Tuesday, August 26, 2008

Inspiration for "To the Thawing Wind"

I am going to give a bit of my thought concept and rehearsal process with "To The Thawing Wind" which will be performed at Miller Outdoor Theatre on the September 12 and 13, at Weekend of Texas Contemporary Dance. Originally, I wept when first I heard the Mark O'Connor score "Appalachia Waltz" ---always a good sign that a dance should be born! I have always wanted to explore the midwestern plains girl that I am, and this music spoke of that earthy grounded landscape and the cycles of new life. I look back and think I was heading into a gentler time in my life, having met the man I was going to marry, and this was one of the gentler works I have done. The title eventually came from a Robert Frost poem, that, in summary, releases the poet to come outside after a long winter, the thawing wind at the window. To be outside and part of that new life....too many days inside at a writer's desk (or shut off in a dance studio!) with 6 months of winter make us appreciate the first signs of spring!

Initially, while in rehearsals, (back in 2003) my dancers and I called it the 'hand ballet'. The gestures are reminiscent of American Gothic, with the pitchfork and the crossed arms --- the first phrases in that grouping are the themes that guide the variations for the whole work ... I think of scooped earth and prayer, violins poised and flocks of birds traced across the sky; listening to the earth like a shell in my hand and blowing the dust away .... putting that rock in my pocket and heading back to work .... those are the images of plainsfolk, everyday gestures that are universal. There are also bound gestures that speak of yearning for freedom, yoked pairings that share the burden and teamwork which makes us stronger. Perhaps the dancers are stalks of corn (from Nebraska!), swayed by winds of summer or dry brown reeds aching for the thawing wind of spring after a hard winter. The return to the theme at end in speedy fashion becomes a flock of birds, turned in unison by the buffeting winds, as one voice---arresting in their symmetry. This time when I rehearsed the dancers, I told them we should be able to do this in unison with our eyes closed---but I peek to see if we are.




I think that's what this dance is about...but you may see something else; I'd love to hear what you see and feel as you watch it! Come out and see it at Miller on Friday and Saturday night, September 12,13, 2008

Posted by Sandra Organ Solis 9/7/08

Thursday, May 29, 2008

Sandra Organ Dance Company Celebrates 10 Years of Performances

A decade can seem like a long time, but it goes by quick as a wink if you’re moving fast. Such has been the pace of the Sandra Organ Dance Company, which is celebrating its 10th anniversary this season.

As a prominent soloist with Houston Ballet, Sandra Organ began to take stock of her life and career in the mid-1990s. She looked back at the goals she had achieved and looked ahead to what her future might hold. Her 15 years with Houston Ballet had given her a rich variety of experiences, working with major choreographers in a vast array of dance styles. There had been worldwide tours, beginning with Houston Ballet’s first tour to Europe in 1982, before she had even completed her training in Houston Ballet Academy to become a member of the performing company. And her acceptance into the company as Houston Ballet’s first African American ballerina had been a major milestone in her life.

But a career as a ballet dancer is physically grueling, typically ending when you’re still quite young, and Sandra wondered how much longer her healthy 30-year old body would take the punishment the dance floor delivers daily to all the bones and joints between the toes and the upper spine. So, she entered a period of self-examination, beginning with a book called Artists’ Way, discovering the obstacles to creativity. In the process, she drew strength from her early life to present a solo concert and build her future as a choreographer and director of her own dance company.

Sandra’s destiny to become a dancer had begun as child of five, when she saw Patricia McBride and Edward Villella on television, dancing with the New York City Ballet. Noticing her fascination, her mother found a teacher for her in Omaha, Nebraska, where the family lived. “She just happened to be a British teacher, who taught the same Royal Academy of Dance syllabus that Ben Stevenson was familiar with when I auditioned for Houston Ballet years later,” Sandra remembers.

During high school years at Omaha’s Duchesne Academy, Sandra had created a dance work every year. And when she graduated at the head of her class, she was allowed to replace the traditional valedictorian’s speech to her classmates with a valedictorian’s dance.

In seeking a new direction for her life 10 years ago, she saw her talent as a means to build a bridge between large dance companies and small dance companies. And as a person instilled with strong religious values, she has seen her dancing life as “an earthen vessel,” through which her talent is meant to be shared with others.

“I hope God’s power is magnified through my limited efforts,” she says, “and I just show up with my craft and the best gifts I can offer. And it seems like He uses that and people are touched by it. And that’s a cool thing and an easy way to filter my talent into another realm.”

Shaping a concept is one matter; putting it into practice is another. It took 18 long months to settle all the legal niceties in establishing the company’s non-profit tax-exempt status. In that process the spiritual concept of Earthen Vessels eventually materialized as the company’s official title, while the Sandra Organ Dance Company (SODC) serves as its business name. In the meantime, Sandra immediately got busy lining up performance opportunities, dancers and dance works, and the board of directors needed to establish and support the company.

