Jonathan Hollander Explained

Jonathan Hollander (born June 18, 1951) is an American dancer, choreographer, educator, and artistic director. He founded the Battery Dance Company in New York City in 1976, opening the Battery Dance Studio that same year. He also founded the Downtown Dance Festival,[1] held annually in New York City since 1982. Since 2008, the Downtown Dance Festival has included the Erasing Borders Festival of Indian Dance.[2] [3] As a dance educator, Hollander has been active in bringing dance into the public schools;[4] and is known for the award-winning "Dancing to Connect" program.[5] He is also known for his ties to India,[6] and for presenting and promoting Indian dancers in New York.[7] He is a co-founder of the Indo-American Arts Council.[8]

Early life and education

Hollander is the son of Joan Wolman Hollander, a pianist, and Bernard Moses Hollander, an anti-trust attorney employed by the United States Department of Justice. The dancer was born in Washington, D.C., and grew up in Chevy Chase, Maryland, where he studied piano for 13 years with Robert Parris, Charles Crowder and Ylda Novik.[9] He studied folk dancing as a child at the Chilmark Community Center in Chilmark, Massachusetts; and received his first theatrical experience at the Interlochen National Music Camp, in Interlochen, Michigan, where he performed in a production staged by American choreographer Carolyn Carlson. Hollander traveled to India in 1968 as an American Field Service Exchange Student, where he was first exposed to Indian dance in the class of Parvati Kumar. He began his own, formal dance training while a student at the University of California Irvine, where he studied with Eugene Loring, James Penrod and Janice Plastino.

Career

Hollander left college to pursue a dance career in New York City.[10] There his teachers included Merce Cunningham, Margaret Craske, Dan Wagoner, Dianna Byer, Janet Panetta, and Ann Parson at the Joffrey Ballet School. He first performed for choreographer Twyla Tharp in 1971; and danced with the New York Dance Collective from 1971 to 1975, before launching his own studio and dance troupe in 1976. The studio was located at 54 Stone Street in New York City from 1976 to 1984; and is currently at 380 Broadway. Battery Dance Company is considered a pioneer in expanding New York's arts scene to lower Manhattan. "Cultural activity first surfaced on Wall Street in the early 1970s. Two avant-garde groups, Battery Dance Company and Creative Time,..were founded in lower Manhattan to take advantage of the vacuum of contemporary art and the potential audience of some 500,000 people."[11]

In addition to offering dance classes, the Battery Dance Studio has been the site of salon events featuring such notable Indian artists as Mallika Sarabhai; the Jhaveri Sisters; Sandip Mallick; and Nirupana and Rajendra. The Battery Dance Company has also presented such notable artists as C.V. Chandrasekhar; Tero Saarinen; and Tommi Kitti, and has played host to K. Jayan, Isheeta Ganguly, and the Silesian Dance Theatre of Poland. Swapnasundari and her troupe of Kathakali dancers appeared at the Downtown Dance Festival, making their New York debut. The Janavak National Folk Dance Troupe of India toured the United States in 2001 under the auspices of Battery Dance Company.

Hollander spent three months in India as a Fulbright Lecturer on Dance in 1992, during which time he deepened his connections to the Indian dance community. He taught workshops at the Darpana and Kadamb Institutions in Ahmedabad, M.S. University in Baroda, Nalanda Dance Institute and NCPA in Mumbai; and his company undertook a six-city tour of India. The following year he organized the American debut and tour of the Jhaveri Sisters, renowned exponents of Manipuri Dance. In 1995, Hollander curated "PURUSH: Expressions of Man," a program celebrating male performers representing various classical Indian dance styles including Bharata Natyam, Kathak, Kuchipudi, and Kathakali. This program made its debut at The Music Centre in Chennai; appeared at the Lincoln Center Out-of-Doors Festival; and undertook an 18-city tour of the United States. He has organized various conferences, seminars and town-hall meetings related to Indian dance.

The Battery Dance Company tours nationally and internationally, sometimes as a cultural ambassador under the auspices of the U.S. State Department.[12] [13] It has appeared at such notable venues as Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts in New York City; the Beijing International Modern Dance Festival; Taipei Arts Festival; Open Look Festival in St. Petersburg; Stockholm's Moderna Museet; Hyogo Performing Arts Center in Japan; Cultural Center of the Philippines; National Center for the Performing Arts, in Mumbai; and others.

Choreographic works

Hollander has created more than 75 dances in the course of his career, including the following:

Social activism

On a 2014 tour of India, Battery Dance Company worked with survivors of human trafficking and gender violence, supporting the efforts of EmancipAction and Aspen Institute's Ananta Centre.

Honors and awards

Encore Award, Arts & Business Council, 1981

Bundesverdienstkreuz, Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany, 2018

Notes and References

  1. News: Turning the Audience into the Act . Staub . Mary . August 14, 2007 . The New York Sun . 2019-11-05.
  2. News: Hindu Deities Conjure Magic in Movement Downtown . Macaulay . Alastair . August 19, 2010 . The New York Times . 2019-11-05.
  3. News: Indian Dance: A Rare Look at the Diaspora . Johnson . Robert . August 14, 2008 . The Star-Ledger . 2019-11-05.
  4. News: Dance class keeps phys-ed students on their toes . Irwin . Victoria . May 25, 1988 . The Christian Science Monitor . 2019-11-05 . Astoria, Queens.
  5. Zimmer . Elizabeth . January 2016 . Dancing to Connect . Studio Life.
  6. News: The Twain Shall Meet . Ratnakar . Seetha . June 22, 2017 . The Hindu . 2019-11-05.
  7. News: An Onrushing Tidal Wave Powered by Currents Out of India and New Orleans . Dunning . Jennifer . August 26, 2006 . The New York Times . 2019-11-05.
  8. News: Council set up exclusively to support arts of India . Datta . Jyotirmoy . October 16, 1998 . INDIA in NEW YORK.
  9. News: About New York: A Ballet Company Among Big Business . Shepard . Richard F. . November 3, 1979 . The New York Times . 2019-11-05 . 26.
  10. News: 18 Years Spent Proving 'Dance is not a Frill' . Klatte . Arlene . September 13–26, 1994 . Downtown Express.
  11. News: Wall Street Proves Shaky Turf for the Arts . Saltzman . Cynthia . August 21, 1980 . The Wall Street Journal.
  12. News: Dance: Bit of Joy on the Streets . McDonagh . Don . August 10, 1977 . The New York Times . 2019-11-05 . 61.
  13. News: The Battle for Hearts, Minds, and Toes . Kinetz . Erika . October 29, 2006 . The New York Times . 2019-11-05.
  14. News: Through a Prism of Moods . Kothari . Sunil . February 19, 1994 . The Economic Times.
  15. News: Spirit of Freedom . Sankaranarayanan . Vasanthi . March 13, 1994 . Indian Express.
  16. News: Fine-tuned to Perfection . Verghese . Jincy . March 6, 1997 . The Times of India.
  17. News: Purush--Reasserting Male Position in Dance . Gowri . R . August 27, 1995 . The Economic Times (Madras).
  18. News: Troupes Unwrap Treats at Lunch Hour . Johnson . Robert . August 23, 2006 . The Star-Ledger.