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AXIS Dance Company
The AXIS Dance Company performs Waypoint by Margaret Jenkins. From left to right are dancers Margaret Cromwell, Bonnie Lewkowicz, Sonsherée Giles, and Sean McMahon.
Founded in 1987[2] by Thais Mazur, Bonnie Lewkowicz, Judith Smith and others, AXIS is a long running contemporary dance company that consciously develops choreography that integrates dancers with and without physical disabilities.[3][4] Thais Mazur, the original Artistic Director, became inspired when she began working with a theater group of disabled adults to expand that work into dance. They started with a lighting and movement workshop and the experimenting expanded from there.[5]
AXIS dancers with disabilities have included wheelchair users (both manual wheelchairs and power wheelchairs), crutch users, and people with amputations. AXIS dancers who are not disabled come with training in a variety of contemporary dance, improvisation and other movement practices. Through interactions between these dancers of varying physical abilities a new dance vocabulary began to be developed. Physically integrated dance, seeks to broaden the definition of ‘dance’ and ‘dancer’ and increase opportunities for artistic expression through movement for a wide spectrum of physical attributes and disabilities.[6][7]
The physically integrated dance movement is part of a broader disability culture movement, the goal of which is to center and celebrate the first-person experience of disability, not as a medical-model construct but as a social phenomenon, through artistic, literary, and other creative means.[8] AXIS Dance was one of the earliest companies in the international emerging field of physically integrated dance.[1][9][10] They have commissioned works by a number of prominent choreographers, including Ann Carlson, Sonya Delwaide, Joe Goode, Joanna Haigood, Margaret Jenkins, Bill T. Jones, Victoria Marks, and Stephen Petronio.
In May 2016 during its 30th anniversary season, AXIS Dance Company hosted the first three-day National Convening: The Future of Physically Integrated Dance in the USAGibney Dance in New York City.[9][1] This event was supported by the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation National Project Program, and culminated in the creation of the report, The Future of Physically Integrated Dance in the USA, which looks at “ways to 1) improve and expand training opportunities and develop pedagogy for dancers with disabilities; and 2) improve training and expand opportunities for disabled choreographers and non-disabled choreographers to work with disabled dancers or integrated ensembles.”[18]
Often when touring, AXIS will couple outreach, advocacy, and dance education into their stay at a venue. In 2017 the company had a residency with Gibney Dance in New York City that included a choreography intensive, master classes, town halls, and teacher workshops.[19]
According to former Artistic Director Judith Smith, the company spends about 50% of their time on educational work.[5] AXIS Dance Company frequent hosts master classes with the company member dancers as teachers wherever they are on tour or in the San Francisco Bay Area which they call home.[19][20][21][22][23][24] They also have a program in which they travel to schools across America and perform for a school assembly and teach the students afterward.[5] For schools near the SF Bay Area, AXIS opens the doors to their theatre for an annual Dance Access Day and does in-school residencies through school district Physical education programs.[5]
The COVID-19 pandemic had a large impact on all performing arts and performing arts education industries. For AXIS, this meant the cancellation of many performances including a first time tour of Switzerland.[25] AXIS found a few ways to continue their work while the country and state of California were in lockdown: master classes hosted over Zoom (software),[26] virtualized school assembly visits,[25] and small improvisational exercises and prompts posted to their Youtube channel.[25]
Sustained Achievement in 2014 to Judith Smith, Founding Member and Artistic Director Emerita
Outstanding Achievement in Performance - Individual in 2012 to Marc Brew for Remember When
Ensemble Performance in 2008 to Rodney Bell and Sonsheree Giles in To Color Me Different by Alex Ketley
Choreography to Joe Goode in 2008 for the beauty that was mine, through the middle, without stopping...
Ensemble Performance in 2002 to Nadia Adame and Jacques Poulin-Denis in Sans Instruments choreographed by Sonya Delwaide
Costume Design in 2001 to Mario Alonzo for AXIS’ entire Home Season Voyages Elsewhere and Between, choreography by Sonya Delwaide, Bill T. Jones, Stephen Petroni, AXIS’ Stephanie McGlynn and Uli Schmitz and AXIS’ Alisa Rasera and Megan Schirle
Company Performance in 2000 for AXIS’ entire Home Season The Ground, the Air and Places in Between, choreography by Sonya Delwaide, Joe Goode, Joanna Haigood and Bill T. Jones
Choreography to Bill T. Jones in 2000 for Fantasy in C Major
Individual Performance in 2000 to Uli Schmitz, the first disabled dancer to receive this award
The company has also received numerous IZZIE nominations for artistic work and production elements.[27]
^ abcdYewell Volin, Emily (2012-10-28). "AXIS Dance Company". Dance Informa Magazine. Archived from the original on 2020-09-29. Retrieved 2021-03-11.
^Pamela Kay, Walker (2005). Moving Over the Edge: Artists with Disabilities Take the Leap. Davis, California: Michael Horton Media. pp. 112–117. ISBN0-9771505-2-6.
^Interview, Judith Smith, “Artistic Director, AXIS Dance Company” conducted by Esther Ehrlich in 2005, Regional Oral History Office, The Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley, 2006. Artists with Disabilities Oral History PageArchived 2011-09-15 at the Wayback Machine
^ABC-CLIO Companion to the Disability Rights Movement, p. 97
^ abLee, Jez. "Award History". list of awards from 2000-2010. ISADORA DUNCAN DANCE AWARDS COMMITTEE. Archived from the original on 2011-10-09. Retrieved 2011-09-15.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)