Events – Danspace Project
Photo of Victoria Lynn Awkward by Maria J. Hackett | Photo of Jasmine Hearn by Kearra Amaya Gopee | Photo of Charmaine Warren by Tony Turner

Conversation Without Walls: Jasmine Hearn, Victoria Lynn Awkward, Myssi Robinson, Charmaine Warren

Saturday, April 11 | 12–3PM

Conversations Without Walls (CWW) was designed to bring together voices of artists, curators, scholars, writers, and more, into long-form roundtable discussions. The content of these conversations are intentionally wide-ranging and artist-driven—they can provide further context and insight into an artist’s research, reflect on a Danspace Project program, unpack methodologies and practices, or reflect on larger systemic and structural issues that impact artists today.

This roundtable discussion will center on Black femme dance writing and archiving. The conversation will be rooted in Hearn’s Memory Fleet, as an archive and performance project; Robinson’s role and practice as the Platform 2026 Writer-in-Residence and archivist; Awkward’s ongoing interview series, Harnessing our Gardens; and Warren’s role as a curator, dance writer, and founder/producer/artistic director of Black Dance Stories.


RSVP HERE


Before you visit:

Accessibility at Danspace Project
Covid Safety at Danspace Project

Victoria Lynn Awkward is a multi-hyphenate creator, administrator, educator and the Director of VLA DANCE. She pursued her multiple interests at Goucher College and graduated with high honors in Dance, Visual Art and Secondary Education. As the Director of VLA DANCE she is researching how to lead with joy, pleasure, and breath in and outside of art making practices. This work is guided through the lineage of Black and queer liberation practitioners. She is currently directing projects: “For Nina” – a multidisciplinary show celebrating the lineage of Nina Simone, “In The Space Between” – a production where dance, textile, and audio bring audiences into a world of queer imagination, and “Harnessing our Gardens” – an interview series in audio and text celebrating Black femme movement artists.

Alongside directing VLA DANCE, Victoria is a freelance artist, who most recently choreographed for Huntington Theater, Company One Theatre, Boston Lyric Opera, and Commonwealth Shakespeare. As a performer she has worked for Jasmine Hearn, Shura Baryshnikov, Jenna Pollack, and others. Victoria is also an educator who has worked at Salem State University, Brown University, West End House, Middlesex School, and Urbanity Dance. She continues to deepen her teaching practices as a mentee with Midday Movement Series. Notably, Victoria is a Brother Thomas Fellow, a recipient of the Next Steps for Boston Grant Dance Program, as well as a recipient of the Queer (Re)public Theater Offensive Residency. Through her work she aims to inspire people to pause and reflect on their actions towards themselves, their community and their environment.

Jasmine Hearn, born and raised on occupied Akokisa lands (Houston, TX), is an interdisciplinary artist, teacher, doula, performer, and organizer. Named one of Dance Magazine’s “25 to Watch” (2025), Jasmine is a recipient of a Foundation for Contemporary Arts Grants to Artists Award (2023), a Cynthia Hazen Polsky and Leon Polsky Rome Prize in Design with Athena Kokoronis of DPA (2023), a Jerome Foundation Jerome Hill Artist Fellowship (2019), and two NY Dance and Performance Bessie Awards for Outstanding Performer (2021, 2017* with the cast of skeleton architecture).

Jasmine has collaborated with Dream the Combine, Bill T. Jones, Saul Williams, Solange Knowles, Alisha B. Wormsley, okwui okpokwasili, Marjani Forté-Saunders, Tsedaye Makonnen, Holly Bass, Bebe Miller, and with dance companies, Urban Bush Women, and David Dorfman Dance, performing choreographic works at the Metropolitan Museum, Brooklyn Academy of Music, New York Live Arts, Guggenheim Museum, Getty Center, Venice Biennale, Ford Foundation, Kelly Strayhorn Theater, Danspace Project, and the Hobby Center for Performing Arts.

Jasmine is currently leading an archive and performance project, Memory Fleet, which has been awarded a Creative Capital Award (2022), a Creation Fund Award from National Performance Network (2022), and a National Dance Production Grant from New England Foundation of the Arts (2023). With its premiere Houston, TX as part of DiverseWorks Spring 2024 season, Memory Fleet continues to deepen and will be presented at Kelly Strayhorn Theater in April 2026 and New York Live Arts in June 2026.

Myssi Robinson (she / her) is a Bessie award winning performer, multi-disciplinary maker and caregiver raised on and returned to Powhatan lands (Richmond, VA). She has interpreted many dances and dances through many interpretations.  Her practice quilts together imaginative archiving and mixed-media marking beside experiments in improvisation, ritual and spatial design.  Intuition and empathy play with maximalist instinct to give life to what comes. Gratitude to Carolyn, Darrin and all that is unseen for her life and abilities to create freely within it.

