History
VCU Dance became a BFA program in 1981, moving from the Physical Education Program into the VCU School of the Arts. Compared with many of the nation’s most acclaimed and well-established dance programs which have been developing since the 1950s, VCU Dance has created and refined an exceptional BFA Degree Program in a relatively short amount of time. Over the last ten years, VCU Dance has soared into national visibility and recognition with the success of its BFA program and of its students, faculty, and alumni, as well as the celebrity of its guest artist program.
- The percentage of VCU Dance students from outside of Virginia has grown from 11%
in 1996 to nearly 50% in 2008.
- The application pool has grown, making the program more competitive. In 1996, the
program accepted 80% of those who auditioned. In 2006 the department accepted 35%
of the dancers who auditioned.
- The program has gone from having a shortage of male dancers—typical of dance
programs in the United States—to becoming a leader in increasing male dancer enrollment. Currently, 18% of VCU Dance students are male, surpassing the national average of 13% male students in BFA dance programs, according to the Higher Education Arts Data Service (HEADS) reports of the National Association of Schools of Dance (NASD).
- VCU Dance has become a fully accredited member of the National Association of
Schools of Dance.
- In 1996, VCU Dance students primarily performed in Richmond. VCU students are now
being invited to perform in major dance venues such as the Kennedy Center and
Danspace Project at St. Mark’s in New York; VCU Dance alumni are joining major dance companies such as the Jose Limón Dance Company, Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company, Tere O’Connor, Chuck Davis, and Hubbard Street 2.
- VCU Dance faculty and chair have become leaders in dance in higher education.
For example, Dr. James Frazier, Chair, received CODA’s 2006 Alma Hawkins Award for Emerging Excellence in Leadership in Dance in Higher Education. Martha Curtis, Professor and former Chair, is currently serving as President of the Council of Dance Administrators (CODA), an invited forum of executives from the nation’s leading 25 dance programs.
Over the years VCU Dance has had a commitment to bringing breadth and depth to the curriculum. The curriculum now includes extensive education in modern dance and choreography with additional curriculum in ballet, dance history, pedagogy, somatics, African dance, jazz, tap, contact improvisation, video/choreography, dance management, kinesology, and yoga. We also offer weekly workshops in a variety of dance areas not covered in the regular curriculum. Guest artist have included Heidi Weiss, Daniel Gwirtzman, Miguel Gutierrez, Tania Isaac, Meisha Bosma, Jawole Willa Jo Zollar, Urban Bush Women, Monica Bill Barnes, Robert Battle, Gerri Houlihan, Limón Dance Company, Tere O’Connor, Doug Varone and the Doug Varone Dance Company, The Martha Graham Dance Company, Paul Taylor, Garth Fagan Dance Company, Joe Goode and The Joe Goode Performance Company, David Dorfman and David Dorfman Dance, Ralph Lemon, and Bebe Miller.
Click here for a VCU Dance TIMELINE.
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