Get ready for a double bill of world premiers from two contemporary (and contemporaneous) choreographers with connections to New York.
Ivy Baldwin founded her eponymous company in 1999, while still an MFA student at NYU Tisch Dance. Learn more about the company here.
Jeanine Durning is from New York, holds a BFA from NYU Tisch Dance, and began making solo work in 1998. Learn more about her work here.
Office Hours: Coming Soon
Get Into It
Get Thee to the LIbrary
Recommended readings to get you in gear for the show.
Lucía Piquero Álvarez. Contemporary Dance Choreography and Spectatorship: Embodied Emotion. Palgrave Macmillan, 2024.
Shantel Ehrenberg, Kinaesthesia and Visual Self-Reflection in Contemporary Dance (2021).
Rudi Laermans, Moving Together: Making and Theorizing Contemporary Dance. Valiz/Antennae Series, 2015.
André Lepecki, Singularities: Dance in the Age of Performance. Routledge, 2016.
Leena Rouhiainen, Kirsi Heimonen, Rebecca Hilton, Chris Parkinson, editors, Writing Choreography: Textualities of and Beyond Dance. Routledge, 2024.
Read All About It: Ivy Baldwin Dance
Gibney Dance | Spring 2020
Artists Reach Out: Ivy Baldwin
“I care most about being in a room together with other artists—experimenting, making, laughing, discussing, and then sharing these works with people who appreciate contemporary art.”
Brooklyn Rail | Oct 2019
Review: Ivy Baldwin Dance’s Quarry at Manitoga
Quarry feels deeply site-specific while remaining mysterious and a little unsettling.
New York Times | May 30, 2017
Her Longtime Dancer Died. Instead of Moving On, She Embraced Loss.
“It was too big and too traumatic to put aside and think about something else.”
New York Times | Dec 11, 2022
Review: In ‘Folds,’ Caught Between Laughter and Grief
Baldwin, who has been steadily making dances in New York for nearly 20 years, is not one to overload her audience with contextual clues.
Read All About It: Jeanine Durning
Movement Research | Apr 7, 2025
The Knowing is a Trap: A Conversation
“I think being creatively naive is very useful and opens up more possibilities.”
New York Times | Sept 10, 2015
Review: Jeanine Durning’s ‘To Being,’ a Dance Premiere in Queens
This marathon of a dance enmeshes the dancers so wholly in doing, doing, doing that you can’t imagine them being done.
Movement Research | Oct 28, 2013
Jeanine Durning in Conversation with Lightsey Darst
“The funny thing about choreographers these days… is that it is a necessity to write well and if you don’t, you really can’t survive.”
Brooklyn Rail | Oct 2015
Review: Jeanine Durning's To Being
Durning’s physicality is quick but not angular.