Charmaine Warren

I am a performer, historian, consultant and dance writer. I began the online series “Black Dance Stories” in June 2020 as a platform for Black dance creatives during the Covid pandemic, but it has been my charge to support Black dance creatives for years. I am the founder/producer and artistic director for “Dance on the Lawn:” Montclair’s Dance Festival which ran for 10 years, a co-curator for Harlem Stage’s dance series, EMoves for 11 years, and the lead curator for Dance @ Wassaic Project Festival for more than nine years. In 2019 I became the Producer of DanceAfrica at BAM.

After performing for many years with major New York dance companies, I joined the internationally known, New York-based, dance/theater company david rousseve/REALITY in 1989 – 2000. I received a 2017 Bessie Award Recipient for “Outstanding Performance” as a member of Skeleton Architecture Collective. I was the recipient of the 2021 “Angel Awardee.” I currently perform with Jasmine Hearn.

I write on dance for The New York Amsterdam News, and over the years The New York Times, Dance Magazine and other print media. I have been published in the Oxford Encyclopedia of American Cultural and Intellectual History, Brooklyn Academy of Music’s BAM: The Complete Works, Steven Serafin, editor., and Jazz at Lincoln Center’s Playbill. My most recent article was for The Kennedy Center’s CENTER Magazine – “The Nutcracker Remix/es.”

I am a former faculty member at Hunter College, The Ailey School and the Alvin Ailey/Fordham University dance major program, Sarah Lawrence College, Kean University, Duke University and Howard University. I hold a Ph.D. in History from Howard University, a Master’s Degree in Dance Research, Reconstruction and Choreography from CUNY, and Bachelor’s Degrees: Speech & Theatre/Dance; and English from Montclair State College.

I was a member of the New York Dance and Performance Awards Committee (BESSIES) for more than ten years, and also a member of the Steering Committee for four years.

Photo by Iki Nagawa

Stacy Matthew Spence: With in, Around, With out… me

Thursday, April 23 | 5:30PM
Friday, April 24 | 5:30PM
Saturday, April 25 | 5:30PM

Open Dress Rehearsal*
Tuesday, April 21 | 5:30PM

To RSVP for Open Dress Rehearsal, Click Here

With in, Around, With out… me is a solo, that continues Stacy Matthew Spence‘s interest in navigating internal and external terrains. It is the sharing of self by exploring the internal essence of a person coming forth to the external as expressive movement along with a play of internal rhythms that are inherent to a person. In this work, “I am also reconnecting to the world beyond the self and the shaping I may have on a place and the place may have on me. Extending from there, I am also playing with responding to the immediate alive space around me and how to be present and responsive with the larger environment that extends beyond myself.”

Musicians Charlotte JacobsRaf VertessenNora Stanley, and Selendis Sebastian Alexander Johnson will join Stacy with instrumentation on this journey, along with Athena Kokoronis who collaborated on the clothing.

“In 2024 I invited Stacy to respond to the replanting of Gordon Matta-Clarke’s Rosebush sculpture in front of St. Mark’s Church in-the-Bowery as part of a project initiated by the Swiss Institute,” writes Judy Hussie-Taylor. “Stacy’s response was to create a new solo in which he traveled from the church sanctuary to the red rosebush outside with a mesmerized audience following his every move. I am interested in his ongoing movement research sparked by this original invitation.”

 

*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.


BUY TICKETS


Before you visit:

Accessibility at Danspace Project
Covid Safety at Danspace Project

Stacy Matthew Spence is a New York City based choreographer, dancer, and teacher. Stacyʼs choreography has been commissioned by Danspace Project, New York Live Arts: Live Artery, The High Line with visual artist Ronny Quevedo, The New School, Ishmael Houston-Jones’s Platform 2012: Parallels for Danspace Project and Tisch School of the Arts. Stacy has performed in co/motion directed by Margaret Peak as part of Jason Moranʼs Whitney Biennial: Bleed, in Deborah Hayʼs Blues as part of Ralph Lemonʼs One Fine Day at The Museum of Modern Art NY, Joanna Kotze’s BIG BEATS, as well as Vespers Reimagined (2025) and Indifferent Forest with Bebe Miller. Stacy danced with The Trisha Brown Dance Company from 1997-2006, was Education Director 2018-2021 and continues collaborating with the company through teaching and re-staging Trisha’s work. He has also taught nationally and internationally at institutions such as The New School, Juilliard, Barnard College, Tisch School of the Arts, Manhattan Marymount College, London Contemporary Dance School, Centre National de Danse Contemporaine, and Movement Research. Stacy is currently an instructor at The New School in New York City.

