nialoveDance
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nialoveDance

New York City, New York, United States | Established. Jan 01, 2013

New York City, New York, United States
Established on Jan, 2013
Solo World Avant-garde

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Music

The best kept secret in music

Press


"Infinite Body"

A. Nia Austin-Edwards explores the world of dance artist Nia Love
I'd like to welcome guest writer A. Nia Austin-Edwards who has contributed a fascinating profile of New York-based dance artist Nia Love. Both women demonstrate profound commitment to art in the context of culture and community. Their inspiring professionalism, generosity and creativity make it a pleasure and honor to share my space at InfiniteBody with them. Please enjoy. - Eva Yaa Asantewaa


"Congregation of Survival – Lost and Found Platform"

Nia love as collaborative ensemble choreographer with Skeleton Architecture - by MAURA DONOHUE in DANCE


"IMPRESSIONS: nia love's "g1(host): lostatsea" at Gibney"

Choreography/Direction: nia love
Performers: Iquo B. Essien, Lela Aisha Jones, Jesse Phillips-Fein, nia love, Veleda Roehl
Music Composition/Live Performance: Antoine Roney, Nioka Workman
November 8, 2019 - By Cecly Placenti


"g1(host): Transatlantic Embodied Memoirs."

A beginning component to a soon to be published book- g1(host): Transatlantic Embodied Memoirs. - nia love and Benin Ford


Discography

Presently, love lives in unseated Lenape Nation known as New York. Their career spans forty years, beginning in 1978 becoming one of the youngest international apprentices with Ballet Nacional de Cuba. Received a  BFA in Theater Directing and pre Medicine from Howard University and an MFA  in Choreography from Florida State University. In 1996 studied Butoh and toured with Japanese Butoh master Min Tanaka and received the honorary Fulbright Fellow in 2002-03. love has numerous awards and honors including, a Bessie's award for Most Outstanding Performer on behalf of Skeleton Architecture, CUNY Incubator Grant,the NYLA/Suitcase Fund, Alvin Ailey’s  New Directions Lab Choreographer Award,Movement Research Artist-in-Residence and Movement Research Exchange Guest Artist/Lecturer at UCLA, and the CUNY Dance Initiative to name a few.

 Love, a recipient of the 2019 Gibney Presents Residency and Gibney|DiP, and  

 presently an Urban Bush Women’s  2019-20 Choreographic Center Initiative Fellowship, a recipient of 2020 MAP Fund,  a 2020-21 Guest Artist at Bryn Mawr College. 

Most recently love received the MANCC (Maggie Allesse National Center for Choreography) Residency, and the Movement Research Rosin Fund Residency.Currently Brooklyn Arts Exchange AIR co-Advisor and NYLA’s  Fresh Tracks Advisor. 

Love presently serves as an Assistant professor adjunct at Queens College and New school|Eugene Lang College of Liberal Arts.


Full Bio

nia love lives in the unseated Lenape Nation known as New York. nia’s career spans forty years, beginning in 1978 when she became one of the youngest international apprentices with Ballet Nacional de Cuba. She received a BFA in Theater Directing from Howard University, and an MFA  in Choreography from Florida State University. In 1996, she studied Butoh and toured with Japanese Butoh master Min Tanaka. She received the honorary Fulbright Fellow in 2002-03 for her research in Ghana. nia has numerous awards and honors including a Bessie's award for Most Outstanding Performer as part of the ensemble Skeleton Architecture, CUNY’s Incubator Grant for research in Tobago, the NYLA/Suitcase Fund for her work in Tanzania, Alvin Ailey’s New Directions Lab Choreographer Award, Movement Research Artist-in-Residence, Brooklyn Arts Exchange/BAX Artist-in-Residence, Movement Research Exchange Guest Artist/Lecturer at UCLA, the CUNY Dance Initiative. Gibney|Dance-in-Process and Gibney Presents commission. Currently, she is a Urban Bush Women’s  2019-20 Choreographic Center Initiative Fellow, a recipient of 2020 MAP Fund, and a 2020-21 Guest Artist at Bryn Mawr College. 

