Pat Graney
Pat Graney is an American choreographer, based in Seattle, Washington. She founded the Pat Graney Dance Company in 1991,[1] and continues to serve as its artistic director and executive director.[2]
The Doris Duke Charitable Foundation describes her work as "featur[ing] a diverse set of movement vocabularies that range from ballet to gymnastics to martial arts; explorations of female identity and power; and rich visuals."[1] Seattle's On the Boards writes that "she often explores female identity and power, taking movement inspiration from ballet to gymnastics to martial arts to slapstick."[3]
Graney's 2004 piece The Vivian Girls was based on the drawings and stories of Henry Darger;[1] her Faith Triptych, consisting of Faith (1991), Sleep (1995), and Tattoo (2001), was presented in 2010 at On the Boards.[1][3][4]
A feminist activist as well as a choreographer, Graney has worked with incarcerated women through her Keeping the Faith/The Prison Project, and has worked with teens in the Seattle school system who have been identified as having been trafficked.[1]
Graney has received numerous awards, including an Alpert Award in the Arts (2008), a USA Fellowship (2008) a 2013 Doris Duke Award.[1]
Childhood and education
Born in St. Augustine, Florida, where her parents had move from Chicago, Graney grew up there and in Mechanicsville, Virginia and Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. After graduating from high school in St. Augustine, she attended Tallahassee Community College (Tallahassee, Florida) and The Evergreen State College (Olympia, Washington), before going on to the University of Arizona. In Arizona, she studied extensively with John M. Wilson at the School of Dance, and received a BFA in 1979, at which time she moved to Seattle.[5]
Keeping the Faith – The Prison Project
In 1992, Graney began arts-based educational residency program "Keeping the Faith – The Prison Project," intended to enrich the lives of incarcerated women and girls. As of 2013, the program works mainly with the Mission Creek Corrections Center for Women in Belfair, Washington, but has made artistic interventions in places as diverse as Japan, Ireland, and Germany. The program involves writing poetry as well as collaboratively creating dance pieces.[2]
Notes
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Pat Graney". ddpaa.org. Doris Duke Charitable Foundation. Retrieved 2015-11-03.
- 1 2 Kathryn Dickason (2015-08-05). "At women's prisons, dance project offers hope, transformation". Gender News. Clayman Institute for Gender Research, Stanford University. Retrieved 2015-11-03.
- 1 2 "Pat Graney - Girl Gods". ontheboards.org. On the Boards. Retrieved 2015-11-03.
- ↑ "Pat Graney Company - Faith Triptych". ontheboards.org. On the Boards. 2010. Retrieved 2015-11-03.
- ↑ "Pat Graney". patgraney.org. Pat Graney Company. Retrieved 2015-11-03.
Further reading
- "Pat Graney", essay in Gigi M. Berardi, Finding Balance: Fitness, Training, and Health for a Lifetime in Dance (Second Edition, 2004), Routhledge, ISBN 0415943388, p. 211-213.
External links
- Pat Graney Company
- Keeping the Faith (Pat Graney Dance Company), YouTube, posted July 23, 2008.
- Chamber Dance Company Archive: Pat Graney, University of Washington Chamber Dance Company, Research Guide on the site of University of Washington Libraries.