Grants and residencies include New York State Council on the Arts Support for Artists Grant 2026, Gibney Dance in Process (DiP) Resident Artist 2022-23, Movement Research Artist Parent Residency; Workspace Artist-in-Residence, Lower Manhattan Cultural Council NY; Manhattan Community Fund, Lower Manhattan Cultural Council, NY; New York Live Arts Studio Series Residency; Artist Residency at Centre National de Danse Contemporaine in Angers, France; Movement Research Artist-in-Residence.

Photo by Peter Born

Marjani Forté-Saunders and 7NMS: float.: Phase I

Thursday, May 7 | 7:30PM
Friday, May 8 | 7:30PM
Saturday, May 9 | 7:30PM

Open Dress Rehearsal*
Tuesday, May 5 | 7:30PM

To RSVP for Open Dress Rehearsal, Click Here

Created by Marjani Forté-Saunders in collaboration with Sound Designer Everett Saunders (7NMS)
Performed by Marjani Forté-Saunders, and more to be announced

float. is a multi-phased performance project that unfolds across solo, ensemble, and durational forms, attending to the dance of Body, Mind, and Will as a meditation on the Wondrous. Rooted in the Zen Buddhist concept of Clouds and Water, the work considers impermanence as a lived condition, asking how one moves through disruption, grief, and change by yielding, shifting, and advancing without resistance. 

float.: Phase I is the ensemble iteration of float. that centers the dance of the Body, Mind, and Will.  Unfolding as a meditation, in changing form, shifting, and advancing- steadily. It is the first phase of this three part project that is unfolding over the next two years. These performances at Danspace Project are the first public sharing of float.: Phase I

float. is made possible in part by the MAP Fund, Movement Research, Barnard Movement Lab, Jacob’s Pillow Lab Residency, The Center for Provocative Thought, and the City of Santa Monica Cultural Affairs.

 

*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. 


BUY TICKETS


Before you visit:

Accessibility at Danspace Project
Covid Safety at Danspace Project

Marjani Forté-Saunders (she/her) is a 2023 United States Artists Fellow and recently presented the restaging of heralded choreographer Blondell Cummings’s solo Chicken Soup, re-imagined for Danspace Project’s 50th Anniversary (Chicken Soup 2025). In 2024, Marjani also celebrated her choreographic debut with the New York Metropolitan Opera, El Niño. Marjani is a 3x Bessie award winning choreographer, performer, teaching artist, and Mother. She is an awardee of the prestigious Dance Magazine Harkness Award (2020) and the Foundation for Contemporary Arts Fellowship (2020). She is an inaugural recipient of 3 distinguishing fellowships in dance, including Urban Bush Women’s Choreographic Center Initiative Fellowship (2017), the Jerome Hill Artist Fellowship (2018), and the DanceUSA Artist Fellowship (2019). Her performance installation Garden of Unicorns- a Surrealist Ode to Blondell Cummings unfolded in The Getty Gardens as part of the Ever Present Series, curated by Kristin Juarez and Sarah Cooper. Saunders is a founding member of the collective 7NMS, alongside composer/sound designer Everett Saunders. They are recent recipients of New Music USA and the National Dance Project Production & Touring award for their latest work Prophet: The Order of the Lyricist. In 2022, Saunders made her off-broadway debut as choreographer of Dreaming Zenzile, written and starring grammy-nominated jazz vocalist Somi Kakoma, and directed by Drama League Founder’s Award winning artist Lileana Blain-Cruz. Saunders is the Visioning Founder of the Art x Power a platform, dedicated to fostering purpose and innovation by investing in and building resilient futures for Black radically experimenting artists. Humbly, Saunders defines her work by its lineage, stemming from culturally rich, vibrant, historic, loving, irreverent conjurers!

Danspace Project Gala 2026

TICKETS + MORE INFO

Tuesday, May 12, 2026


HONORING REBEL ANGELS

Phong Bui Portraitist, writer, curator, and vanguard of New York City artistic life through the Brooklyn Rail and beyond.

Anne Delaney Artist, philanthropist, and social activist fiercely committed to artistic and cultural expression

Charmaine Warren Performer, historian, producer, and writer radically championing Black Dance Stories nationwide

 

CO-CHAIRS Melissa Levin and Michelle Coffey

HOST Paul Lazar

SPEAKERS Mikki Shepard, Michelle Coffey, and Joan Jonas

PERFORMERS Annie-B Parson and Paul Lazar, Brass Queens Band, Jasmine Hearn, Henry Threadgill, Kyle Marshall, Okwui Okpokwasili and Peter Born

BENEFIT COMMITTEE (as of March 2026)

There’s still time  to join esteemed artists and colleagues on our Benefit Committee, please contact Miranda Brown at miranda@danspaceproject.org for more details.  

