Siobhan Davies

Siobhan Davies CBE (born 18 September 1950 in London,[1] and often known as Sue Davies) was a dancer with the London Contemporary Dance Theatre during the 1970s, and became one of its leading choreographers creating work such as Sphinx] (1977). In 1988, she founded her own company, Siobhan Davies Dance.

Originally trained in art, Davies was one of the first year's intake of full-time students at the London School of Contemporary Dance. Her works White Man Sleeps and Wyoming have been included on the dance GCE A-Level syllabus. Her work Bird Song is being used in GCSE Dance syllabus as Set Work (2008–2010). She is among the top contemporary choreographers in the UK.[2]

Personal life and career

She was born Susan Davies in 1950 and first performed with the company that came to be Dance Theatre Robert Cohan in 1967. She was made resident choreographer in 1984 before leaving the company in 1985. In 1986, Davies won the Fulbright Arts Fellowship, the first ever to be awarded to a choreographer.[citation needed]

In 1982, she joined forces with Richard Alston and Ian Spink to create Second Stride, which has been lauded as one of the most influential dance companies of the 1980s as well as the first contemporary dance company to tour the United States. From 1988-92 she was the associate choreographer of Rambert Dance Company.[3]

Dance Company

Davies founded Siobhan Davies Dance Company, a contemporary dance company in the United Kingdom, in 1988. From the year 2000, Davies began a change in choreographic style, moving towards creating site-specific dance work, and in 2007 decided to abandon touring dance productions altogether.

Siobhan Davies Dance

In 2006 Siobhan Davies opened Siobhan Davies Studios, created by architect Sarah Wigglesworth, and winner of the 2006 RIBA award. This marked a permanent change in Davies' work from a touring dance company into a contemporary arts organisation. The new company focuses on the investigation and exploration of choreography and movement within a contemporary arts context. The company produces and commissions new work from live performance to contemporary film, and actively takes part in industry and academic exploration. It also uses its London-based building as a visual art gallery as well as a dance studio space. The company regularly takes part in the annual Dance Umbrella season.

References

  1. ^ Film Reference
  2. ^ "Videos Interview Siobhan Davies". Article 19. Retrieved 2014-08-16.
  3. ^ Siobhan Davies' oral history interview in the Rambert Archive https://vimeo.com/236578550

External links



This page was last updated at 2019-11-16 15:14 UTC. Update now. View original page.

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