Its initial engagement was commissioned by Fotofest in the fall of 1998, and this was followed by two appearances at the Jewish Community Center, an evening on Miller Outdoor Theater’s Texas Contemporary Dance Festival, a commissioned evening of dance from the Golden Triangle Chapter of Links (a national association of African-American women) in Beaumont, a couple of fund-raising events and the company’s first annual Black History Month engagement at the University of Houston’s Cullen Performance Hall.

SODC’s second season was even more ambitious, numbering a record 11 appearances. In the eight seasons since then, the company has danced 43 engagements, running anywhere from two-to-nine events in a given season. Its performances have been seen by audiences and surrounding communities as far north as Huntsville all the way west to Austin. The company even performed in Los Angeles, as an emerging ensemble on a conference hosted by the International Association of Blacks in Dance.

Its dance venues have ranged throughout small and large Houston area theater spaces: DiverseWorks, the Ensemble Theatre, Talento Bilingue de Houston, Heinen Theater on the Houston Community College campus, the University of Houston’s Cullen Hall and Moores Opera House, Wortham Center’s Cullen Theater, the Hobby Center’s Zilkha Hall, The Menil Collection, the Jewish Community Center, Richmond State School, St. John the Divine Episcopal Church, Kingwood College, Miller Outdoor Theater and downtown Houston’s Barnevelder Movement/Arts Complex.

During that time, the company has partnered with nearly two dozen dance organizations, in Houston and elsewhere, and has brought students from nearly 50 schools to attend its performances. Building a board of directors, gaining financial support, establishing a stable corps of dancers, finding rehearsal spaces and surviving through economic downturns have all brought challenging moments.

Initially, SODC’s board consisted of a dozen members and now runs between 12 and 20. They include some charter members as well as new people with fresh insights to funding. Much of its early support came through individual contributions and its membership in the Texas Accountants and Lawyers for Artists. Over the decade-long span of SODC’s existence, Houston Endowment, the Houston Arts Alliance, the Mithoff Family Foundation, Target and the Cullen Trust for the Performing Arts have provided key support for SODC’s budget, which has ranged from $60,000 to $200,000.

It has been more of a challenge to build a steady corps of dancers and find available times and proper spaces for them to gather for rehearsals and performances. “Over the middle seasons – 2000-2004 – there was a corps of about six dancers who stayed with me. We were doing things a little differently than other companies at that time. We were paying them for rehearsal time and I was trying to find teaching opportunities for them in the community, so they could sustain themselves. We were doing a number of shows, we were going into the schools, doing choreographic workshops and they were contributing some of the choreography. There are a number of dancers I can call upon for special projects, but building a steady corps is a project that will continue over the next decade,” she concludes.

When it comes to rehearsing her own dancers for a performance, Sandra has been especially thankful for the opportunities provided by her former employer, Houston Ballet, and its executive director, C. C. Connor. “Having worked there for 15 years, I knew there were times when the rehearsal studios were not being used, and he rented space to our company,” she says. Since the completion of the Barnevelder Movement/Arts Complex on Texas Ave, most of her rehearsals are done there.

Tracing the history of her company over the 10-year span, Sandra says, “I’ve always had this juxtaposition of modern dancers and ballet dancers. Early on, everybody got trained in a ballet class. There was continuity of style, a balletic “line,” so that even if I did want to go in a more modern direction, they could put on pointe shoes or they could wear flat shoes and still have that balletic base. They could still do pirouettes and they could still look nice in an arabesque and things like that.

“What I’ve found now is, I have to hire either one or the other. When you can work with a corps of dancers over the years, you can get them to do both stylistically. But for different pieces now, I have to find modern dancers, and I have to find ballet dancers.” At present, she finds dancers from each category better equipped and “coming a little more to the other side now. But,” she says with a good laugh, “there’s resistance to the pointe shoe. And for those already in the pointe shoe, it’s a challenge trying to get them grounded!”

Turning serious, she takes up another topic. “Coming out of the (discipline of) ballet, I want to honor women of different sizes. I wanted to make dances that are about real people, so I didn’t mind if real people walked in the door and didn’t necessarily look like dancers. As long as they could do an arabesque and looked like women, great! That didn’t matter to me. That, to me, is affirming to who I am and who most people are. So, as I say, we’re ballet dancers without the tutus and the tights, and we look like women and we look like men, and we dance like women and men. And sometimes the women are required to do some lifting.” Summing up, she says: “I just feel like, if I’m going to tell stories that are relevant to people today, I have to choose people they look like, sometimes.”

Reviewing the dance works she has created these past 10 years, Sandra feels the works she has created for Black History Month are particularly striking. “You don’t find many artistic directors telling those kinds of stories.” She mentions a piece about Harriet Tubman, or a slave narrative “where I could create a solo about a woman who lived in an attic for seven years, inside a coffin, so she could watch her son grow up. “Those are kind of unsung stories,” she says.

