Open Call: Kayla Hamilton
Tickets
Admission to Open Call events is free with a ticket reservation.
For sold out performances, an in-person wait list will be available 15 minutes before the show begins.
Learn more about accessibility for this production.
About this commission
In How to Bend Down/How to Pick It Up, Kayla Hamilton explores lineages of Black disabled imagination and alternative world-building through an immersive, community-specific, multidisciplinary dance performance.
The performance moves through three historical spaces—the cotton field, the Black church, and the freakshow/circus—where disability was hidden, deemed unproductive, reduced to spectacle, or asked to be prayed away. How to Bend Down/How to Pick It Up offers an archival exploration of these spaces and a reclaiming of agency, recentering the parts of the self that were discarded or suppressed in those settings while carrying forward the ancestral task of envisioning a future where every-body is free.
The production makes use of multiple audio descriptors and a performance structure that can reconfigure every night based on the performers’ changing needs.
Creative Team
Vanessa Hernandez-Cruz is an interdependent and interdisciplinary Chicana Disabled dance artist. Hernandez-Cruz is currently set to premiere a new experimental contemporary dance solo titled Soul Seeker for the Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibition show Abundance and it will later premiere for Mouthwater Festival this fall.
Over the past few years Hernandez-Cruz’s work has been shown nationally and internationally. She is currently the recipient of the 2023 California Arts Council x The Center of Cultural Power Artist Disruptor Award. In 2023, she had two exciting dance solos that premiered in the summer: Metal, Plastic, Skin debuting at The Odyssey Theatre’s Dance Festival and Exhale Static, Inhale Fumes with her debut at The REDCAT’s NOW Festival.
Dr. Akhila Vimal C. is a visually impaired dancer and performance theorist whose research explores the intersection of performance studies, ritual studies, ethnochoreology, dance pedagogy, reception studies, and disability aesthetics. Her work focuses on intercultural performance traditions from India, examining their history, training, principles, contemporary practices, and textual narratives.
Currently, Akhila is a Fulbright Postdoctoral Fellow at the Department of World Arts Cultures/Dance, UCLA. Her research sits at the intersection of performance and disability, with a particular focus on disabled dance pedagogy. Methodologically, she is committed to practice as research, and her current project investigates blind dance pedagogies and practices.
Credits
This show includes live captions by Stanley Sakai.
This production has been supported by the Circle O Team. Led by Founder and Artistic Director Kayla Hamilton, Circle O reimagines a dance world where Black Disabled and other multiply marginalized creatives are central, and every body is worthy of care.
Circle O includes:
Ita Segev, Grant Writer, Creative & Strategic Advisor
Ziiomi Law, Administrative Care Coordinator
Shannon Meredith, Finance and Operations Consultant
Ellen Chenoweth, Management and Programs Partner
Vanessa Hernandez Cruz, Social Media
Open Call Credits
Alex Poots, Artistic Director
Darren Biggart, Director of Civic Programs
Dejá Belardo, Assistant Curator, Civic Programs and Visual Arts
Daisy Peele, Open Call Producer (Associate Producer at The Shed)
Christal Ferreira, Program Manager, Civic Programs and Visual Arts
Ben Young, Production Manager
Special thanks to Public Assembly (Tamara McCaw, Maggie MacTiernan, and Annabel Thompson) and to former program team colleagues who facilitated the call for proposals and selection process for the third edition: Solana Chehtman, Sarah Khalid Dhobhany, Alessandra Gómez, and Andria Hickey.
Michael Ruiz-del-Vizo, Scenic Coordinator
DJ Potts, Sound Coordinator
Vittoria Orlando, Lighting Coordinator
Hao Bai, Video/Projection Coordinator
Cynthia Caridad, Stage Coordinator
Caren Celine Morris, Stage Coordinator
Ariana Michel, Stage Coordinator
A. Sef, Accessibility Consultant
Location and dates
August 15 – 17
7:30 pm
The Shed’s Griffin Theater is located at 545 West 30th Street, between 10th and 11th Avenues. View The Shed on a map.
For information about accessibility and arriving at The Shed, visit our Accessibility page.
Details
- Running time: Approximately 70 minutes, no intermission
Accessibility
About this Production
Each performance is a masked performance; if you are able wear a KN95 mask we ask that you please do so. The Shed will have KN95 masks available upon request in The Doctoroff Lobby and outside The Griffin Theater on Level 6.
The venue is physically accessible with wheelchair seating available upon request. Every performance will include CART and ASL interpretation by Tolly Tillman, Alisa Besher, and J'da Damas. Audio description is integral to the entirety of the performance. Runtime will be approximately 70 minutes with no intermission. People are welcome to float in and out of the space as desired.
Due to the creative experimental nature of this performance, there will be moments of cacophonous sounds; a quiet space is located on Level 8 if you need to take a break. Earplugs and fidgets will also be available outside the theater on Level 6 and in the quiet room on Level 8.
Accessible restrooms are located on the same floor as the performance, including a gender-neutral, single-stall restroom.
We understand access is social/relational; there will be two access doulas present in the space to help facilitate access needs as they arise.
To make an accessibility request, please click the link below. If you are experiencing access issues with The Shed website or have questions about accessibility, call (646) 455-3494 or email accessibility@theshed.org.
Thank you to our partners
Additional support for Open Call is provided by The Wescustogo Foundation and Jody and John Arnhold | Arnhold Foundation.
The creation of new work at The Shed is generously supported by the Lizzie and Jonathan Tisch Commissioning Fund and the Shed Commissioners. Major support for live productions at The Shed is provided by the Charina Endowment Fund, with additional support from the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New York State Legislature.
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