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For all events, the Department of Performance Studies acknowledges the Canarsie tribe of the Lenape People in whose traditional territory we are gathering.
For all events, the Department of Performance Studies acknowledges the Canarsie tribe of the Lenape People in whose traditional territory we are gathering.
Join us to learn about our curriculum, student activities, and more!
This panel brings together queer/feminist scholars and activists to consider how the spread of COVID-19 – like prior pandemics – has impacted and disorganized our understandings of the body, the boundaries of public/private, intimacy, sex, risk, and the distribution of vulnerability and care.
This fall we will be offering a series of bi-monthly, optional get-togethers for all students and faculty in the department.
Join us for a speaker series event with special guest artist, Jibz Cameron a.k.a. Dynasy Handbag!
For Tisch's Week of Community, the Departments of Performance Studies and Art & Public Policy are gathering artists to discuss how they are creating, performing, and enacting during this pandemic. Is solo work the foreseeable future of performance? How might one work within and beyond the solo form? What other possibilities might exist? Speakers who work across genres from theater, performance art, dance, and drag will discuss their respective practices today; and we hope to have a larger conversation together about the future of performance!
Join Noel Rodriguez, Administrative & Academic Services Director, and Laura Fortes, Assistant Director of Programs to learn more about applying to graduate programs.
Join us for a series of virtual events, including a panel on with current Performance Studies BA Candidates and with PS Alumni.
Together, Hartman and Armand will discuss how their work straddles the material and immaterial worlds, asking about the political dimensions of their practice, embodiment, queer practices, and — specific to the conditions of today — how their ongoing experience with intuitive practice speaks to the possibilities in virtual spaces of engagement, of how we are affected and affect each other from afar.