Intersections: Conversations on Art and Culture @ Studio Museum in Harlem May 12

Photographer Ray Llanos documented the event with wonderful images you can see here at his website.

Photo by Ray Llanos following Studio Museum event: l. to r.: Amalia Mallard, Studio Museum Public Programs Coordinator; Brenda Dixon Gottschild; Misty Copeland; and Raven Wilkinson.

BDG and Alec Wek. Photo by Melvin E Taylor

Louis Johnson and BDG. Photo by Melvin E. Taylor.

Intersections: Conversations on Art and Culture
A Discussion with Misty Copeland and Raven Wilkinson
moderated by Professor Brenda Dixon Gottschild
Thursday, May 12, 2011 | 7:30 PM

A special discussion about art and dance with Misty Copeland, the first African-American female soloist for the American Ballet Theatre and Raven Wilkinson, the first African-American ballerina to become a member of a major ballet company. Brenda Dixon Gottschild, writer, former dancer, and Professor Emerita at Temple University, moderated the discussion.

Features

Features   Posted by Studio Museum May 19, 2011 2:58 pm “On Being Black in the World of Ballet”

Professor Brenda Dixon Gottschild reflects on our recent panel

Here, Professor Dixon Gottschild shares her thoughts on the evening.

—-

What does it mean for a black dancer to want to do ballet? Is this a defection from blackness, a giving in to the dominant powers? Only if we fail to understand that blacks have every right to do ballet, as whites have every right to boogie on down. On March 12, at the Studio Museum in Harlem, some of the issues arising around blacks–particularly black women–in ballet were aired by ballerinas Raven Wilkinson and Misty Copeland, with yours truly as the moderator and sometime participant. The Studio Museum theater space was fully occupied. What I loved was the diversity of the crowd: black, white, and brown; professional dancers (Richard Garland of Dance Theater of Harlem; the legendary Louis Johnson, choreographer and former danseur); people from other walks of life (including stunningly gorgeous supermodel and human rights activist Alek Wek); old, not so old, and young turned out to hear 70-something Wilkinson and 20-something Copeland compare notes as they pondered the problems they confronted in their chosen field.

It was a lively conversation, with audience involved in the discussion for the final half hour. There is never enough time for a topic like this to be exhausted. What we hoped for was accomplished, at least in some small way: people couldn’t tear themselves away, and the discussion continued as audience members took their time in filtering out of the theater. The final question of the evening was a beautiful way to formally end the event. A lovely youngster who identified herself as a 13-year-old budding ballerina, about to enter the American Ballet Theater summer school of dance, asked Misty Copeland (the first black ballerina in ABT to be promoted to the position of Soloist in over two decades) how she should prepare for going into that session, knowing that she’d be perhaps the only black student in class. Copeland wisely told the teen that she shouldn’t worry about being black but just be concerned with doing her best. As much as possible, that is a lesson for all people of color to digest. Our victory is to keep our eyes on the prize and not be derailed by the double consciousness of being black in a white world.

Pictured above left to right: Misty Copeland, Raven Wilkinson, and Brenda Dixon Gottschild

The Studio Museum in Harlem
144 West 125th Street
(between Adam Clayton Powell Jr. and
Malcolm X blvds)
New York, NY 10027
212.864.4500 / studiomuseum.org

One Response to “Intersections: Conversations on Art and Culture @ Studio Museum in Harlem May 12”

  1. […] Wilkinson, the first African-American ballerina to become a member of a major ballet company. Brenda Dixon Gottschild, writer, former dancer, and Professor Emerita at Temple University, will moderate the […]

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