WILLIAMSTOWN, MASS.- Dance We Must: Treasures from Jacobs Pillow, 1906-1940 explores the contributions of Jacobs Pillow founder Ted Shawn and the iconic Ruth St. Denis to American modern dance. Gathering over 350 materials, including more than 30 costumes and accessories, over 200 photographs, five original antique costume trunks, and a dozen original artworks from both the Jacobs Pillow Archives and Williams College Special Collections, the exhibition contextualizes the pioneering work of Shawn and St. Denis within the scope of American art history through artifacts that have never been seen before. Dance We Must is on view at
Williams College Museum of Art from June 29 through November 11, 2018. The opening celebration will take place on July 2, featuring performances by Adam H. Weinert and Williams College Artist-in-Residence in Dance Erica Dankmeyer.
WCMA is known for our dynamic gallery-based art experiences and Jacobs Pillow is of course a renowned center for live dance performance. With this unprecedented collaboration WCMA is able to bring to life many extraordinary objects from Jacobs Pillows groundbreaking history for the first time since they debuted on stage. says Interim Director of WCMA Lisa Dorin. Dance performance, visual art, and archival documents come together to tell important and complicated stories that will be sources of delight, as well as contemplation and inquiry for Williams students and visitors alike.
WCMA has given Jacobs Pillow the extraordinary opportunity to bring so many precious objects from our collection into the light and we are excited to have people enter into the work of Ted Shawn and Ruth St. Denis in this immersive way. We welcome the wide spectrum of responses this exhibit will prompt as an opportunity to critically re-examine dance history and as a platform for discussion about issues of cultural appropriation and privilege, says Jacobs Pillow Director Pamela Tatge.
Ruth St. Denis and Ted Shawn transformed dance in America by developing a style of movement and choreography that sought to connect the physical and the spiritual, often inspired by their understanding of ancient, indigenous, and international sources. Borrowing from a variety of influences percolating through elite culture including Theosophy, the Occult, and Orientalism with specific interests in Buddhism and Hinduism, the two forged new territory in international dance after founding Denishawn, a dance school and performing company in 1915. Denishawn made contributions to what would become a recognizably modern and American style of movement by discarding traditions of European ballet, performing in bare feet, often flexed, rather than pointed, in parallel instead of turned out, and making full-body contact with the floor.
St. Denis and Shawns appropriation of non-Western and indigenous forms of movement was a search for more authentic modes of self-expression than many in their predominantly white and upper class circles believed existed in the industrialized West. However, it is not possible to separate Shawns Native American works from the continued marginalization of indigenous peoples in the United States and globally. Similarly, St. Denis darkening her skin with makeup to appear Southeast Asian can be interpreted as cultural imperialism that brings to the fore white performers privilegethen and nowto adopt at will the identities of people of color. Images, dances, and costumes of Shawn and St. Denis intended to celebrate other cultures may be deeply offensive to contemporary audiences, and the historical context within which they lived and worked will be interrogated in the exhibition narrative and programming.
After separating from St. Denis in 1930, Ted Shawn purchased a rundown farm in the Berkshires known as Jacobs Pillow. There he laid the groundwork for his revolutionary company of Men Dancers and the now internationally-renowned dance festival. Through developing boldly muscular choreography that was influenced by their time farming the land of Jacobs Pillow and building barn-like dance studios and theaters still used today, Shawns Men Dancers choreography placed men, rather than women, as the dominant bodies in dance, and provided insights into discourses of masculinity and queerness in early twentieth century America. His Men Dancers toured the country relentlessly, elevating and reimagining the status of men in dance.
WCMA and Jacobs Pillow are jointly undertaking a project to conserve, research, and fully catalogue these archival materials. The elaborate costumes of St. Denis, Denishawn, and the Men Dancers, some of which date to the early 1900s, are emerging from the original company touring trunks for the first time in decades. The exhibition covers the first three decades of the twentieth century charting the movements of St. Denis and Shawn from Los Angeles to Asia to Becket, Massachusetts.
