Events – Danspace Project
Photo of Malcolm-x Betts by Stephen Olweck | Photo of Dominica Greene by Maria J. Hackett

Shared Evening: Dominica Greene + Malcolm-x Betts

Thursday, December 11 | 7:30PM
Friday, December 12 | 7:30PM
Saturday, December 13 | 7:30PM

Open Dress Rehearsal*
Tuesday, December 9 | 7:30PM

To RSVP for Open Dress Rehearsal, Click Here

A shared evening of new work by two NYC-based dancers and choreographers Dominica Greene and Malcolm-x Betts. Both artists have previously shown work-in-development in Danspace’s DraftWork series. 

Dominica Greene creates conceptual, body and time-based environments which interrogate cycles of life, death, love, and legacy. Her new work endlessend—performed by herself and Garrett Allenponders these here “end times,” considering all the variable outcomes in a game of life endings. “I’ll see your end and raise you a…”


Malcolm-x Betts is a visual and dance artist whose work is rooted in investigating embodiment for liberation, Black imagination, and directly engaging with challenges placed on the physical body. Performed by Malcolm-x Betts, Molly Lieber, and GENG PTP, fly baby fly is for Betts’ older cousin Michael who died of AIDS. “It’s the end of the world; a year after Michael’s death a harp falls from the sky,” Betts writes.

This work was made possible, in part, by the Franklin Furnace FUND 2024-25, supported by Jerome Foundation and the members and friends of Franklin Furnace Archive.

 

*About Open Dress Rehearsal: Tuesday evening’s dress rehearsal will be free with RSVP and open to the public at limited-capacity. Open dress rehearsals are a mask-required, community-minded program prioritizing our immunocompromised and low-income audiences. Staff and audiences will be required to wear masks (N95 or KN95) and performing artists (if unmasked) will be  required to test for COVID-19 (rapid tests provided by Danspace Project). This is a first-come-first-served event. Danspace will not hold late seating or a waitlist during Open Dress Rehearsals. Thank you for your understanding.


Tickets

$10 Members
$20 Regular Price
$30 A little extra
$40 A little more!
$50 Celebrating 50 years!
$100 Here’s to the next 50!

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Before you visit:

Accessibility at Danspace Project
Covid Safety at Danspace Project

Dominica Greene is a movement-based conceptual artist, dancer, and facilitator residing on the unceded lands of the Munsee Lenape people. She creates body and time-based multidisciplinary environments which interrogate cycles of life, death, and love. Harnessing the elements, spirit, and womanness into an existence rooted in love, community, and regeneration, her work seeks to reflect nature –human and otherwise– as a way of highlighting humanity, the stark similarities in our differences, and our inheritances as legacies.

Greene’s large-scale installation and group works have been commissioned by Ririe-Woodbury Dance Company, SALT Contemporary Dance, and the University of North Carolina School of the Arts. Her solo and interactive work has been presented by Arts on Site, BADDANCE, Black Aesthetics at the Judson Church, the Center for Performance Research (CPR,) The Carnegie Museum of Art, Gloria Strelsin Community Garden, ISSUE Project Room, Movement Research, Pioneers Go East Collective at Socrates Sculpture Park, PROCESSA on Governors Island, STILL/MOVING at Ki Smith Gallery, and Triskelion Arts. She is thrilled and honored to be presented by the historic Danspace Project!


Malcolm-x Betts is a New York based visual and dance artist who believes that art is a transformative vehicle that brings people and communities together. His artistic work is rooted in investigating embodiment for liberation, Black imagination, and directly engaging with challenges placed on the physical body. He has a community engagement practice allowing artistic freedom and making art accessible to everyone. Betts developed and presented work at La MaMa Umbria International in Spoleto, Italy. La Mama NYC, Gibney Dance Center, Movement Research at Judson Church, Brooklyn Academy of Music (BAM), The Bronx Museum and Dixon Place. Betts showed excerpts of Midnight Glow: Kinfolk at Brooklyn Arts Exchange (BAX), Movement Research at Judson Church and Draftworks at Danspace Project. Kinfolk Vol 2: Butch Queen was persented by Judson Arts in November 2021. Betts worked on Bronx Speaks with the Bronx Musuem with undocumented immgrants. Performed in works by Snoogybox (Andy Kobilka), Nile Harris, Moriah Evans and Alex Romania. Betts was a 2018 Artist and Resident with Movement Research.

