CWF LEAD ARTISTS: JOSÉ FRANCISCO BARROSO
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Full Circle

jose francisco barroso

Project Title:  Full Circle
Recipient Organization:  DREAM Dance Company
Fiscal Sponsor:  Destiny Arts Center
Lead Artist:  José Barroso
Genre and Date Awarded:  Traditional Arts, 2005 
To Be Presented:  May 19-21, 2006 at Laney College Theater, Oakland


Afro-Cuban folklorist and choreographer José Francisco Barroso and DREAM, an Oakland-based urban dance company that grew out of Destiny Arts Center, are collaborating to create “Full Circle,” an exploration of historic, social, and aesthetic links between Afro-Cuban Rumba and African-American Hip-Hop. The finished work, a 20-minute dance-theater piece will be premiered May 19-21, 2006, at Oakland’s Laney College Theater and toured both as a stand-alone work and part of DREAM’s repertory.

Although Rumba and Hip-Hop were born of different eras and lands, Barroso developed skills in both as a young man in Cuba and notes that similar social environments sparked their development. He sees both cultures as growing out of an overwhelming need for self-expression and release from existing stresses and oppressive living conditions.  To this end, music, dance, clothing, and language were re-created, both to express joy as well as to be tools of transformation. In addition to integrating both Hip-Hop and the Afro-Cuban tradition within his solo movement vocabulary, and his years of choreographing group works within the Afro-Cuban tradition, “Full Circle” will be Barroso’s first chance to explore with a professional dance company the intersections of these two distinct cultural forms.

Launched in September 2002, DREAM Dance Company brings innovative urban folk art and culture to the stage to tell personal and collective stories of struggle, transformation, and inspiration.  Central to its collaborative process is the ability of the dancers to contribute creatively to the artistic process.  Development of “Full Circle” begins with Jose Francisco Barroso teaching technique, creating choreography, and directing rehearsals with the members of DREAM dance ensemble. DREAM’s Artistic Director, Naomi Bragin, will collaborate creatively on the choreography and is responsible for production of “Full Circle’s” May 19, 2006 premiere. As all participating artists have heavy touring and performing schedules, rehearsals will be videotaped and the tapes exchanged among the principals for critique and development of the work.  Barroso and Bragin together will select musicians, designers, and any other participating artists.   

Rumba describes a form of community gathering—the word itself is derived from African root words meaning “to gather and dance” or “to have a party.” According to Yvonne Daniel, in Rumba, Dance and Social Change in Cuba, it “flourished in urban and rural settings where Cuban workers of all colors and occupations [gathered to share] their Creole heritage in music and dance…where free blacks gathered to communicate their feelings or comment on their struggles and enslaved Africans were permitted to congregate after work.”  These communities lived, gathered, and danced in urban quarters known as solares and from the solares, the culture of Rumba became popularized as a “vehicle of liberation and protest.”  By 1962, the Cuban revolutionary government institutionalized Rumbaas a national dance.  To this day, the Rumbacircles at Sabado de la Rumba, a weekly gathering place in Havana, draw Cubans to dance, play music, and sing.  The artistic disciplines that have been integrated into Rumbaare incredibly diverse, including traditional Yoruban religious songs and rhythms and the reenactment of folktales.

“Full Circle” also explores Hip-Hop as a culture that has developed over the course of the past 30 years, in many respects like a folkloric cultural tradition.  It draws on multiple stylistic influences, from the early 1970s funk styles of Poppin’, Lockin’ and Boogaloo, to Salsa and Rumba, to the 1920s and 30s Jazz and Tap, to Native American Fancy Dance, and Brazilian Capoeira.  According to Hip-Hop dancer and historian Mr. Wiggles, Hip-Hop “in its origin was about celebration, partying, and having fun.” It shares Rumba’s tradition of storytelling in its creation of theatrical characters, gestures, and movement sequences, drawing inspiration from its environment.  It also shares Rumba’s story as a form arising from a culturally diverse urban setting and expressing the need for social change.

Born in Havana, at a very young age, José Francisco Barroso was dancing the popular Cuban styles of Son, Casino, Rueda, and Rumba.  As a teenager, he competed and was recognized throughout Havana for his skills in the American forms of Hip-Hop and break dance.  Literally discovered dancing on the street corner in Havana, Barroso was mentored by director of Cuba’s Compania Folklorica Raices Profundas, Juan de Dios Ramos, and rapidly began his journey and career as a principle dancer and soloist of Afro-Cuban dance. Today, director and choreographer José Francisco Barroso is regarded as among the foremost authorities on Afro-Cuban dance, music, and folklore. He continues to expand and exhibit his already impressive knowledge of Yoruba traditional practices by studying and collaborating with numerous Cuban and African masters of drum, dance and culture.

DREAM Dance Company brings innovative urban folk art and culture to the stage to tell personal and collective stories of struggle, transformation and inspiration. Rooted in elements of Hip-Hop culture, DREAM’s stylistic repertoire integrates a breadth of African diasporic movement, including Hip-Hop, House and Afro-Caribbean dance. DREAM’s work explores the intersections of these traditions and the cultures from which they arise, utilizing dance, theater, poetry and beatbox.

