• 'Not Just Your Mama's Post-Modern Dance Company'

REGGIE WILSON / FIST AND HEEL PERFORMANCE GROUP

- Founded In 1989 -

  • 'Not Just Your Mama's Post-Modern Dance Company'
Featured
May 5-6, 2017

CITIZEN - KRAVIS CENTER

Choreographer Reggie Wilson’s compelling new work, Citizen, investigates what it means to belong and not belong, probing the nuanced layers that lie beneath public versus private. His Brooklyn-based performance group boldly blends contemporary dance and African traditions, drawing from the movements of blues, slave and gospel cultures to create provocative works that both honor the past and break new ground.

April 21- 22, 2017

CITIZEN Performance- Tigertail (Miami, FL)

Noted NYC-based choreographer Reggie Wilson brings his dance company, Fist and Heel Performance Group, to Miami-Dade County Auditorium On.Stage Black Box to perform CITIZEN. In this work, Wilson asks, "What does it mean to belong?" and "What does it mean to NOT want to belong?", core questions of Reggie's investigations for this new evening-length dance work. In CITIZEN, Wilson drills down into the human desire to belong with exponentially expanding questions: "Do the injustices in today's America engender a feeling of belonging? What supports belonging? Is belonging solely something internal, inside the individual? Is a sense of belonging or not belonging, a private or a public matter?" CITIZEN promises to engage and compel while igniting perspectives on our compassion and humanity.

January 28- February 24, 2017

DanceMotion USA

This visionary, multidisciplinary performance group reinterprets and reworks rhythm and movement traditions of Africa and its diaspora with communities in the Dominican Republic, Haiti, and Panama.

January 10, 2017

CITIZEN Overture Center (Madison, Wisconsin)

The Brooklyn-based dance company draws from the spiritual and mundane traditions of Africa and its diaspora, and takes its name from the distinctive worship practices of enslaved Africans in the Americas. Choreographer and artistic director Reggie Wilson creates work that displays rigor, structure and craft in a postmodern dance vernacular. His choreography goes way beyond what’s often called “black dance” and ranges from strict dance pieces to full, all-inclusive multimedia performance art pieces

January 7, 2017

CITIZEN

7.45pm to 8.45pm Mark Morris Dance Center (BK, NY)

December 14-17, 2016

CITIZEN BAM Next Wave Festival (BK, NY)

Choreographer Reggie Wilson’s (Moses(es), 2013 Next Wave; The Good Dance - dakar/brooklyn, 2009 Next Wave) deeply expressive postmodern work draws from the languages of the African diaspora, weaving elements of blues, slave, and spiritual cultures into contemporary and pedestrian movement vocabularies. Returning to BAM with Fist & Heel Performance Group, Wilson—who tours to the Dominican Republic, Panama, and Haiti next year as part of DanceMotion USASM, an exchange initiative led by the US Department of State and produced by BAM—presents a brand new work inspired by African-American figures throughout history who were conflicted and chose not to leave their home country in spite of pervasive racism. Five dancers engage with video projections in a series of provocative solos that overlap and intersect, asking: What does it mean to belong, and to not want to belong?

November 15-20, 2016

MOSES(ES) WhiteBird Performance (Portland, OR)

Reggie Wilson, award-winning choreographer and performer, draws from the cultures of Africans in the Americas and combines them with post-modern elements and his own movement style to create what he calls “post-African/Neo-Hoodoo Modern Dances.” His critically acclaimed and magnificently uplifting Moses(es) celebrates, through dance, song and vocalization, the migration of peoples and culture from Africa out into the world.

October 11-15, 2016

Knowing Arts More

Presented by the School of Dance, "Knowing Dance More" is a series of lectures, conversations and informal showings led by important artists and scholars in the international field of dance. This series seeks to bring into focus current issues within the production, performance and practice of dance works and will hopefully foster ongoing conversations about knowing dance (more).

Choreographer and performer Reggie Wilson, executive and artistic director of First and Heel Performance Group, will present "The Ring Shout - An African Technology in Relationship to Post-Modern Dance," a source of inspiration, research, history and information.

September 5-10, 2016

CITIZEN - WORLD PREMIERE

What does it mean to belong? What does it mean to NOT want to belong?

This greatly expressive, physically virtuosic company takes audiences on an exploration of the core human impulse to belong, and the ways that a society treats race, culture, and income to influence one’s identity in a group. CITIZEN is a contemporary dance that confronts the complex challenges, struggles, judgments, and webbing between anonymity and community, between ideas of individual self and of being a citizen of your homeland or your adopted homeland. This exhilarating and provocative work features layered interplay between dancers, film, and shadow—and a masterful display of motion.

July 26 - Aug 10, 2016

Yard Offshore Creation Residency Martha’s Vineyard (MA)

The Yard supports artists in both their creative processes and social instrumentality through paid research residency, public performance, and long- term educational and community engagement across all ages and diverse cultural populations of Martha’s Vineyard, and in broad application to New England and the nation.

April 6-17, 2016

Replacing PhiladelphiaPainted Bride Arts Center (PA)

Re-PLACE-ing Philadelphia, the Painted Bride’s project focusing on building an expanded archive of cultural memory that includes multiple histories, re-place-ing the established with new narratives and understandings of Philadelphia. Reggie Wilson explores how we “physicalize place” in this postmodern work featuring Kristel Baldoz, David Brick, Paul Hamilton, Germaine Ingram, Jumatatu Poe, Maria Urrutia, and Miles Yeung-Tieu. Reggie and the artists create space and opportunity to reveal the physical testimonies and histories in their bodies. The results are poetic, intentional, and dynamic all at once.

