netta Yerushalmy was in residence October 2014, working toward the premiere of Helga And The Three Sailors at Danspace Project. Read about Helga And The Three Sailors in The New Yorker.

DEAN MOSS

Dean Moss was in residence March 2014, working toward the premiere of johnbrown at the Kitchen. Read about johnbrown in the New York Times.

JON KINZEL
IN ASSOCIATION WITH THE CHOCOLATE FACTORY

Jon Kinzel was in residence in 2014, working toward the premiere of Someone Once Called Me a Sound Man at the Chocolate Factory. Read about Someone Once Called Me a Sound Man in the New York Times.

LANCE GRIES
IN ASSOCIATION WITH DANSPACE PROJECT

Lance Gries was in residence in 2014, working toward the premiere of IF Imminent Field at Danspace Project. Read about IF Imminent Field on the Gibney Dance Blog.

ROSEANNE SPRADLIN

RoseAnne Spradlin was in residence February 2014, working toward the premiere of g-h-o-s-t c-r-o-w-n (working title) at New York Live Arts. Read about g-h-o-s-t c-r-o-w-n (working title) in the New York Times.

DANCE IN PROCESS 2012-13

ANNA SPERBER

Anna Sperber was in residence in 2013, working toward the premiere of The Superseded Third at the Chocolate Factory. Read about The Superseded Third in the New York Times.

DAVID THOMSON

David Thomson was in residence in 2013. Read an interview with David on the Gibney Dance Blog.

MELINDA RING

Melinda Ring was in residence in 2013, working toward the premiere of Forgetful Snow at the Kitchen. Read about Forgetful Snow in the New York Times.

DECADANCE

DECADANCE was in residence in 2012.

APPLY FOR DIP

The application for 2022-23 Dance in Process (DiP) Residencies is now open. Review the application guidelines and timeline below. Applications are due Monday, March 14 at 10:00 AM EST.

APPLICATION GUIDELINES

Thank you for your interest in Dance in Process! We encourage you to review these guidelines thoroughly and to familiarize yourself with the application information before beginning your proposal. Gibney staff will also host two free information sessions about the program and the application process on February 3 and February 10 via Zoom.

Download Application Guidelines
Download Residency Resource Menu

ABOUT DANCE IN PROCESS (DIP) RESIDENCY PROGRAM

Gibney’s Dance in Process (DiP) Residency is designed to provide extensive, holistic support for mid-career New York-based dance artists who are in the middle stages of work on a new project.

Following an open call for applications, Gibney will assemble a panel selected by DiP applicants to review applications submitted from the New York City-based dance community. The DiP panel will choose six DiP resident artists for the 2022-2023 season.

Resident Artists will each receive three weeks of exclusive, continuous access to a studio at one of Gibney’s locations, as well as a $7,500 stipend and a $2,000 allowance for artistic consultants. During their season in residence, participating artists will also receive an additional 40 hours of discounted studio space in designated studios, as well as professional development and administrative support from Gibney Center staff.

SPACE & RESIDENCY DATES

Gibney has twenty-three studios across two Manhattan locations. Granted studio space will be large enough to accommodate the needs of working choreographers and companies, but small enough to allow for close and private work. Gibney staff assigns studios based on need and availability. Please see the following DiP residency designated dates.

Applicants are required to choose a minimum of four of the following choices in order for their application to be submitted. Each Resident Artist will meet with Gibney Center’s producing team to organize individual artists’ needs for their residency.

RESIDENCY DATE OPTIONS
(Applicants must be available for a MINIMUM of 4 options)

STUDIO X (medium open studio)
September 19 – October 9, 2022

STUDIO X (medium open studio)
October 17 – November 6, 2022

STUDIO Y (medium open black box)
January 9 – January 29, 2023

STUDIO V (medium open studio)
February 20 – March 12, 2023

STUDIO Y (medium open black box)
March 27 – April 16, 2023

STUDIO V (medium open studio)
May 1 – May 21, 2023

For photos and more information about each space, please visit Gibney’s website at https://gibneydance.org/center

Application Timeline & Deadlines

PROPOSAL DEADLINE

Monday, March 14, 2022 AT 10:00 AM EST
Late proposals will not be accepted.

