Monday, December 22, 2014

Value dance

Value dance by Melissa Alexis  November 21, 2014

In past weeks The Boston Globe Opinion page has been overflowing with arts-focused writing upon the appointment of Julie Burros, the incoming Chief of Arts & Culture for the City of Boston. (http://www.bostonglobe.com/opinion/2014/11/14/developing-boston-arts-community/UGqbfurzCJYC7qaHc1bl8L/story.html).  I want to add my welcome to a dance world in Boston that has a lot of room for positive growth and development and implore the City of Boston to renew focus on granting robust funding, for operational and programming support, to companies with a high number and quality of trained dancers and strong leadership. Two such companies are Jean Appolon Expressions (JAE) and Urbanity Dance.  I interviewed the directors of these companies for whom delivering high quality dance programming in the communities in Boston is just as important as delivering top-notch performances.  Both directors acknowledge the well-known trend in Boston of dancers working for free or little pay because like theirs, many companies don’t gain adequate funding to allow for more than nominal operational costs, such as space rental and production fees.  There is a ceiling for dance growth that additional support would help companies like these blast past to aspire to join the ranks of the merely one professional dance company in Boston that is well-funded enough to retain a large number of highly skilled dancers and pay them a living wage.  For this reason, JAE is embarking on a campaign for operational support - let’s call it a human capital campaign: https://www.crowdrise.com/jeanappolonexpressions

These are under-resourced, under-valued companies serving under-resourced, under-valued communities - a model that is clearly not sustainable.  I also want to ask Ms. Burros to examine and with professionals in the field, publish, standards of fee for artistic service; and let this take root in our vocabulary and our negotiations.  In my love note to dancers, choreographers, and presenters, I want to remind us all that we help set the standard.  We should accept and offer nothing short of a fair fee for artistic service given the education/training, time, work, operational expense and salaries for which we have to account.  As Jean Appolon puts it, “the value of dance is very high, not just monetary, but it is something that the community needs.  People coming to my class are so relieved to listen to the music, to move their bodies...now more than ever, everything is about dance - from So You Think You Can Dance to the toothpaste commercial - we need to respect it and value it so we can all benefit from it in the future.  I know that dance is really essential to the growth of our communities but people have a hard time understanding what this means.”  Simply put, dance heals.  We should all invest in this kind of healing.

Excerpts of interview with Jean Appolon, Co-founder & Artistic Director of JAE and Betsi Graves, Director of Urbanity Dance (JAE has been in operation since 2011 and Urbanity since 2008):

What do you consider your primary mission?
Jean/JAE: To make dance accessible to everyone, but mainly underprivileged kids in Boston and Haiti.
Betsi/Urbanity: Empower, engage, and inspire individuals and communities through the art of dance and movement.  At the forefront of everything we do is community-building.

What are your primary activities?
Jean/JAE: Performance; teaching classes and workshops like our classes at Cambridge-based Community Arts Center; contributing to conferences/convenings (scholarship and community-focused); and conducting a free summer institute in Haiti.
Betsi/Urbanity: Performance; on and off-site teaching; and producing our own shows and other companies through the Boston Contemporary Dance Festival (I’m not sure if this can be continued because of the cost; this goes back to our vision and mission to support Boston-based dance companies and to revitalize Boston as a leader in presenting dance).

From which activity do you derive the bulk of your revenue?
Jean/JAE: Grassroots community fundraising and grants from institutions.
Betsi/Urbanity: Mostly our on-site school but not overwhelmingly.  A lot of performances break even and programs right now are completely sustainable. Boston Public Schools (BPS), for example, were told exactly how much it cost to run programs at selected schools and the schools chipped in.

Who are your primary funders?
Jean/JAE:  Kellogg Foundation awarded us a one-time grant last year for $25,000.  Before Kellogg, individuals mostly, friends and class members. We’ve also received support from FOKAL, a foundation in Haiti.
Betsi/Urbanity: Individuals; giving $250 on average.

As director, do you pay yourself a salary?  Do you pay dancers?
Jean/JAE:  My dancers and I are on a volunteer basis, but we are finally able to pay ourselves for performances and a monthly stipend.
Betsi/Urbanity: Yes to both.

What is a living wage in dance?
Jean/JAE:  A minimum should be $700 weekly.
Betsi/Urbanity: What you need to live a comfortable life. In the same way that teachers prepare for class...you need to take into consideration the hours before and after rehearsal, of craft and the toll it takes on bodies.  Like in other industries, a tiered pay scale to reflect education/experience. A lot of our dancers have a college degree and pay should reflect that.