March 28 - April 2, 2016

BAC Tech Residency (New York, NY)

Choreographer/performer Reggie Wilson (NYC) will confront questions about the human desire for belonging in CITIZEN, a new work aimed to ignite disruptive, uncomfortable perspectives on compassion and humanity.

March 16-24, 2016

Replacing Philadelphia (PA)

Re-PLACE-ing Philadelphia has engaged three Artists/Thinkers: Reggie Wilson, Faustin Linyekula, and Marty Pottenger, who are creating new works with people in Philadelphia, catalyzing the question: What shapes this city's history? A series of performances, exhibitions, and events will be staged at the Bride and throughout the city in April 2016.

February 10-13 , 2016

Replacing Philadelphia (PA)

A project of the Painted Bride Art Center, Re-PLACE-ing Philadelphia is building an expanded archive of cultural memory that includes multiple histories, re-place-ing the established with new narratives and understandings.

January 12+17, 2016

American Dance Platform The Joyce Theater (New York City, NY)

The Joyce Theater is proud to launch its first American Dance Platform, showcasing some of the most captivating American companies performing today. This year’s festival features companies representing different regions throughout America and pairs emerging companies with those that are more established. The festival is curated by Paul King and Walter Jaffe, the founders and directors of White Bird, the acclaimed dance presentation series based in Portland, Oregon.

October 12 - November 1, 2015

Master Artist in Residence | Atlantic Center for the Arts (New Smyrna Beach, Florida)

Wilson leads a select group of choreographers, dancers, performers, scholars and researchers interested in physical/movement and verbal conversations on belonging and not belonging, esp. regarding citizenship and civic duty. Partially a research and developmental residency for Fist and Heel's 2015 work-in-progress.

July 5 - July 19, 2015

Creative and Performance Residency | Alverno Presents- Lynden Sculpture Garden (Milwaukee, Wisconsin)

For this fifth collaboration between Alverno Presents and Lynden Sculpture Garden, Reggie will present his latest work, Moses(es), a look at the many representations of Moses in the mythical, canonical, and ethnographic imaginations, to ask: how do we lead and why do we follow? Joined by his Fist & Heel Performance Group and members of diverse Milwaukee communities, and set to live vocalizations from the African diaspora, Reggie is making a site-specific iteration of Moses(es) especially for the Sculpture Garden.

May 26-June 8, 2015

Rehearsal Residency- Extended Life Program | LMCC/Governor’s Island (New York)

Lower Manhattan Cultural Council’s Extended Life program showcases choreographers whose work demonstrates a strong understanding of site, space and architecture, challenges notions of form, and inspires an investigative spirit.

May 8-13, 2015

Dance and Dramaturgy Conferences | Gray Center, High Concepts Lab (Chicago, IL)

A panel discussion focusing on choreographic process, dramaturgy and the body, moderated by Chicago Dancemakers Forum Executive Director Ginger Farley and Reggie Wilson and UChicago’s Department of Mathematics faculty member Jesse Wolfson will engage in a public conversation about their collaboration on the dance production Moses(es).

May 4-8 , 2015

Hatchery Project Rehearsal Residency | Chocolate Factory (New York)

April 19-26, 2015

Hatchery Project Rehearsal Residency | MANCC (Tallahassee, FL)

March 25-29, 2015

Moses(es) Performance | ICA Boston (Boston, MA)

After a weeklong residency in our theater in July 2014, returns with his Brooklyn-based Fist and Heel Performance Group. An evening-length exploration of “how we lead and why we follow.”

February 25 - March 1 , 2015

Artist Talk with Marcyliena Morgan and Xaviera Simmons | ICA Boston (Boston, MA)

Marcyliena Morgan, professor in the Department of African and African American Studies at Harvard University and Executive Director of the Hiphop Archive, leads a conversation on art and history with choreographer Reggie Wilson and artist Xaviera Simmons, whose work is featured in the exhibition When the Stars Begin to Fall.

February 15-22, 2015

I AM a MAN, Ballet Memphis Commission | Ballet Memphis- Memphis, TN

Ballet Memphis describes I Am as a, "symphony of struggles and triumphs in four world premiere works." The evening showcases new work by a quartet of notable choreographers from the four corners of America — Reggie Wilson, Julia Adam, Gabrielle Lamb, and Memphis' own Steven McMahon.

February 9-14, 2015

Hatchery Project Rehearsal Residency | Chocolate Factory (New York)

January 29-31 , 2015

Re-PLACE-ing Philadelphia Artist Convening | Painted Bride Arts Center (Philadelphia, PA)

Re-PLACE-ing Philadelphia has been supported by the Pew Center for Arts & Heritage. Re-PLACE-ing Philadelphia will apply critical methodologies to the city of Philadelphia in order to make visible the “unspoken” and seemingly invisible archives of cultural memory so that they can be recognized and re-constructed in ways that encompass a broader community.

January 10 - 11, 2015

APAP SHOWCASE | Ailey Center (New York)

December 12 -13, 2014

Lang Dance Fall Performance | New York Live Arts (New York)

Partnership with Eugene Lang College and The New School for Liberal Arts features seasonal performances including premieres of original dance works created by guest choreographers; Reggie Wilson and Jeanine Durning.

November 16-22, 2014

Moses(es) Performance | Orpheum Theater (Memphis, TN)

Making its Orpheum debut, internationally acclaimed Fist and Heel Performance Group presents Moses(es), a stunning exploration into our relationship with leadership and the effects of migration on beliefs and customs.

October 28 - November 15, 2014

Creation Residency for I AM a Man | Ballet Memphis (Memphis, Tennessee)

Ballet Memphis describes I Am as a, "symphony of struggles and triumphs in four world premiere works." The evening showcases new work by a quartet of notable choreographers from the four corners of America — Reggie Wilson, Julia Adam, Gabrielle Lamb, and Memphis' own Steven McMahon.

 

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