Kaolack Ibrahima Ndiaye

Pape Ibrahima Ndiaye (Kaolack)
Wednesday, Mar 20 2024, 7:00 PM - 8:00 PM, VAPA Martha Hill Dance Theater
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Wednesday, Mar 20 2024 7:00 PM Wednesday, Mar 20 2024 8:00 PM America/New_York Kaolack Ibrahima Ndiaye OPEN TO THE PUBLIC | A presentation on how Ndaga can be used as a way to decolonize the Senegalese imaginary space and contemporary dance aesthetic. How to deconstruct and radically rethink the concept of archives, historical legacies, and traditions that stand the risk of being lost forever. VAPA Martha Hill Dance Theater Bennington College

OPEN TO THE PUBLIC | A presentation on how Ndaga can be used as a way to decolonize the Senegalese imaginary space and contemporary dance aesthetic. How to deconstruct and radically rethink the concept of archives, historical legacies, and traditions that stand the risk of being lost forever.

Pape Ibrahima Ndiaye (Kaolack) was born and raised in Senegal by his grandmother. Kaolack began his professional dance career at École des Sables in Toubab Dialaw, Senegal. He was a member of Germaine Acogny’s Compagnie Jant-bi from 2001–2007 with whom he toured internationally and danced in works by choreographers including Jawole Willa Jo Zollar and Kota Yamazaki. In 2008, Kaolack became the first Senegalese choreographer to win the pan-African contemporary dance Danse l’Afrique Danse choreographic competition from Africa and the Indian Ocean, in Tunisia with his solo J’accuse. He currently lives between Philadelphia and the Czech Republic. From 2014–2016, he worked with Nora Chipaumire on portrait of myself as my father, which was an incredible experience that opened his mind and furthered his understanding of the aesthetics of the Black body, Black African performing bodies, and the radical Black African presence. Inspired by the Senegalese Ndaga, he created his own dance vocabulary and continued to investigate it and unpack its potential as a technique.

Kaolack’s work is entirely focused on pushing boundaries of space and time, race and gender, liveness, and the full being in the spaces we inhabit and claim as our own, while making space for spirit to be present. It is also about the transmission of embodied knowledge; Our bodily knowledge, the animist information rooted in indigenous cultural dance practices that are connected to ancestral wisdom. His work deconstructs decolonization by creating images that are mesmerizing and futuristic. He received an MFA from the University of the Arts in Philadelphia, PA.