The arts are an outlet, a safe place to try something new and push the limits. During the past year, performance arts programs at the CSU have provided students with that space: to wrestle with their identity, experiment with new technology and storytelling techniques or cope with life’s challenges. Here are a few examples.
A Question of Identity
“Art is so much more interesting when it's [by and about] real people," says Eric Kupers,
California State University, East Bay theater and dance professor. “Every individual person is so unique and so different, and that's what's beautiful about humanity." It's that concept that led Kupers to organize the inaugural
Inclusive Performance Festival at Cal State East Bay to celebrate all identities and art forms.
“By inclusion, I mean everybody's included: all bodies, abilities, disabilities, identities, ethnicities. But also all art forms and all aspects of our life," Kupers says. “Arts aren't something you do on the side as a nice thing; everything is woven into everything else: cooking and building and security and financial concerns. All of that is interwoven with the arts. And so, one side of the Inclusive Performance Festival aims to explore what is possible."
The month-long festival brought together artists from across the campus and the local community for virtual and outdoor events. It included annual shows like the Spectrum Showcase that supports autistic artists and their collaborators, lectures like a talk by dancer and author Emmaly Wiederholt on her book project “Discussing Disability in Dance," workshops like the introduction to the south Indian dance form Mohiniyattam and other performances like a drag show featuring underground drag artists.
The campus's cultural organizations were also invited to participate. As part of the festival, the
Pilipinx American Student Association (PASA) put on its annual
Pilipinx Consciousness Night, titled KAI, to raise awareness around the Pilipinx community.
A group of students at CSUEB perform the Muslim dance called Sua Ku Sua as part of Pilipinx Consciousness Night.
“We had the chance to learn and talk about history and stories that aren't taught in school and show our communities why they are valued and important to society," says Lorenzo Miro San Diego, a CSUEB computer science senior, PCN co-director and PASA student representative. “Having an Inclusive Performance Festival is important because we can show communities and people from all walks of life that their stories can be told no matter what barriers might come their way … Especially in today's political and social climate, it is important everyone's stories are seen, respected and heard so their stories are passed on to and understood by future generations."
The schedule also featured this year's spring dance concert, “Wandering in the Wilderness."
Ensemble members Ina Gonzalez-Valenzuela and Scott Duane perform “Wandering in the Wilderness.”
“With everything that happened [in 2020], we needed to break free and heal, and that is what we did together," says Ina Gonzalez-Valenzuela, a CSUEB senior double-majoring in theater and dance and psychology and a “Wandering in the Wilderness" collaborator. “This is what 'Wandering in the Wilderness' is about. All of us were realizing we needed change. But how do we do that? Our first step was leaving behind old ways and saying goodbye to our past traumas and traditions that no longer serve us."
Technological Experimentation
As the curtain lifts on the opera “Gianni Schicchi," performed by the
California State University, Northridge opera and orchestra, the online audience views not a typical stage, but rather a drawn 14th-century mansion.
Directed by Professor Maurice Godin, the
animated opera, in which a greedy family seeks to inherit wealth after the death of a relative, grew from a months-long partnership between the CSUN opera, theatre department, CSUN Symphony Orchestra and animation department. “There was a need to keep the opera alive and find ways of performing virtually [during the pandemic]," says opera executive director, music director and professor Mercedes Juan Musotto.