Photo of Maxi Hawkeye Canion by Guillaume Python | Photo of Lauren Bakst & Kris Lee performing with Julie Tolentino by Rachel Keane

DraftWork: Maxi Hawkeye Canion + Kris Lee & Lauren Bakst

Saturday, December 20 | 3PM

Curated by Ishmael Houston-Jones, Danspace Project’s DraftWork series hosts free, informal showings of new works in varying stages of development. This afternoon features performances by Maxi Hawkeye Canion and Kris Lee & Lauren Bakst.

Showings are followed by a reception, conversation, and Q&A between the artists.


RSVP HERE


Before you visit:

Accessibility at Danspace Project
Covid Safety at Danspace Project

Maxi Hawkeye Canion (they/she) is a Brooklyn based Performance Artist. As a Black Trans/Queer artist, they distill their life experiences through movement focused installations, experimenting with text, format, sculpture, sound, and garment. With an emphasis on improvisation, they create low-stakes, high-integrity containers that prioritize research, play, and spontaneity. Their works illustrate nuances of intimacy, failure, femininity, the grotesque, ephemerality, and domesticity within metaphysical dystopias. Compositionally, she leans into a maximalist approach influenced by cinematic framing and post genre aesthetics while focusing on surreal autobiographical narratives. Each work is “solo play” anchored by eclectic personas serving as metaphorical embodiments of her socio-political stances and currently present as “mascots of doom/disperceptive realities”. These entities, along with the immersive contextual environments she devises, reference nostalgic 00’s anime/manga, immersive gaming, YouTube video essays, the Black avant garde, punk, nihilistic memes and current viral trends, deconstructed fashion and drag, and ambient horror.


Kris Lee (she/they) is a New York-based dance artist, performer, and DJ. Most recently they have performed in works by Julie Tolentino, Kevin Beasley, Moriah Evans, Ishmael Houston-Jones, Ralph Lemon, Miguel Gutierrez, Andros Zins-Browne, Jonathan González, Okwui Okpokwasili, and Shamel Pitts (TRIBE). They were a recipient of a 2024 danceWEB scholarship at ImPulsTanz under the mentorship of Isabel Lewis. Kris has shown work at Judson Memorial Church as part of Black Aesthetics and Cathy Weis Projects’ Sundays on Broadway. In 2025, she had the pleasure to be part of OO-GA-LA, the reimagining of Fred Holland and Ishmael Houston-Jones’ 1983 Untitled Duet at Danspace Project.

Lauren Bakst is a scholar and artist working across experimental performance and queer studies. She is completing a PhD in English at the University of Pennsylvania where her dissertation focuses on lesbian erotic lifeworlds through a constellation of performance, film, and scenes of social life. Her research and writing on the Clit Club is forthcoming in TDR/The Drama Review. Lauren organizes and curates The School for Temporary Liveness, a para-site for collective study and dissonant communion. She currently teaches seminars in contemporary art at Rutgers University.

Photos by Rachel Keane

OO-GA-LA Reimagined (The Fred Holland and Ishmael Houston-Jones 1983 Duet Danced into the 21st Century)

Thursday, January 8 | 7PM
Friday, January 9 | 7PM
Saturday, January 10 | 7PM


Co-presented with Live Artery | New York Live Arts

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ishmael Houston-Jones presents OO-GA-LA Reimagined (The Fred Holland and Ishmael Houston-Jones 1983 Duet Danced into the 21st Century). The 1983 Danspace Project festival Contact at 10th and 2nd celebrated the 11th year that Steve Paxton named the form “Contact Improvisation.” Fred Holland and Ishmael Houston-Jones were invited to perform a duet on the Partners Program alongside Paxton, Nancy Stark Smith, and more. Considering themselves to be the Black Punks of Contact Improv, Holland and Houston-Jones decided to perform their improvised duet by doing everything wrong. As part of Danspace’s 50th anniversary in 2025, the piece was reimagined by three extraordinary young dancers of color—Stephanie Hewett, Kris Lee, and AJ Wilmore—who were invited by Houston-Jones to Queer the duet and bring it to a new generation.