LEAD ARTIST

José Francisco Barroso
Born in Havana, José Francisco Barroso’s childhood was enveloped in Cuba’s rich artistic and spiritual environment.  At a very young age Barroso was dancing the popular Cuban styles of son, casino, rueda, and rumba.  Barroso describes these movements as an expression of everyday life in Cuba and as a symbol of the vibrancy of the Cuban people.  As a teenager, Barroso competed and was recognized throughout Havana for his skills in the American forms of hip-hop and break dance.  Literally discovered dancing on the street corner in Havana, Barroso was mentored by director of Cuba’s Compania Folklorica Raices Profundas, Juan de Dios Ramos, and rapidly began his journey and career as a principle dancer and soloist of Afro-Cuban dance.

Immersed in the dance and music tradition of his ancestors, Barroso delved ever deeper into the significance and roots of his culture.  Today, director and choreographer José Francisco Barroso is regarded as among the foremost authorities on Afro-Cuban dance, music, and folklore.  His extensive training and dedication yield Barroso accreditation as an Omo Ayán, master of the consecrated Bata; Palo ÑaÑganaga, keeper of knowledge in the Congolese tradition; Omo Elegba, priest of the Orisha Elegbá; and Awo Ifa, high priest of Orunmila.

Barroso was a California Arts Council Artist-In-Residence Grant recipient for the years 1995-2000, teaching extremely popular classes for children and adults, in arts centers, community centers, and public schools, and is a 2006 recipient of the ACTA Living Cultures Grant Program.  In addition to private dance studios, Barroso has held residency at several universities and colleges such as Stanford University, California State University Sacramento, San Jose State University, Humboldt State University, San Francisco State University, New College of San Francisco, Laney College, and Mills College.

Barroso continues to expand and exhibit his already impressive knowledge of Yoruba traditional practices by studying and collaborating with numerous Cuban and African masters of drum, dance and culture.

OTHER COLLABORATING ARTISTS

Naomi Bragin

Naomi Bragin, founder and Artistic Director of DREAM Dance Company, is a multifaceted dancer, choreographer, teacher and director with a personal style that integrates the rhythms and spirit of Hip-Hop, House, African, Latin and Modern dance.  Exposed to music at birth by her mother, a concert pianist, by the age of four Naomi was performing classical violin repertoire and soon entered competitions in and around Los Angeles and at the Idyllwild music camp. Her passion for dance developed in the underground clubs and parties of Los Angeles and New York in the 1990s and she was awarded the BA in Dance Choreography and Performance by Wesleyan University in Connecticut in1995.

Since moving to Oakland in 1997, Naomi has created and produced events celebrating the unique urban culture of the Bay Area.  In 2001, she received a California Arts Council grant to create Free Style Fridays, a popular weekly freestyle dance session in West Oakland that connected Bay Area youth with professional dancers and DJs.  This innovative event was among the first to introduce West Coast youth to House dance and music. 

Her exploration into the cultural roots of the various dance forms performed by the DREAM Company has brought Naomi to their source, studying with legendary dancers in New York, Cuba and Brazil.  Most recently, she toured the islands of Mindanao and Kalinga, studying indigenous Pilipino tribal dance and culture.   Support from the Zellerbach Foundation, Creative Work Fund, East Bay Community Foundation and PUEBLO among others has allowed DREAM to bring its unique blend of dance performance to national audiences exceeding 25,000.

Naomi is Artist-in-Residence for Youth-In-Arts and Performing Arts Workshop, has collaborated with theater director Ellen Sebastian-Chang and performed with Mambo Romero Dance Company, Pearl Ubungen and the Emma Said Dance Collective. She has served as Director of Dance for San Francisco's Robeson Rivera and Life Learning Academies and worked from 2000-2002 as Co-Director of Oakland’s Destiny Arts Youth Performance Company.

Naomi is a practitioner of the Afro-Cuban spiritual tradition, Lukumi. She feeds her love of music as a party DJ, spinning Hip-Hop, Soul, Dancehall and House.

www.naomibragin.com

Dream Dance Ensemble

Founded in September 2002 by Artistic Director Naomi Bragin, DREAM has performed for over 25,000 people at 60 venues throughout California and nationally. DREAM dedicates a portion of each season to bring their multidisciplinary shows and workshops to local schools and community events, activating young people’s awareness of these vital cultural traditions.

Dig Us Now, DREAM’s current touring production, focuses on the dance cipher, a circle where the dancers battle, get down, and seek spiritual elevation, trading personal and collective stories in movement. Dig Us Now is an evolution story of African-American music and dance told through movement, rhyme and ritual. Dig Us Now showcases each company member’s unique style, representing the diversity of cultural dance forms that make up the collective voice of a community, finding inspiration and freedom through physical artistic expression. DREAM is available for excerpts and full-length performances of Dig Us Now, as well as dynamic, in-depth workshops in Dance Technique & Performance, Word Flow, Hip-Hop Theater and Violence Prevention & Conflict Resolution.

DREAM Dance Company has received funding and support from East Bay Community Foundation, PUEBLO, Zellerbach Foundation, the Creative Work Fund, Destiny Arts Center and individual donors and volunteers.
Contact:
www.dreamdancecompany.org
dream@dreamdancecompany.org