Return to SITES home!


The Dancer Within: Photo © Rose Eichenbaum

 

The Dancer Within title banner

“The impulse to move comes from the spirit.” — Ben Vereen

Where does the urge to dance come from? How does one cope with the highs and lows of the artist’s life? What are the choreographer and dancer’s responsibilities to each other, to the audience, to the self?

Rennie Harris's Puremovement dancers. Photo by Rose EichenbaumThese are just a few of the questions that dancer-turned-photographer Rose Eichenbaum posed, with camera in hand, to America’s most celebrated dancers and choreographers.

The Dancer Within pairs Eichenbaum’s striking color action photos and black-and-white portraits with excerpts from her conversations with ballet icons, Broadway stars, modern dance luminaries, Hollywood legends, and prominent choreographers. Eichenbaum captures the character and vitality of Fernando Bujones, Jacques D’Amboise, Katherine Dunham, José Greco, Cynthia Gregory, Bill T. Jones, Anna Sokolow, Russ Tamblyn, Tommy Tune, and some 30 other dance professionals while eliciting candid reflections on their lives and careers. Eichenbaum is author of Masters of Movement: Portraits of America’s Great Choreographers (Smithsonian Books, 2004).

This exhibition has been organized by SITES and generously supported by United Dancer Merchants of America. Additional support has been provided by The Enchanted Garden Conservatory of Music, Dance & Drama.

 
Up button



Exhibition Specifications

Contents 48 framed color and black-and-white photographs, text panels, labels
Supplemental Companion book, educational and promotional resources, speaker list, bibliography, film guide
Participation Fee $3,000 for 8-week booking period
Size 200 running feet, est.
(60 running meters)
Crates To be determined
Weight To be determined
Category Art
Security Limited
Shipping Outgoing
SITES Contacts

Minnie Micu, 202.633.3160 (Scheduling)
Katherine Krile, 202.633.3108 (Content)

Tour Begins Spring 2008
   
 
Up button

Tour Itinerary

Dates   Host Institution Status
4/5/2008 6/1/2008 Ypsilanti District Library, Ypsilanti, MI Booked
6/21/2008 8/17/2008   Tentative Hold
9/6/2008 11/2/2008 Oglebay Institute, Stifel Fine Arts Center, Wheeling, WV Booked
11/22/2008 1/18/2009   Call for Availability
2/7/2009 4/5/2009 Rolling Hills Wildlife Adventure, Salina, KS Booked
4/25/2009 6/21/2009 Drexel University, Rincliffe Gallery, Philadelphia, PA Booked
7/11/2009 9/6/2009 Del Rio Council for the Arts, Del Rio, TX Reserved
9/26/2009 11/22/2009   Call for Availability
12/12/2009 2/7/2010   Call for Availability
2/27/2010 4/25/2010 Sunrise Civic Center, Sunrise, FL Reserved
       
     
Up button

Related Publications

Coming Soon!
Masters of Movement: Portraits of America's Great Choreographers; paperback; Smithsonian Press, 2007

The Dancer Within; Wesleyan University Press, Spring 2008
Up button

 

Press Release

What compels people to dance? What fuels the choreographer’s creative vision? Why do most dancers devote their entire lives to this art form? Many artists refer to a spirit within that defines and drives their need to move, to create, to dance. It is this spirit that is explored in the evocative Smithsonian traveling exhibition The Dancer Within.

Featuring 48 color and black-and-white photographs by dancer-turned-photojournalist Rose Eichenbaum, the exhibition will be on view at the Ypsilanti District Library in Ypsilanti, Mich., April 5, 2008 through June 1, 2008. The Dancer Within, from the Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service (SITES), will continue on a national tour through 2010.

“Visually, the exhibition captures a moment in the life of a dancer,” said Eichenbaum. “Viscerally, it reflects how dance speaks to the social and cultural issues of our times and has the power to express the deepest of human emotions.” In 1998, equipped with a camera and tape recorder, Eichenbaum set out to elicit the secrets of creativity from some of America’s greatest choreographers. After publishing Masters of Movement, her highly acclaimed 2004 collection of photographs and interviews, Eichenbaum focused her lens on ballet icons, Broadway stars, Hollywood legends, hip-hop artists and modern-dance luminaries. The result, The Dancer Within, takes visitors on a backstage—and at times on-stage—tour of the multidimensional world of dance.

The character and vitality of Mikhail Baryshnikov, Jacques d’Amboise, José Greco, Bill T. Jones, Ann Reinking, Chita Rivera, Russ Tamblyn, Tommy Tune, and dozens of other choreographers and dancers are captured in revealing portraits and dramatic performance shots. Interview excerpts documenting the dancers’ candid reflections on life, work and passion accompany each photograph, providing a rare glimpse at the inner workings of the artists.
“I believe in destiny,” said internationally acclaimed ballet dancer Natalia Makarova. “But I also believe that there are many factors that go into what makes a dancer—the right physique and proportions; exposure to music, literature and art; environment; and family. But then there is something else, something that is God-given—spirit. How spirit is formed I don’t know. No one can explain this.”

A companion book complements the national traveling exhibition. The Dancer Within: Intimate Conversations with Great Dancers will be published in spring 2008 by Wesleyan University Press. The Dancer Within was created by Rose Eichenbaum, organized for travel by SITES and made possible through the generous support of United Dance Merchants of America, presenter of National Dance Week. Additional support has been provided by The Enchanted Garden Conservatory of Music, Dance & Drama in Ridgefield, CT. Eichenbaum, whose photographs “open windows onto the soul of dance,” according to the New York Times, is one of the most highly acclaimed photojournalists working in the dance field today. She holds a bachelor’s degree in ethnic arts/dance and a master’s degree in dance from the University of California, Los Angeles. Her love and commitment to the art form lead her to teaching, dance research, photography and, ultimately, photojournalism.

An award-winning photographer, she has photographed some of this country’s most respected dance companies, including Mikhail Baryshnikov’s White Oak Project, Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company, Pacific Northwest Ballet, Tango Argentino, Les Grands Ballet Canadian de Montreal and many others. Her photos and articles have appeared in numerous publications, including Dance Magazine, Pointe, Dance Teacher and Dance Spirit. Her books include The Number on My Grandfather’s Arm (UAHC Press) and Masters of Movement—Portraits of America’s Great Choreographers (Smithsonian Books). Eichenbaum’s photography has been exhibited from coast-to-coast with one woman shows at Jacob’s Pillow Dance Festival and the Center of Creative Arts in St. Louis.

SITES has been sharing the wealth of Smithsonian collections and research programs with millions of people outside Washington, D.C., for more than 50 years. SITES connects Americans to their shared cultural heritage through a wide range of exhibitions about art, science and history, which are shown wherever people live, work and play.

 

Up button

 



EXPLORE and LEARN

Exhibition Specifications

Tour Itinerary

Exhibition Images

Related Websites

Promotional Materials

Related Publications

Press Release

In the News


Other SITES exhibitions
| | | |

Mailing Address
PO Box 37012
MRC 941
Washington, DC 20013-7012
202.633.3168 (tel.)
202.633.5347 (fax)

Delivery Address
470 L'Enfant Plaza, SW
Suite 7103
Washington, DC 20024