In 2021, nia received the Maggie Allesee National Center for Choreography (MANCC) Residency, the Movement Research Rosin Fund Residency, and the EYEBALA award at Gibney Dance  She is currently the Brooklyn Arts Exchange Artist-In-Residence Co-Advisor and New York Live Arts Fresh Tracks Advisor. Love presently serves as an Assistant professor adjunct at Queens College and New school|Eugene Lang College of Liberal Arts.



Photos

Bio

g1(host):lostatsea

A serial, multi-media performance and site of study, g1(host): lostatsea marks my continuous engagement with the memory, prolonged histories, and “afterlives” of transatlantic slavery. An unfolding of the term “ghost”, the work pursues questions regarding my body's status within historical, geographical and atmospheric limits, and pivots on this fundamental query: what remains of the Middle Passage as force, gesture, and affect?  As an elaboration of this ongoing series, g1(host)lostatsea occupies an underwater realm; I sift through themes of loss, alchemy, geological debris, and generational accretions, to trace a dense, energetic nothingness. Here, “wake work,” as scholar Christina Sharpe asserts, operates as a mode of suspension, a sensory field of historical being, an oceanic black thing that we’re all drenched by and in.

Drawing from the research tools set forth by historian Saidiya Hartman’s “critical fabulation,” a writing methodology combining historical research with critical theory and fictional narrative to make sense of the gaps in the archive of transatlantic slavery, I extend this method into multimedia performance. Beginning in 2013 with a collaboration with female farmers and dancers in Tanzania titled S(oil), g1(host) has undergone several iterations. That starting point explored the cultivation of land and the intimacies between ecology and black life. A May 2016 performance at Snug Harbor, NY, evoked the geography of the New World plantation as staging area for genres of fugitive escape and the economies of movement and narrative within confinement. In April 2017, a staging at Theater For the New City (NYC) featured an engagement with the thought presented in Christina Sharpe’s groundbreaking text, In The Wake: On Blackness and Being. Sharpe’s powerful notions of “wake work” as the necessary reckoning with the deathworlds that structure black life, serves as a further impetus to this project. In this iteration, the re-telling of childhood stories and memories of my late father propelled me to excavate my relationship to water and the histories it holds. This led me to a more direct encounter with the ocean and the remnants of the Middle Passage. In June 2018, I acquired my deep sea diving license and traveled to Tobago to do free dives, which were filmed underwater. These arduous descents recalled the experience of drowning slaves, who were thrown or jumped overboard, while also pulling me into an oceanic realm which intensely disoriented my bodily instincts. Here, I revisit Sharpe, who speaks of the “residence time” of the ocean as the life cycle of the elements cast into its waters. The sodium of human blood, for instance, has a residence time of 260 million years. Being submerged in the density of these ungraspable sediments and encountering the shimmer of life and death requires a rigorous attunement of my attention. In g1(host), we enter into this residence time and let it shape and change our sensorium, as we seek clues of the continuum between past disaster and present possibility. 

A Gibney Dance-in-Process residency in June 2019, brought these ongoing concerns back to shore, where I began to expand this project from a solo performance to a group endeavour. During this time, we hosted Professor Sharpe from Toronto for three days, and exchanged ideas with dramaturge Katherine Profeta. A distinctly underwater movement practice began to emerge through a series of generatives that challenge us to remain non-locatable: such as free float, slippage, bubble, rift, tracing clues to a map that disintegrates when we touch it.  We premiered the first iteration premier of g1(host):lostatsea as a group mix-media 
performance at Gibney in November 2019.  Presently, in times of COVID, we have become increasingly aware of what is safe-space for people and how that places labor both on the viewer and performer as we each regulate distance and proximity, togetherness and apartness. 

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