Photo: Carlos Avendano
Photo: Carlos Avendano

Voguing Your Way to Yourself

Kristi Yeung

An hour and a half of voguing transformed the Come As You Are: Sublime Movement Workshop attendees. At the start of class, we were still and silent, barely answering the instructor’s questions: “what do you know about voguing?” and “what made you come to class today?” At the end of class, we were bouncing, clapping, and cheering as our peers volunteered to perform solos, taking what they had just learned and boldly making the moves entirely their own.

                              The workshop was an introductory voguing class hosted by the Fabric Workshop and Museum (FWM) in collaboration with BalletXStanley Glover, a BalletX dancer and former So You Think You Can Dance contestant, led the workshop, which blurred the lines between visual and performing art. In learning the five elements of voguing—hands, cat walk, duck walk, floor performance, and spins and dips—we explored texture and shape through our bodies. 

Participants were directed to imagine our hands painting colors as we moved them in luxurious circles and waves or daintily tapped them against our bodies. We then twisted our torsos to maximize our curvature in cat walk and bounced on our heels in duck walk. While learning floor performance and dips, we faced the challenge of creating new lines with our backs on the floor and our toes in the air.

The Sublime Movement Workshop was one of many public programs sponsored by FWM as part of Jacolby Satterwhite: Room for Living. This ongoing exhibit is an entertaining mixed media showcase featuring videos, sculptures, and an imaginative virtual reality experience. Many of these works prominently reference voguing. In one piece, a sculpture of five women in exaggerated feminine poses appears below a screen showing the artist performing the well-known vogue dip.

Attending the Sublime Movement Workshop primed me to appreciate the dance styles displayed in Satterwhite’s work. In the workshop, Glover was smooth, majestic, and at times, delicate. In contrast, Satterwhite was angular, abrupt, and powerful. This difference enabled me to recognize Satterwhite’s personal dance style as an extension of his bold visual aesthetic.

Glover emphasized individual expression and originality above all else while guiding us through voguing technique. Grounding the lesson in the history of voguing, he told us that the style grew out of Harlem ball culture in the 60s. During a difficult and dangerous time in LGBTQ history, ballrooms provided an outlet for safe, honest expression. These values remain at the core of voguing today. Throughout class, Glover encouraged us to discover our own dancing personas. As he helped us loosen up, new personalities appeared, ranging from regal to sassy. Though the workshop was called “come as you are,” I’d say that we were more ourselves at the end of class than at the beginning.
 

The Jacolby Satterwhite: Room for Living exhibit at the Fabric Workshop and Museum runs September 13-January 19. 

Come as You Are: Sublime Movement Workshop with BalletX Instructor Stanley Glover, Fabric Workshop and Museum and BalletX, BalletX Center for World Premiere Choreography, November 6.

Share this article

Kristi Yeung

Kristi Yeung is a writer and dancer currently based in Philadelphia; she previously lived in NYC, where she was an advertising copywriter by day and a hip-hop dancer by night. Her writing has appeared in The Philadelphia Inquirer, Dance Magazine, and thINKingDANCE. She is a former staff writer with thINKingDANCE.

PARTNER CONTENT

Keep Reading

The West Did Not Make Me

ankita

An Interview with nora chipaumire

nora chipaumire, a Black African woman takes the stage in 100% POP with her collaborator, Shamar Watt, a Black Jamaican man in a black Adidas tracksuit and red-green-yellow, Zimbabwe-flag-colored Nike shoes. As he runs through the frame upstage, backgrounded by a grungy, urban wall, chipaumire captures the camera’s focus as she jumps into the air, one knee tucked up to her chest, the other a foot off the ground. Wearing a ripped white shirt, black track pants, and all-white high tops, chipaumire gazes down at the ground while she leaps up, as if stomping her way back to Earth.
Photo: Ian Douglas

Jack and Jill Trudge up the Hill

E. Wallis Cain Carbonell

"No one help me. I’m falling towards wholeness."

Two white women with bright red hair pulled back loosely, wear black pants and tank tops and accentuate the curves of their waists, leaning into their hips and slightly covering their eyes with elbows bent at different angles. They are loosely connected by a thin, red thread and in the background there is a hill constructed of wooden blocks against a white wall. Completing the scene are red galoshes, two picture frames hung above the hill and a large new moon hung from the ceiling.
Photo: Shosh Isaacs