Kayla Hamilton is an inventive drive of nature. Initially from Texas and now Bronx-based, this groundbreaking artist has been introduced on the Whitney Museum, Gibney, Efficiency House NY, New York Dwell Arts, and Bronx Academy of Arts and Dance. She is a 2023-2025 Jerome Hill Artist Fellow, A 2023-2024 Pina Bausch Basis Fellow, a 2024 NEFA Nationwide Dance Venture Manufacturing Grant recipient, and a 2023-2024 Bronx Cultural Visions Fund recipient. She is the Founder and Inventive Director of Circle O, a brand new cultural group created by and for Black Disabled and different a number of marginalized creatives. Dance Informa caught up with Hamilton in between rehearsals for her upcoming performances at The Shed this August 15-17.
At what age did you begin dancing? What motivated you to attend a dance college?
“As a baby, I noticed my uncle Lawrence Hamilton on Broadway. All through his profession, he carried out in reveals like Porgy and Bess, The Wiz and Jelly’s Final Jam, and that was the spark – I wished to bop.”
Are you able to speak concerning the studio you attended? What types of dance did you examine?
“At age eight, I began lessons at Judith McCarty’s College of Dancing in Texarkana, Texas. I began with faucet and ballet, after which added jazz a number of years later. Faucet dance was my favourite. I went to Texas Girl’s College the place I earned a BA in Dance and the place my focus shifted to trendy and post-modern dance. In school, I developed a love for conventional West African dance – dances from Mali, Senegal and Guinea.”
Did you’ve gotten a favourite model or method, and why? Are you able to discuss the way you made dance strategies be just right for you rising up?
“As a younger child, faucet dance was my favourite. I believe rhythm and sound actually me. On the time, I didn’t actually take into consideration ‘making strategies work for me’ – I simply cherished to bop! I did it as a result of I cherished it. I cherished being in my physique.”
Have been the college and the instructors conscious of your visible challenges and what, if any, lodging did they make?
“As a younger lady in dance, my lecturers weren’t conscious, as a result of I used to be not conscious, as a result of I used to be not raised to consider myself as sight impaired or disabled. I cherished to bop and I wished to bop, and I did what I needed to do to get by. In school, as my sight modified, professors have been conscious. However once more, after I wish to pursue one thing, I do. And I determine it out from there. And that’s to not place a price on that – it’s simply the way it was. However as a baby and even in school, there have been probably not discussions about entry or lodging – it was not a factor.”
What motivated you to maneuver to New York Metropolis? Did you examine at any studios or take open dance lessons? What was your expertise?
“I used to be dwelling in Washington, D.C. on the time. I knew one individual in NY – Crystal U. Davis – who I’m nonetheless very shut with at this time. I had been speaking to her about wanting to maneuver to NY. One summer season, I packed up my two suitcases and made the transfer, with Crystal’s assist. I wished to proceed to review dance, and be round different dancers, and to expertise performances – simply be round artwork. Once I first got here in the summertime of 2008, I took the Dance New Amsterdam summer season intensive. Then I began taking open lessons at DNA. A number of the individuals I met that first summer season, I’m nonetheless in touch with them at this time. I actually wished to completely immerse myself in dance and tradition in New York Metropolis, and I did.”
When did you begin creating your distinctive pedagogy?
“I first started reimagining pedagogy after I met and started working with collaborator, good friend and fellow disabled artist Elisabeth Motley. We’re each motion artists, we’re each educators, we’re each disabled, and we’re each curious. So together with her, I started to reimagine the methods wherein I educate, and collectively, we created Crip Motion Lab – a pedagogical framework centering, on cross-disability accessible motion practices.”
Inform us concerning the creation of Circle O.
“Circle O is a brand new cultural group created by and for Black Disabled and different (multiply) marginalized artists and creatives. It’s actually about placing a container or umbrella across the issues I’ve already been doing (performing, educating, consulting). Now, I can put them into one area and all these parts can communicate to and be with one another. It’s about having a holistic area to be working towards a dance world the place the Black Disabled and different a number of marginalized artists are centered, and each physique is worthy of care.”
Inform us about your rehearsal course of with the dancers to your upcoming performances at The Shed.
“At The Shed, we’ll premiere Easy methods to Bend Down/Easy methods to Decide it Up. This work is an immersive, community-specific, multidisciplinary dance efficiency exploring the lineages of Black Disabled creativeness and various world constructing. Our forged contains dancers, actors, singers, ASL interpreters, audio describers — all of whom are performers. Inside my rehearsal course of, it’s extremely essential that we create a care-filled cross-disability area wherein entry is central and a key supply of creativity and creation.
Throughout creation, incapacity is the strategy, the method and the topic. This work is life work. No matter we create and share as a gaggle is the place we’re at, in that second. Incapacity is how we’re processing, the place we’re constructing, the methods wherein we’re holding the area. All of that is the container wherein HBD/HPU is created – we’re grappling with bigger questions just like the seen and unseen, who we’re, who we imagine ourselves to be, what methods have helped form who we expect we’re. And the method is loaded with entry.
I’m inspecting: how can we undo this concept of perfectionism and mastery and symmetry in dance? The method is pushing everybody, together with myself, to our rising edge. Once more, that is life work. We aren’t finished once we present the work at The Shed. We proceed.”
Performances at The Shed run from August 15-17, and data will be discovered by visiting www.theshed.org. Yow will discover out extra about Circle O by visiting www.circleo.org.
By Mary Carpenter of Dance Informa.