She mentions the honor of memorizing and using the words to a piece she created on Dr. Martin Luther King’s “I have a dream” speech. For that piece, choreographed in 2005, she gathered a group of schoolchildren together, asking them to tell their own dreams. Her choreography incorporated the gestures they made as they spoke.

For a couple of years, her company worked with Rob Smith and his Aura Contemporary Music Ensemble at the University of Houston, where several of her dancers choreographed new works to the music on the program. She also participated in the UH School of Music’s Shostakovich Festival a few seasons back

She worked with the hip-hop company, Fly, to create dances at Miller Theatre. James Sewell’s choreography to Gian-Carlo Menotti’s Amahl and the Night Visitors has become a staple of Houston’s holiday theater season. And in her February program at the Barnevelder Arts/Movement Complex, she staged a major work, There is a Time, by José Limón, the famed Mexican-born choreographer who established a significant modern dance company in New York during the mid-20th century.

Sacred dance has also been an important component of Sandra Organ’s choreography since her very earliest years. While sacred works are sprinkled throughout her repertoire of dances, she is careful to maintain that SODC is not a sacred dance company. Nor is its mission specifically committed to a celebration of her African American heritage. Its mission statement speaks of goals “to promote contemporary dance, educate the public and attract a diverse audience.”

Included in that mission is the goal of having a school of dance associated with her company. In the early 1980s, she felt incredibly fortunate to be awarded a scholarship to study at Houston Ballet Academy and then become a prominent member of the company. Indeed, that had been in line with Houston Ballet’s policy since the company’s earliest years. But looking back a few decades earlier, she also remembers that “my mother grew up in Houston and she sure couldn’t do that.”

Even today, she sees too few opportunities for professional artistic achievement among young people disadvantaged by their ethnic or economic background. So, a dance academy is prominent among her future goals, “and it’s going to be either in the Third Ward or the Fifth Ward,” she says quite firmly.

©2008, Carl R. Cunningham

Saturday, April 26, 2008

Sandra Speaks at Transforming Culture Symposium

Sandra Organ-Solis traveled to Austin at the beginning of April to participate, as a guest speaker, in the Transforming Culture: A Vision for the Church and the Arts. In her presentation she discussed how our physical bodies have the need to express themselves in our worship of God, going from the simple gestures of bowing and hand-clasping to the more elaborate circle and festival dances. In this session she explored five ways in which churches can make use of dance as an aid to our adoration and celebration before God.

Following the presentation, she was interviewed for the WorshipPodcast. You can download the interview or visit WorshipPodcast.com

Friday, March 28, 2008

Sandra Organ interviewed by Pacifica Radio on the Si Se Puede performance



On Tuesday, March 25, 2008, Sandra Organ, artistic director and choreographer for the Sandra Organ Dance Company, was interviewed by Alfonso Rivera on the Son Pacifica radio show. Sandra spoke about the performance of the Si Se Puede piece at Talento Bilingue de Houston. During the interview, which also featured Carlos Solis as a translator into Spanish, Sandra presented a brief history of Cesar Chavez. She also talked about the parallels she sees in the fight for equality by migrant farm workers and by African Americans.
You can listen to the interview here or download it.

Saturday, March 15, 2008

Si Se Puede by Sandra Organ Dance Company

Thursday, March 27, 2008 9:30am and 11:15am student matinees

Friday, March 28, 2008 9:30am and 11:15am student matinees

Friday, March 28, 2008 8:00pm evening performance

Tickets for the student matinees are $5
Tickets for the evening performance are
$10 general admission $8 students $5 senior.

In collaboration with Talento Bilingüe de Houston, Sandra Organ Dance Company will present a full-length dance inspired by the legacy of Cesar Chavez and the history of the migrant farm worker movement. Si Se Puede opens with A Prayer for the Farm Worker, written by Cesar Chavez, and also includes Tata Dios, a dance about a couple and their struggles as migrant farmers. Si Se Puede offers students of all ages a creative and unique perspective on this important issue.

To book a group, please contact Fernando Perez at fernando@tbhcenter.org.

Monday, February 25, 2008

10th Black History Month Performance featured on The Front Row

The following report and interview with Sandra was broadcast on KUHF's The Front Row on February 12th.

The Front Row, 2/21/2008


Musicians from the Aperio: Chamber Music of the Americas chamber series share some of the "African American Spirituals, Popular Songs and Art Music" that they will present in honor of Black History Month. We also hear from Sandra Organ as she prepares to celebrate her 10th anniversary . . .

