“What I love about the dance world is that it has the possibility of bringing together so many different cultures, so many different people, beliefs, ways of thinking, ways of being in a space … we always find a common ground and a way to exist and support one another and to create something really beautiful”
Read MoreDan Daw
"[Dance] It gave me an outlet and a way to express myself, and to be in a space where I could see myself represented."
Read MoreJane Desmond
“As dancers and dance scholars we have the ability to articulate how embodied senses of self in the world and how specific embodied practices come to have social meaning, and how those presumed meanings circulate in public discourse, influencing public policy and political claims, with long term and complex results.”
Read MoreBruno Isaković
"I am observing them, observing me."
Read MoreChase Johnsey
“I am a huge feminist, so there was something about the strength of the females going on pointe, that really interested me, I like that there was strength beyond the beauty.”
Read MorePhillip Adams
“New York was my mentor”
Read MoreJustin Shoulder
“In many respects I started doing performance as a reaction to having a very digital practice, working with images and I wanted to physically feel more alive in this reality.”
Read MoreGareth Chambers
“I think when people are exposed to something, like queer dance or queer art, it can either trigger two things: it can firstly make them want to learn or understand it, or secondly, they refuse it because it scares them. I think both actions can trigger change.”
Read MoreThomas Fonua
"Being Indigenous now means you are influenced by not only your traditional heritage but by pop culture, western education, sexuality … there are so many things that influence us now as Indigenous peoples. So from my point of view, that’s where my work comes from, that point of diversity
Read MoreMichael J Morris
“sexuality is a choreography as much as anything else”
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