Teresa Trujillo Explained

Teresa Trujillo is a Uruguayan dancer, actor, choreographer, performing arts specialist and political activist.[1] She has created dance and other performances in South America, Europe, and the United States.

Biography

Trujillo was born on April 4, 1937, in the Pocitos barrio of Montevideo, Uruguay7.[2]  Trujillo began dancing at an early age. She studied ballet under Tamara Grigorieva until joining the Elsa Vallarino dance group. Trujillo also studied music at the Kolischer Conservatory.

In 1962, Trujillo moved to New York to study modern dance from Martha Graham and Jose Limon. In 1964, she completed her academic training at the Schola Cantorum in Paris. Trujillo then joined the Karin Waehner company, and began choreographing dances. she began experimenting with music, dance, and painting to create a multidisciplinary act.

By 1966, Trujillo was back in Uruguay. During this period, he found her work censored by the government of Jorge Pacheco Areco, which did not appreciate modern dance. In 1972, Trujillo left the country, spending time in Argentina, Chile, Cuba, Venezuela and Spain. In 1985, after the end of the military dictatorship, she returned to Uruguay.

In the 1990s, Trujillo switched from dance to theatre work, teaching at University of Music . She received up a degree from the Eutonia of Buenos Aires, where she would later teach.

Activism

In the 1960s Trujillo, Graciela Figueroa, Isabel Gilbert and curator Angela Lopez Ruiz created a piece titled Gender and Dance Studies in Pioneers of Action Art I. It aimed to show the experiences of Uruguayan women by using their testimonies and archives.[3]

Moreover, Trujillo's activism extends to the evolution of dance and freedom of expression, something that was heavily censored in Uruguay due to the dictatorship.[4] In an interview with Laura Sand of Voyart, Trujillo explains that freedom was the biggest motivator of dance, and that her body is dance, indicating the liberating nature she achieves from dance.

Artwork

Dance

Escalada, 1969

A 35-minute dance piece regarding the construction of a new building, Alliance Francaise De Montevideo, in Uruguay. The set was a structure of metallic tubes in the center of the future theatre. .[5]

Choreography

Danztrio

Dance group who performed on Caleidoscopio. This group was created as a result of the dynamic lifestyle found in Spain, which made it very difficult for dancers like Trujillo to struggled to situate themselves.

Kaspar

In 1986, Trujillo worked on the national comedy of Kaspar.

Waiting for Godot

Trujillo participated in this version of Waiting for Godot, in which the actors are women. She starred with Susana Castro, Nelly Goitino, and Norma Salvo and given one of her first monologues. Trujillo was short listed for the Revelation Prize.

Select works

Uruguay 1954-1961

Paris 1964-1965

Uruguay 1966-1967

Uruguay 1969-1970

Exile 1972-1984

Cuba 1972-1978

Uruguay 1984-1989

Uruguay 1994-2016

Los Angeles 2017-2018

Exhibits

Awards

Publications

In September 2012, Trujillo and artist Carina Gobbi published Cuerpo a Cuerpo (Body to Body), a biographical book.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Teresa Trujillo. 2013-08-15. Comedia Nacional. es. 2019-05-06.
  2. Web site: BIOGRAFIA. Trujillo. Teresa. Official website. es. 2019-05-06.
  3. Web site: Estudios de género y danza en Pioneras del arte de acción I – La escena expandida (1962/1975).. CCE. es-ES. 2019-05-20.
  4. Web site: Consciencia y movimiento: Entrevista a Teresa Trujillo. Vouyart. en-US. 2019-05-21.
  5. Web site: ESCALADA (1969, Uruguay, 35 min), a Dance Piece by Teresa Trujillo. Vimeo. en. 2019-05-21.
  6. Web site: Jurados Convocatoria 2014 . Fondo Concursable para la Cultura . 2 June 2019.