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Before you visit:

Accessibility at Danspace Project
Covid Safety at Danspace Project


The dynamic Live Artery festival at New York Live Arts is one of NYC’s most attended dance-specific platforms during the annual presenter conference season, featuring resident commissioned artists and curated guests. New York Live Arts, guided by the leadership of visionary artist Bill T. Jones, collaborates with boundary pushing artists, advocates for their vision, and fortifies a creative future.

Ishmael Houston-Jones: choreographer, author, performer, teacher, and curator. His improvised dance and text work has been performed world-wide. He and Fred Holland shared a New York Dance and Performance “Bessie” Award for Cowboys, Dreams and Ladders. He was awarded his second “Bessie” Award for the revival of THEM, his 1985/86 collaboration with writer Dennis Cooper and composer Chris Cochrane and a third for Variations on Themes from Lost and Found… He curated Platform 2012: Parallels and co-curated with Will Rawls Platform 2016: Lost & Found, both at Danspace Project. Houston-Jones’ work has been supported by a 2013 Foundation for Contemporary Arts Artists Award, a 2015 Doris Duke Impact Award, a 2016 Herb Alpert Award, a 2021 USA Artist Award and a 2022 John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship.

Fred Holland (1951 – 2016) received a 1973 Bachelor of Fine Arts from Columbus College of Art and Design, Columbus, Ohio. After that, he had a one-man exhibition of his paintings at the Painted Bride Art Center in Philadelphia where he met dancers Terry Fox and Ishmael Houston-Jones who were performing there. Intrigued by their improvisations he took his first dance classes with them. Houston-Jones introduced him to the emerging practice of Contact Improvisation and they both became members of the Philadelphia Contact Collective. Upon moving to New York, Holland began combining his dance practice with his visual arts working alongside Houston-Jones, with whom he shared their 1984 New York Dance and Performance “Bessie” Award for Cowboys, Dreams and Ladders.

Stephanie Hewett is a queer Afro-Caribbean multidisciplinary artist from Munsee Lenape land (Bronx, New York). She is a graduate of Fiorello H. LaGuardia High School of Music & Art and the Performing Arts in New York City and has studied at the Laban Conservatoire of Music and Dance in London. She holds an MFA in Dance Studies and works with movement and electronic music production to decode ancestral wisdom and knowledge stored in the body. Hewett DJs and produces electronic music under the moniker Madre Guía, and experiments with sound to explore polyrhythmic potentialities of intergenerational healing. She is a member of RUPTURE, a bicoastal performance collective examining Black gatherings that center collective rest, folk games, somatic experimentation, and the creation of communal dance spaces as spiritual technologies and practices of resistance and refusal.

Kris Lee (she/they) is a New York based dancer/performer and home chef. She received her BFA in Dance from University of the Arts in 2019. Kris was a member of the Stephen Petronio Company (2021-22) and has toured with nora chipaumire (2019-20). She was one of the creators and performers for high noon (2022), the interdisciplinary performance work produced by Ninth Planet. Most recently they have performed in Remains Persist (2022) & Out of and Into: Plot (2023) By Moriah Evans; Variations on Themes from Lost and Found: Scenes from a Life and other works by John Bernd (reprisal) by Ishmael Houston-Jones & Miguel Gutierrez (2023); duel c (2023) & duel H (2024) by Andros Zins-Browne. They also had the pleasure of being a part of Impulstanz’ Danceweb scholarship program mentored by Isabel Lewis (2024).

Born and raised in Philadelphia, AJ Wilmore is an artist and performer who delves into storytelling, identity, and the complexities of black familial relationships. She excavates her innermost desires while grappling with questions of visibility, intimacy, and selfhood. Wilmore graduated from The University of the Arts, where she honed her craft in movement investigation and approaches. Her recent performances include ‘ADAKU’ by Okwui Okpokwasili and Peter Born at BAM’s 2023 Next Wave Festival and Joan Jonas’s ‘Mirror Piece I and II’ at MoMA. Driven by a practice of making love to her fears, Wilmore investigates the stakes, texture, and vulnerability of her social and sexual life.

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