Kathleen Hermesdorf
Kathleen Hermesdorf (January 31, 1967–November 29, 2020) was a dancer, teacher, choreographer, improviser, producer, and curator, born in Wisconsin, USA, and a long-time resident of San Francisco.
Career in Dance and Choreography
From 1998 to 2020, Kathleen co-directed, with musician Albert Mathias, the dance companies ALTERNATIVA and MOTIONLAB,[1] having already worked in a collaborative artistic partnership together since 1995 after meeting as members of Sara Shelton Mann's performance co-op Contraband.[2] Hermesdorf also directed or co-directed several other companies including Hermesdorf & Wells with Scott Wells,[3] Collusion with Stephanie Maher, and Fake Company.[4]
As a dancer and performer, Kathleen was a core collaborator in the companies of Margaret Jenkins Dance Company (1993–1999),[5] Contraband/Sara Shelton Mann (1993–2008), and Bebe Miller Dance (2002–2009).[6] Hermesdorf obtained a BFA in Dance from Western Michigan University, and an MFA in Dance Performance and Pedagogy from University of Illinois-Champaign.
Based in San Francisco since 1991, Hermesdorf performed and taught across the United States and around the world, including in Mexico, Germany, Austria, the Netherlands, Ireland, Czech Republic, Hong Kong, France, and Senegal. She was widely recognized as a powerful improviser in performance, prompting the Seattle Times to write: “In Hermesdorf’s hands, ordinary movement is distorted into a kind of prowess. Twitches, mood reversals and vernacular gestures twist out of her at crazed velocity. There’s no doubting her stage presence.”[7]
Curatorial and Production work
Kathleen was the founder, producer, and co-curator of the FRESH Festival[8] in San Francisco from 2010 to 2020. Playing a crucial role in the Bay Area contemporary dance ecology, the FRESH Festival was described by KQED as a “bastion of experimentation.”[9] Recurring artistic guests at FRESH Festival included Sara Shelton Mann, Amara Tabor-Smith, Abby Crain,[10] Brontez Purnell, NAKA,[11] Sherwood Chen, and Keith Hennessy.
Teaching
Hermesdorf was particularly renowned as a teacher of dance and improvisation.[12] Hermesdorf and Mathias developed a unique approach to teaching a hybrid of modern and contemporary approaches to technique, improvisation, and performance presence, supported by Mathias’ beat-driven live electronic music. Hermesdorf’s teaching was influenced by Sara Shelton Mann, especially in adapting qigong to contemporary dance, as well as contact improvisation, various somatic and release techniques, and modern and jazz dance. Besides her ongoing classes in the Bay Area, Kathleen and ALTERNATIVA toured widely, including recurring contributions to both Ponderosa (Berlin and Stolzenhagen, Germany) and Bates Dance Festival (Maine, USA). From 2010 to 2019, Kathleen co-directed, with Stephanie Maher, the PORCH Program[13] at Ponderosa in Stolzenhagen, Germany.
In a 2018 interview with Jill Randall, Kathleen said, “Dance is transformational. It is a way of perceiving the world and a transmission of human and individual experience. It is how I process and prove truth. It is what makes me more alive than anything else.”[14]
Death
Kathleen Hermesdorf died on November 29, 2020,[15] of a rare cancer. Memorials were held in Elm Grove, Wisconsin; San Francisco, California; Stolzenhagen, Germany; and online. In an obituary in the San Francisco Chronicle, Rachel Howard wrote that “Hermesdorf embodied punk charisma, with her blond hair and chiseled legs. Like her Contraband peers, Hermesdorf approached her art with fierce energy and uncompromising rawness. But along with these qualities radiated a powerful sense of kindness and generosity — all channeled in movement that was slyly virtuosic.”[16]
References
- ^ "SPEAK By Kathleen Hermesdorf". dancersgroup.org. Retrieved 2021-05-25.
- ^ Howard, Rachel (Oct 17, 2003). "Faulty Magic". The DanceView Times, Bay Area. Retrieved Aug 29, 2021.
- ^ Ts'ao, Aimée (Nov 29, 2017). "25 years later, SF choreographer Scott Wells keeps creating bold, 'super physical' works". The Mercury News. Retrieved Aug 29, 2021.
- ^ xembassy, Autor (2017-11-11). "FAKE FEST". kollektiv x-embassy (in German). Retrieved 2021-05-25.
- ^ Anderson, Jack (Jul 8, 1994). "DANCE REVIEW; Collaborative Choreography About Social Interaction". The New York Times. Retrieved Aug 29, 2021.
- ^ Grauert, Ruth (Nov 2008). "Bebe Miller Company: Necessary Beauty". Bearnstow Journal. Retrieved Aug 29, 2021.
- ^ Upchurch, Michael (Oct 29, 2011). "Velocity Dance: A mix of rap, Cyndi Lauper, daring — and a need for tightening". The Seattle Times. Retrieved Aug 29, 2021.
- ^ Howard, Rachel (Dec 31, 2014). "Fresh Festival enables indie artists to forge sustainable careers". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved Aug 29, 2021.
- ^ Lefebvre, Sam (Jan 27, 2020). "Fresh Festival Remains a Bastion of Dance Experimentation". KQED. Retrieved Aug 29, 2021.
- ^ "Abby Crain". Abby Crain. Retrieved 2021-05-25.
- ^ "NAKA Dance Theater". NAKA Dance Theater. Retrieved 2021-05-25.
- ^ Yu, Brandon (Dec 17, 2018). "Hermesdorf still brings a fresh perspective to dance in San Francisco". San Francisco Chronicle, Datebook. Retrieved Aug 29, 2021.
- ^ "Ponderosa e.V." Ponderosa e.V. Retrieved 2021-05-25.
- ^ "Artist Profile #166: Kathleen Hermesdorf (San Francisco)". Life as a Modern Dancer. Retrieved 2021-05-25.
- ^ Services, Becker Ritter Funeral Home & Cremation. "Tribute for Kathleen Margaret Hermesdorf | Becker Ritter Funeral Home & Cremation Services". Tribute for Kathleen Margaret Hermesdorf | Becker Ritter Funeral Home & Cremation Services. Retrieved 2021-05-25.
- ^ Howard, Rachel (Dec 11, 2020). "San Francisco dancer, choreographer Kathleen Hermesdorf dies at 53". San Francisco Chronicle, Datebook. Retrieved 2021-05-25.