![]() ![]() The Knox student performance, titled "What You Got," was one of 10 pieces performed at the show. I didn’t know I wanted to dance when I came to Knox, and now it’s taken over my whole life.” “I think this will be one of the highlights of my Knox career,” Chehmani said. Though the week was physically exhausting, they felt every practice session was energized by the movement of the art and the enthusiasm displayed by Aerial Dance Chicago Choreographer Lauren Reed. These students auditioned for the professional troupe at the start of spring term and were hand-selected to participate in the public performance.Īicha Chehmani ’24 was selected as a dancer and spent three hours practicing each day of the residency to learn the routine. Six Knox students, five dancers and one lighting designer, were selected to participate in the final residency performance held at the Orpheum Theatre on Saturday, April 15. The team also guided Knox dancers in using silk climbing ropes, a stage apparatus used during Aerial Dance Chicago’s live performances. ![]() Professional dancers on the Aerial Dance Chicago team spent the week working alongside Knox students in workshops and artist talks. Some of the newest trends to develop from aerial silks are aerial yoga and aerial suspension training.Knox College partnered with Aerial Dance Chicago to host a dance residency from April 10-15, 2023. Aerial dance training used to be limited to Olympic level gymnasts and circus performers, but now it is being offered to the public as a dance and fitness program. It is an exciting time for this new aerial style, because it is gaining popularity yet it continues to explode with new developments. Debbie Parks, another aerial innovator does a silk performance from a hot air balloon. Aerial silk artists cannot wear safety harnesses, because it would get tangled in the fabric. Normally aerial silk artists work between 18-35’ but there is really no limit to how high it can be done. The fabric is supple and pliable, and is wrapped and unwrapped around various parts of the body. Poses and sequences often borrow from older aerial arts forms like trapeze or rope, but new ones are constantly being discovered, including dynamic movements like drops, slides, and rolls. The technology to create synthetic fabrics strong enough to hold the incredible amounts of weight of high impact drops has only been around for less than 50 years. The beauty of the silky material wrapping around the aerialists body is matched only by the breath-taking courage it takes to be suspended several stories above the ground. The suspense builds as an aerialist wraps complex, multi-dimensional sequences, then drops into a death-defying free-fall until the last second when they catch themselves mere feet from the ground. ![]() Aerial silk artists climb, twist, spin, drop, and contort themselves on fabric curtain sheets that hang from the ceiling. What are aerial silks?Īerial silks, also known as aerial fabrics, aerial tissue, aerial ribbons, or aerial curtains is one of the newest and most challenging, yet most awe inspiring and versatile aerial art forms. Cirque du Soleil popularized the concept of aerial arts as a dance form and theatrical expression rather than a purely gymnastic movement art. It has continued to evolve and is gaining national recognition as a fitness program. Aerial silks (also known as aerial fabric, aerial tissue, aerial ribbon, or aerial curtain), trapeze, lyra (aerial hoop, cerceau), aerial rope (corde lisse, Spanish web), aerial sling (aerial hammock), and aerial net are a few of the more popular apparatuses, although aerialists are also known to invent their own equipment. It is an incredibly demanding art form that requires a high degree of strength, power, flexibility, courage, and grace to master.Īerial dance shares a fundamental movement vocabulary with circus arts, where high-flying acrobatic feats are used to amaze audiences. Aerial dance is the broad term for a style of modern dance that incorporates the use of hanging equipment, also called aerial apparatuses. ![]()
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