Choreographer Sandra Organ Solis talks with KUHF's Catherine Lu about her upcoming retrospective program. It celebrates both Black History Month and her company's 10th Anniversary. Performances are thsi weekend at the Barnevelder Movement/Arts Complex. Listen Download


Link to original article

Friday, February 22, 2008

Black History Month Restrospective Featured in the Houston Press

The Houston Press published the following announcement about the 10th SODC Black History Month performance

Black History Month Retrospective
Celebrate the contributions of African-Americans with the Sandra Organ Dance Company
By
Julia Ramey

Sandra Organ Dance Company has two reasons to celebrate this month: First, this season, which they’ve dubbed “A Season to Remember,” marks the contemporary ballet company’s tenth anniversary. Second, February is Black History Month (and a good time for them to present their many African-American-themed works). Today’s Black History Month Retrospective features Suite Louis, set to two songs by Louis Armstrong, and Sojourner, based on Sojourner Truth’s writings about the Civil War’s black regiments. Organ has added her personal history to the mix with Dogan, an autobiographical account of her quest for information about her great uncle. The program also includes dances inspired by the poetry of Maya Angelou and Lucille Clifton, the scientific work of George Washington Carver, and the life of Frederick Douglass. In addition, the company will premiere There Is a Time, by noted choreographer José Limón, based on biblical passages. 7:30 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays, and 2:30 p.m. Sundays. Through February 29. Barnevelder Movement/Arts Complex, 2201 Preston. For information, call 713-225-0677 or visit www.organdance.org. $10 to $15.
Feb. 22-24, 7:30 p.m.; Fri., Feb. 29, 7:30 p.m., 2008


Link to online story

Thursday, February 21, 2008

SODC: "Dance of biblical proportions" in the Chronicle


SODC was featured today in the Houston Chronicle. See the article partially cited below, and follow the link at the bottom for the complete story.


Feb. 20, 2008, 6:21PM
Dance of biblical proportions
Limón classic is centerpiece of anniversary performance

Choreographer Sandra Organ agrees with Ecclesiastes 3: There is a time to dance.

That's why she selected the late José Limón's 1956 masterwork based on these famous Bible passages as the centerpiece of her upcoming 10th anniversary performance.

There Is a Time begins and ends with the performers holding hands in a circle — a perfect metaphor for a decade of dance for this small but dedicated company.

Organ founded the Sandra Organ Dance Company in 1998 shortly after leaving her post as a soloist with Houston Ballet, where she was the first African-American in the company. Since then, she has created work around themes of black history, and this concert also will feature a retrospective of selected works.

Read the complete artice in the Houston Chronicle

Monday, February 4, 2008

SODC Presents Black History Month Retrospective in Conjunction with 10th Anniversary

Press Contact:
Sandra Organ Solis
713.225.0677

Houston, January 31, 2008 – Sandra Organ Dance Company (SODC) is pleased to present a retrospective of a decade’s dance programming to mark Black History Month and the company’s 10th anniversary. Performances will be held at the Barnevelder Movement Arts Complex during the week of February 22 through 29.

The dance repertoire will include excerpts from the following works:
• Carver – based on the contributions of renowned scientist George Washington Carver
• Sojourner – based on Sojourner Truth’s Battle Hymn, a tribute to the black regiments of the Civil War
• Dogan - the autobiographical account of Sandra Organ’s search for information about her great uncle, and a tribute to the black newspapers that helped her uncover his story
• Suite Louis – featuring Louis Armstrong’s Mack the Knife and Dream a Little Dream of Me
• Song of Mary – incorporating seven poems by Lucille Clifton, professor of humanities at St. Mary’s College and former Maryland Poet Laureate
• Phenomenal Women – based on Maya Angelou’s Phenomenal Woman
• Douglass – a newly choreographed collaboration between Sandra Organ and InterActive Theatre based on Frederick Douglass
• There is a Time – Jose Limon’s 1956 work based on Ecclesiastes 3 set to the music of Norman Dello Joio

“We’ve titled our 10th Anniversary as the ‘Season to Remember,’” said Sandra Organ Solis, SODC Founding Artistic
Director. “These excerpts reflect a broad spectrum of black history, and it seemed appropriate to add Limon’s There is a Time as a classic work in a season of retrospectives.”

Performance details are:
• Friday, February 22 7:30 pm
• Saturday, February 23 7:30 pm
• Sunday, February 24 2:30 pm
• Friday, February 29 7:30 pm

• The Barnevelder Movement Arts Complex is located at 2201 Preston at Hutchins [directions]
• Advanced prepaid ticket sales by phone to 713-529-1819 or online at www.barnevelder.org
• Ticket prices are $10 for children and seniors and $15 for general admission
• For more performance information, call 713-225-0677 or visit www.organdance.org

SODC’s performances of There is a Time have been underwritten by the City of Houston's City's Initiative Program through the Houston Arts Alliance, Houston Endowment, and the Texas Commission on the Arts.