‘Joy, inspiration, relief’ as Dance Center reopens studios
The Dance Center reopened this fall with a mix of in-person and hybrid classes in styles ranging from ballet to soca. After a year of dancing at home in front of screens, many students are celebrating the return to the studio.
Among them was Akarsh Raghunath, a Ph.D. student from New Delhi, who jumped at the chance to learn bharatanatyam, a form of Indian classical dance, in person. “The beats of the music, movement of the body, and consciousness of space, along with the discerning eye of the teacher, cannot be best experienced online,” Raghunath said. “Dance is a community experience.”
Reaction to the studios reopening has been overwhelmingly positive, according to Elizabeth Epsen, communications and programs coordinator of the Dance Center.
“The Dance Center is a home for so many,” Epsen said. “And after a year of dancing in our living rooms, kitchens, dorm rooms, tennis courts, parks, and Harvard lawns, to be able to dance and move together in these specialized spaces for dance has been a great source of joy, inspiration, and relief.”
Liliana Price ’25 (from left), Jane Li ’22, and Margaret Cote ’22 warmed up.
Dancers moved in pairs, including Manyatta (left) and Djibril Rushingabigwi ’22.
Jasper Schoff ’22 (left) and Li spun to the music. Dancers waved their flags in “Soca Fusion” class. Pictured are Medical School student Maetal Haas-Kogan ’19 (from left); Rui Sun, a visiting fellow at the Harvard-Yenching Institute; teaching artist Makeda Wallace; Ph.D. student Mitali Bafna; and Medical School student Bezaye Teshome. The hybrid class broadcasted from the studio to remote students.
Sun and Wallace stretched.
Haas-Kogan (from left), Sun, Wallace, and Teshome danced in union. Teaching artist Joh Camara led “West African Dance.”
Prince Jenkins, a student at Harvard Divinity School, and Riya Kapoor ’24 practiced moves.
Sunanda Narayanan (center) taught “Bharatanatyam.” Students included Akarsh Raghunath (from left), a Ph.D. student in the Department of History of Art and Architecture, and Samantha Jones, a doctoral candidate in music.
Jones and Raghunath learned bharatanatyam hand gestures.
Artist-in-residence Nailah Randall-Bellinger (not pictured) led a rehearsal for an upcoming performance with professional dancers Imani Deal (from left), Toni Singleton, Jenny Oliver, and Patricka James.
Randall-Bellinger (seated) instructed the choreography.