APPLY HERE

APPLICATION TIMELINE

Application online
Week of January 18

Info Session #1, 6:00 – 7:00 PM EST, on Zoom
Thursday, February 3
Info Session #2, 6:00 – 7:00 PM EST, on Zoom  
Thursday, February 10

Deadline for Applications + Initial Panelist Nominations
Monday, March 14 10:00 am EST

Applicants Submit Final Votes for Panelists
Monday, April 18 10:00 am EST

Panel Review Process
May 9 – June 15

Artists Notified of Selection Panel Decisions
Week of June 27

Residency Scheduling with Selected Artists
July 2022

Residency Period
August 2022 – June 2023

Eligibility

We encourage all applicants to take the eligibility quiz detailing our criteria that determines a mid-career artist. A link can be found on Gibney’s main DiP Residency web page, or you can visit: https://tinyurl.com/2s3wfrha

Gibney’s Dance in Process (DiP) Residency is limited exclusively to:

  1. Mid-career
  2. New York City-based dance artists
  3. who are in the middle stages of work on a new project.

Gibney defines a “mid-career artist” as one who has established a significant body of work, either in terms of quantity over time or in terms of impact and recognition.

Gibney defines “New York City-based” as having primary residence in one of the five boroughs of New York City.

Gibney defines “dance artists” as artists making work that centers the body as fundamental to their creative process; where their work is advanced by dance studio-based rehearsals and processes.

Gibney defines the “middle stages of work” on a “new project” as the broad period of time after initial research, but prior to the final stages of production. Artists do not necessarily need to have a premiere location confirmed to apply for this residency, but they should be able to demonstrate that the work already has a sense of its intended partners, timeline, and budget in place, rather than inventing them for the purposes of this application. This residency is not intended to support a remount or reworking of existing pieces.

While we recognize that these distinctions are limiting, we have designed the DiP residencies specifically for mid-career choreographers with a significant amount of choreographic experience and coordinating capacity. These parameters were designed to ensure that the

DiP resources are utilized to their fullest extent.

Residency Scheduling: You must be able to conduct a continuous three-week residency during one of the designated date ranges, and must be available for at least four of the designated date ranges. If you know you are not able to participate in the DiP program during this period or you feel that the DiP resources are not applicable to your current project or working process, please do not apply for this round.

For questions regarding eligibility, please email Artist Coordinator Constanza Armes-Cruz at constanza@gibneydance.org.

FAQS

WHAT DOES DIP PROVIDE?

Space and Time: DiP Resident Artists will receive a three-week residency of continuous, private access to a studio space at Gibney at no charge. Studios will be available seven days a week at Gibney’s 280 Broadway location: Monday – Friday, 8:00 am – 10:00 pm, Saturday – Sunday 10:00 am -10:00 pm. Additionally, during their residency season (August 2022 – June 2023), artists will have access to an additional 40 hours of discounted rehearsal space in select Gibney studios.

Resources: DiP Resident Artists will select from a Residency Resource Menu consisting of opportunities for public engagement; feedback sessions and consulting; physical and technical resources; relationship building and technical assistance. 

Fees: Resident Artists will be provided with a stipend of $7,500 along with a $2,000 allowance for artistic consultant fees for a total of $9,500 in financial support. Gibney recognizes that this support will most likely not cover all of the Resident Artists’ costs.

WHAT ARE THE RESPONSIBILITIES OF THE RESIDENT ARTISTS?

Resident Artists must schedule and complete their immersive residency between August 1, 2022 – June 30, 2023.

Resident Artists must meet with the Gibney Center producing team and sign a contract committing to make full use of the allocated time and resources. Resident Artists are required to participate in an assessment of the DiP experience and its impact at the end of the residency.

Resident Artists will be asked to rank their preferred residency period as part of this application. Gibney staff will make every effort to honor your selected residency time frame but cannot guarantee that you will receive your first choice.

There is no required public-facing component of the DiP residency, though we encourage

Resident Artists to be involved with the Gibney community throughout their Residency year in whatever capacity they feel most comfortable. This can be designed in partnership with the Gibney producing team.

WHO CAN I TALK TO IF I HAVE QUESTIONS?

If you have any questions about this program or any aspect of the proposal process, please consider attending one of the two DiP info sessions on:

Info Session #1, 6:00 – 7:00 PM EST on Zoom
Thursday, February 3, 2022
Info Session #2, 6:00 – 7:00 PM EST on Zoom
Thursday, February 10, 2022

Both information sessions take place on Zoom. The RSVP link will be listed on the Gibney Website: https://gibneydance.org/calendar/. If you cannot attend, please feel free to email questions to Producing Consultant Karen Kitchen at karen@gibneydance.org and Artist Coordinator Constanza Armes-Cruz at constanza@gibneydance.org.

If you have any access needs that make the current application process inaccessible, please let us know, and we will do our best to work with you to find a solution.

For any questions regarding the application process, application budget, or Dance in Process Residency, please email Producing Consultant Karen Kitchen karen@gibneydance.org and Artist Coordinator Constanza Armes-Cruz constanza@gibneydance.org.

Photo of Larissa Velez-Jackson, 2016-17 DiP Resident Artist