Kyle Abraham, Marina Abramovic, Bjorn Amelan, Pi-Isis Ankhra, Charles Atlas, Yona Backer*, Jeff Barnett-Winsby, Kevin Beasley, Eve Biddle, Philip Bither, Black Dance Stories, Suzanne Bocanegra*, Linda Brumbach, Barbara Bryan, Antuan Byers, Amy Cassello, Kim Chan, Patricia Cruz, Molly Davies, Quinn Delaney, Maura Ngyuen Donohue, Douglas Dunn**, Kristy Edmunds, Dr. Indira Etwaroo, David Fanger*, Susan Feder, Joan Finkelstein, Simone Forti, Terry Fox, Eleanor Friedman, Boo Froebel, Olga Garay-English, Jon Gilman, Danni Gee, Jilian Cahan Gertsen**, Philip Glass, Molly Gochman, Indira Goodwine, Miguel Guiterrez, Susan Harris, Ishmael Houston-Jones**,  Judy Hussie-Taylor*, Bill T. Jones, Nunally Kersh, Tommy Kriegsman, Amy Lamphere, T Lax*, Brad Learmonth, Ralph Lemon**, Melissa Levin*, Babette Mangolte, Kyle Maude, Cynthia Mayeda, Joe Melillo, Bebe Miller**, Rashaun Mitchell*, Meredith Monk, Carol Mullins, Linda Murray, Sarah Needham*, Eiko Otake*, Nicky Paraiso, David Parker*, Yvonne Rainer, Brian Rogers, David Rousseve, Legacy Russell, William Staso, Pat Steir, Elizabeth Streb, Lucy Sexton, Pamela Tatge, Jennifer Tipton, Julie Tolentino, Muna Tseng**, Laurie Uprichard, Helen and Peter Warwick**, Wendy Whelan, Nina Winthrop**, Janet Wong, Jawole Willa Jo Zollar, Eva Yaa Asantewaa, Bowie Zunino, and more TBA

*Danspace Board member  **Danspace Board Emeriti


Before you visit:

Accessibility at Danspace Project
Covid Safety at Danspace Project

Photo of Okwui Okpokwasili by Michael Avedon

Malcolm-x Betts + Okwui Okpokwasili

Friday, May 22 | 8PM

Co-presented with Poetry Project

Malcolm-x Betts and Okwui Okpokwasili are both interdisciplinary artists who work in and around dance. Each of them, in their own ways, makes performances that articulate the expansive vision of the Black radical tradition, while simultaneously grounding that vision in everyday intensities of desire, grief, love, and rage. They both approach movement as a site of textual experimentation and language as a bodily material, working at the limit of what seems possible, approaching scenes of abandonment with abandon. For this shared evening, co-presented with Danspace Project, Betts and Okpokwasili will have an opportunity to highlight the presence of writing in their respective practices, each reading from new and in-progress works.


BUY TICKETS


Before you visit:

Accessibility at Danspace Project
Covid Safety at 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.

Okwui Okpokwasili (she/her) is a Brooklyn-based performer, choreographer, and writer creating multidisciplinary performance pieces. The child of immigrants from Nigeria, Okpokwasili was born and raised in the Bronx, and the histories of these places and the girls and women who inhabit them feature prominently in much of her work. Her productions include the Bessie Award-winning Bronx Gothic and the performance installation Sitting on a Man’s Head. In 2018, she received a Princeton University Hodder Fellowship, a Herb Alpert Award in Dance, a Doris Duke Artist Award, and a MacArthur Fellowship. She was the inaugural artist for the Kravis Studio Residency program at MoMA in 2022. In 2025, she received an Arts and Letters Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters.

Photo by Ian Douglas

Samita Sinha + Guests: Tremor

Saturday, May 23 | 3PM

Tremor is an energy system of voice, body, sound and vibration brought to life through processes of attunement, emergence, resonance, and the ecstatic. This iteration of Tremor is created by Samita Sinha in collaboration with Ash Fure, Sunder Ganglani, Sunny Jain, Darrell Jones, and Daniel Neumann, with Sunil Bald conceiving space and design.


BUY TICKETS


Before you visit:

Accessibility at Danspace Project
Covid Safety at Danspace Project

Samita Sinha is an artist, composer, researcher, and educator whose practice is rooted in the voice and body. She has trained in Indian vocal traditions (North Indian classical and Bengali Baul folk), and has unraveled them through the body to create a new and multivalent language of vibration and transformation. Sinha has performed her work nationally and internationally, and received awards from the Mellon Foundation, National Endowment for the Arts, National Performance Network, New York State Council on the Arts, and the Fulbright Foundation.  She is a Visiting Professor at Dartmouth College.