American College Dance Festival comes to Tempe


February 4, 2002

WHAT: The Department of Dance in the Herberger College of Fine Arts at ASU hosts the Southwest Region American College Dance Festival (ACDF). More than 500 out-of-town university dance students and faculty will convene on the Tempe campus for the four-day festival, which includes master classes, concerts and panel discussions. In addition, a panel of three internationally renowned guest artists will adjudicate 57 dance works presented by the participants.

The public will then have a rare opportunity to see, in one concert, some of the best choreography that is being created in the country by a diverse group of innovative choreographers and dance teachers. ACDF Dancers Photo courtesy of Herberger Institute for Design and the Arts. Download Full Image

This gala dance performance that is open to the public will culminate the festival. Of the 57 dance pieces to be presented in the festival, judges will select the best eight to 10 works; these pieces will then be presented in the ACDF Gala Performance.

Of those pieces performed at the gala, a choice number of pieces will then be selected to perform at the Kennedy Center for Performing Arts in Washington, D.C., in May 2002, as part of the National ACDF.

WHEN: The ACDF Gala Performance is March 16, 2002, at 2 p.m. The festival runs March 13-16, 2002. 
WHERE: Paul V. Galvin Playhouse, 51 E. 10th St. on the ASU campus in Tempe.
TICKETS: $14 general admission; $5 students.
INFORMATION, TICKETS: 480-965-6447.

About the festival

The Department of Dance in the Herberger College of Fine Arts at Arizona State University last hosted the American College Dance Festival in 1992. Ten years later, it is one of the largest of nine regional festivals. The department expects more than 500 dance students and faculty from all over the nation.

This is an important opportunity that dancers don’t often get – to spend four intense days teaching, taking a diversity of movement classes and getting vital feedback from established professionals.

The festival boasts three highly respected guest artists: Lynn Simonson, Ralph Lemon and Kim Epifano. This prestigious panel will adjudicate the work and then choose a select number of pieces that will comprise the Saturday night ACDF Gala Performance.

In addition, Margaret Gisolo, the founding chair of the department of dance in the Herberger College of Fine Arts at Arizona State University, will be honored during the festival.

The department of dance is nationally ranked in the top 10 by Dance Teacher Now magazine. Its graduate program is ranked 5th and its undergraduate program is ranked 9th. The ARCO Performance Arts College Guide calls the department one of the “most highly recommended programs” in the country.

Media Contact:
Megan Krause
480-965-8795
megan.krause@asu.edu

Fiber art exhibition at Harry Wood Gallery


February 4, 2002

What: Emerging Places, an MFA thesis exhibition of monumental works made from handmade felt, wool and silk.

Where: Harry Wood Gallery, Art Building, ASU Main, Tempe. (900 Forest Mall on the west side of campus near the intersection of Forest and Tyler Malls.) Download Full Image

Who: Yuko Umeda, a graduate student at the School of Art in the Herberger College
of Fine Arts at ASU.

When: Feb. 11-22.
          Opening Reception: 7-9 p.m., Feb. 11.

Hours: Monday-Thursday: 9 a.m. – 5 p.m.; Friday: 9 a.m. – 3 p.m.

Cost: Always Free

About the Exhibition: Yuko Umeda, a native of Japan and a graduate student at ASU’s Herberger College School of Art, expresses her awe in the natural grandeur of the Arizona landscape through her monumental works of handmade felt, wool and silk. Umeda creates the felt from raw wool using the traditional Japanese technique of Shibori, which involves tie dying in order to create a varied surface.

Living in a different culture and environment, which she says gave her a new perspective of both art and life, has profoundly impacted Umeda. Her desire to make monumental works of felt is a direct result of her move to Arizona to study art at the Herberger College.

“I have been very impressed with the immense scale of the natural environment in places such as the Grand Canyon,” Umeda says. “The impact on my artwork has been significant. Through my work, I would like to evoke the emotions similar to those I encounter when I see the enormous landscape.”

About the Image: White Walls, 2002, by Yuko Umeda

The Harry Wood Gallery is one of three galleries on the ASU Tempe campus operated by students, staff and faculty of ASU’s School of Art in The Katherine K. Herberger College of Fine Arts. The Harry Wood Gallery features solo thesis exhibitions and group shows by graduate students pursuing master of fine arts (MFA) degrees and group shows by undergraduate students.

Media Contact:
Jennifer Pringle
480-965-8795
jennifer.pringle@asu.edu