What is a fair fee for artistic services and how do you calculate this?
Jean/JAE:  Calculated by how we can pay a company of 8 dancers, 4 musicians, and 2 directors.  To me, fair is $5000 each time we step out to do a performance. Our baseline price for a performance in the Boston area is $2500 although we often negotiate.
Betsi/Urbanity: Biggest factor – does it have to be an original work; if not, it’s easier (more cost effective).  $2000-2500 (existing repertory piece), $5000 (for original work).

How can the City of Boston assist your organization’s growth?
Jean/JAE:  There needs to be more engagement.  I feel like in Boston people need help figuring out how to get engaged with dance.  If they’re not coming to see a performance or to see a friend perform, they don’t come. 
Betsi/Urbanity:  There has to be a resurgence in the value of art.  It’s hard to make the case for that when there are competing priorities such as homelessness, hunger, imprisonment.  It’s hard when you compare art to these issues.  I think art is as important. In a city that has so many creatives, other institutions that do great work, this doesn’t make sense.  It doesn’t make sense that we have only one dance institution [Boston Ballet] that is the only option.  What I see is a pretty stark inequity between 1) arts organizations and other [industry] organizations in Boston; and 2) the relative success of [established] institutions and the “little ducks in Boston” that have a really unique and important voice.  It would be really sad if people’s experience of dance in Boston didn’t include all of these colors.






Thursday, December 18, 2014

Get me off the grid...

This box, solid like a wooden coffin some days
suffocating me
make a salary
do, do, achieve, and earn
no premium put on how we learn
no, just like a bounty held over my head
I can't get ahead
slidin' back like a baby tryin' to get up that slide
on the wrong not-the-ladder-side
I've seen the ladder from afar
As other people either climb nimbly from one rung
to another, or as I spot her there perched on top -
look closer
she's ingested a man's conditioned response and regurgitates
hardened to the humanity
of the reality
of a woman's work
Work, feed, clothe, house, decorate, earn, learn, pay,
educate, nurture, dig deeper into the well
surrounded by the four walls constructed by men
So weary of these air-tight walls
I can't breathe
said Eric Garner, over and over again in that video
that I wished I hadn't clicked on
to watch those men pounce on
closing in, constricting his airways
choking the death out of him as his life force had already
faded
He faded by their hand
Our humanity, my humanity
Is fading
By their invisible hands holding up the walls visible to the
invisible men and women of this country
And countless corners of the world that have been touched
by those hands
I want off the grid, out of the walls of
Earn to live, (y)earn to be respected, look and sound a certain way
to be acknowledged as a fellow be-ing
We're so busy do-ing that we have forgotten each other
Can't even see each other
Until we remember not to forget our selves and get on
the path to go closer, forge deeper... into the well
where walls don't exist.

Monday, December 1, 2014


Cross-posting astrology from the amazing, insightful Chani Nicholas. We need all the positive guidance we can assemble during these times...we are at the precipice...good things await.  I'm sure of it

http://www.chaninicholas.com/full-moon-gemini-horoscopes-week-december-1st/


My sister friend calls for us to determine 5 things we would like to accomplish before 2014 ends.  A challenge to all of us to make this kind of essentials list and attend to our time and attention in the next 30 days.  I'm on it...who's with me?

From today's meditation, my thoughts of dedication: December 1, 2014

I bow to the unknown.
It is all we have.
I bow to the unwavering and unchanging intention
that creates unwavering conviction in my actions.
I bow to great Love.
It is all we are.

Tuesday, November 11, 2014




The Tree of Life is a magical symbol for me and I see it everywhere... Blue Hills Reservation.  Communing with nature has always been a way for me to learn to be in the world - grounded and present, awake to all my senses, seeing myself in all living beings and all living beings in my self.

Sunday, May 11, 2014

Here I am again...

Restless today.  Means I'm tired but also the deeper feeling for me is that I'm on the cusp of something new, another change.  I'm eager to expand my life and extend my reach... get outside of the confines of my life the way that it has been...again.  A constant growth process of bringing my two lives together - the one I've been living and the one in my dreams. Paulo Coelho speaks of this, of course...

From the "Manual of the Warrior of Light":

Sometimes the warrior feels as if he were living two lives at once.
         In one of them he is obliged to do all the things he does not want to do and to fight for ideas in which he does not believe.  But there is another life, and he discovers it in his dreams, in his reading and in his encounters with people who share his ideas.

       The warrior allows his two lives to draw near.  'There is a bridge that links what I do with what I would like to do,' he thinks.  Slowly, his dreams take over his everyday life, and then he realises that he is ready for the thing he always wanted.

       Then all that is needed is a little daring, and his two lives become one.



Here I am at the edge of the cliff again.