By Kellen Beckett

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UC Santa Barbara is keeing good company in hosting the exhibit Border Crossings: Exile and American Modern Dance, 1900–1955, which is featured at the New York Public Library as well as simultaneously by UCSB’s Art Design & Architecture (AD&A) Museum.

The exhibit “celebrates the heroism of immigrant and BIPOC artists” and “challenges previous histories to consider how war, exile, inequality, and injustice shaped 20th century performance art,” according to the AD&A Museum description.

It was conceived by UCSB Theater and Dance professor Ninotchka Bennahum and Bruce Robertson, emeritus professor in History of Art and Architecture. Border Crossings examines how artists of color and indigenous artists had a deep impact on dance as an art form — through the lens of injustice and border crossings. The exhibit also shows how the history of dance has been archived — from photographs to copies of artwork, to costumes, to videos of performances.

Border Crossings opened at the AD&A Museum on campus on January 25th, and subsequently held a two-day symposium which included panels, artists’ roundtables and a reception. On January 8th, Hatlen Theater hosted one of the very dance companies whose history the exhibit chronicles: The Limon Dance Company. Based in New York City and co-founded by acclaimed dancer and choreographer Jose Limon, it performed excerpts from “Exiles, Danzas Mexicanas,” and “Chaconne” followed by a Q&A with current artistic director of the company, Dante Pueleio. The UCSB Dance Company, which has toured annually in Europe since 2011, also performed. Santa Barbara Dance Theater presented both new and original works supporting the core themes of the exhibit.

Events affiliated with Border Crossings and all the artists it celebrates continue and the UCSB Dance Company will again celebrate the bi-coastal exhibition, performing at Hatlen Theater this Friday March 15th and Saturday March 16th from 7:30-8:30 p.m.

Kellen Beckett is a fourth year Political Science and Writing and Literature major.