The rich and varied materials at the Archives demonstrate myriad creative intersections between the visual and performing arts in early 20th century America. Examples include the Denishawn Magazine beautifully designed and printed by the Arts & Crafts community of Roycroft, and Shawns choreography inspired by a suite of abstract lithographs by Katherine Dreier, who championed American avant-garde art and was a patron of both Shawn and Marcel Duchamp. says WCMA Curator Kevin Murphy.
The visceral excitement of a performance by Denishawn or Shawns Men Dancers is difficult for us to imagine today, so the original costumes, set pieces, and other artifacts in this exhibition play an invaluable role in illuminating the beginnings of an American art form. Its thrilling to be able to share some of the Pillows rare treasures in a museum setting where they can be fully seen and appreciated for the first time, says Jacobs Pillow Director of Preservation Norton Owen.
Items on display include Ruth St. Denis headdress and costume from Kuan Yin (1919), created from recycled brooches and costume jewelry, artificial pearls, plastic buttons and glass beads, seen in direct contrast to the ethereal portrayal of the dancer by American painter Albert Herter, also on display; St. Denis vibrant, multi-layered silk satin kimono from O-Mika (1913), derived from an authentic Japanese garment; St Denis swooping peacock costume with a stunning train of silk and lamé fabric decorated with gelatin sequins, first worn in 1914 and re-used until the 1940s; and Ted Shawns Cuadro Flamenco costume, which he purchased from a bullfighter in Seville in 1923.
Opening these trunks, which had been relatively untouched for over half a century, has been incredibly exciting. The majority of the costumes were uncatalogued and have never been exhibited together. One of the most intriguing things for me has been to add color to the black-and-white photo understandings of the Denishawn and Men Dancers companies. I think audiences will be impressed at the huge range of colors as well as materials and techniques used, says Co-Curator, Costume Specialist, and Jacobs Pillow Archives and Preservation Fellow Caroline Hamilton.
Dance We must is organized by WCMA with the Jacobs Pillow Archives and the Williams Theatre and Dance Department. The exhibition is designed by David Gürçay-Morris.
Ted Shawn was born Edwin Myers Shawn on October 21, 1891 in Kansas City, Missouri and grew up in Denver, Colorado. While studying to become a minister, Shawn suffered a bout of diphtheria at the age of 19, leaving him temporarily paralyzed. On the advice of his physician, he took up dance as a form of physical therapy. Dancing cured Shawns paralysis and left him with a passion that would guide and direct him for the rest of his life. Although Shawns first dance experience was with a Metropolitan Opera ballerina and he achieved some success as part of an exhibition ballroom team, it was meeting Ruth St. Denis in 1914 that would set his artistic life in motion. They were married that same year. During the next 15 years, the activities of their Denishawn Company and School changed the course of dance history; most of todays modern dancers trace their ancestry to Denishawn. Shawn and St. Denis separated in 1930 and this also brought about the dissolution of the Denishawn Company. With the purchase that same year of a rundown farm in the Berkshires known as Jacobs Pillow, Shawn laid the groundwork both for his revolutionary company of men dancers and Americas oldest dance festival, which he continued to direct until his death in 1972.
Ruth St. Denis (1879-1968) life was changed in 1906 by a cigarette poster. She was then an eccentric showgirl named Ruth Dennis, touring through Buffalo in David Belascos theater company. When she spotted an advertisement for Egyptian Deities cigarettes in a Buffalo drugstore, the image of the goddess Isis conjured up the idea of a new kind of dance-theater which might tell the entire story of a civilization through movement. This unlikely event would alter the course of modern dance in America. Within a few months, she had emerged as Ruth St. Denis in a solo concert on Broadway, inaugurating a decade of triumphs in various exotic dances fashioned from the folklore of Japan, China, and India. She was sketched by Rodin, courted by Stanford White, and pursued by Ted Shawn (who became both her partner and her husband). Any performance by Miss Ruth was distinguished by her remarkable stage presence. Her solos are difficult to reproduce, as they demand charisma, deft manipulation of costumes and props, and a profound belief in the mystical power of dance. The Denishawn company and school (1914-1929), influenced a generation of disciples including Jack Cole, Martha Graham, Doris Humphrey, and Charles Weidman.