

HYBRID DANCE FESTIVAL
Save the Date!!! VBDF 2024
February 2-4!!
VBDF4
Focus (BLACK)
Dancing Liberation & the State of the Black Dancer in Virginia
VBDF will be back for 2024!
Thriving through a pandemic and rapidly changing world.
And we’ve still got some pressing questions:
What does success look like for Black dancers, particularly in Virginia?
How do Black dancers cultivate and sustain the tools they need to fulfill their goals?
What is the role of community in the life of Black dancers?
We invite you to join us as we continue to inquire, look for answers, and find solutions, TOGETHER, at the 3rd Annual Virginia Black Dance Festival.
VBDF 2023 will include over 20 dance encounters including classes, workshops, panel discussions, and a performance - all focused on Black dancer histories, opportunities and futures.
VBDF 2024 is hosted by
Appomattox Regional Governor's School
and Virginia State University Dance Minor Program
WHEN /
February 2-4, 2024
WHERE /
Appomattox Regional Governor's School
For the Arts & Technology
&
Virginia State University
OR WHEREVER YOU ARE
ABOUT THE EVENT /
Virginia Black Dance Festival provides community building and networking opportunities for members of the Black, Indigenous, and Afro Latina dance community in Virginia. With workshops and performances that highlight the diversity of dance genres cultivated as part of Black Dance culture in the diaspora, it honors the traditions of multigenerational dance performance and practice. Virginia Black Dance Festival accomplishes this through workshops, panel discussions, professional workshops as well as juried, showcase performances.
Artists for 2024
soon to come!
Class line up this will include
Jazz,
Contemporary Ballet
Musical Theatre Workshop
Southern Style Majorette
And More!!!
Special Thanks to the Artists from 2020-2023

Deandra Clarke
Business of Dance Brunch
Presenter
Studio 4 Dance Agency, LLC
Deandra Clarke is a graduate of Virginia Commonwealth University, with a bachelor's degree in Radio Broadcasting. After four years as an on-air personality with WBTJ 106.5 The BEAT radio station, she decided to expand her professional career in dance choreography by founding 4 The Streetz Choreography in 2003.
This professional dance company served as a way for dancers in the area to fulfill their dreams without having to leave Richmond for places such as New York or Los Angeles. Providing them with similar opportunities to build their dance resumés, gain experience in the dance industry and help prepare them for the time when they do decide to make that move into a professional dance career. She is now continuing her mission by focusing her attention on her newest projects.
One of which being the Co-Owner of MOVE! Dance Workshops, a traveling dance workshop series that makes stops all over the country, providing hip hop and contemporary masterclasses for aspiring and semi-professional dancers from established choreographers in the industry.She is also the Co-Owner of Studio 4 Dance Company. A professional hip hop dance company based in Richmond, VA that focuses on the training of semi-professional dancers. In addition to private company rehearsals, these members are provided performance opportunities to showcase their talents along the east coast. Not limiting their training to only company members, Studio 4 Dance Company additionally offers open company classes to the public on Wednesday evenings.Over the past three years, Deandra has been the Director, Choreographer and Coach for two sports dance teams; The minor league basketball team, Hampton Roads Sharks and the minor league football team, Virginia Hornets. She is currently the Dance Team Coach for Midlothian High School Trojanettes.In addition to her many business ventures, she still choreographs and dances regularly for numerous independent artists along the east coast as well as teach weekly hip hop classes at the Village Dance Studio and Jadore Dance Studio in her hometown of Richmond, VA.

Kevin LaMarr Jones
Business of Dance Brunch
Presenter
African Roots Reunion
Beyond the social barriers of race, religion, gender, and geography, Kevin LaMarr Jones professes that dance and music have the ability to unite the world. Since graduating from the University of Richmond with a B.S. in Business Administration and Virginia Commonwealth University with a B.F.A. in Dance and Choreography, Jones has become a graphic designer, dancer, choreographer, and producer based in Richmond, Virginia. His dance portfolio includes work with the Latin Ballet of Virginia as a professional company member, in addition to founding, CLAVES UNIDOS, a community-based dance company and academy which connects Richmond, Virginia to the world and gathers its residents around dances of the African diaspora. The centerpiece of this work is a weekly community dance class on Saturday mornings that he has led since 2011 called African Root Reunion.
Mr. Jones has been cultivating his own Pan-African dance style since the mid 1990s when as a Senior at UR, he was introduced to and became a permanent fan of the music of, salsa band, Bio Ritmo. Jones studied traditional West African dance with Sister Faye Walker and Judy Lynn Edwards. He discovered a passion for flamenco through teachers like with Ana Ines King, Anna Menendez and Antonio Hidalgo Paz as well as many other master flamenco teachers during his travels to New York, Washington DC, Jerez de la Frontera, Madrid and Seville. He has studied Afro-Cuban dances with Ifé Michelle Milligan, Alberto Limonta Perez and various other master teachers in workshops between Miami, New York and Barcelona. He has studied salsa and partner dancing with various artists including Edwin Roa, Steve Greene and Yamil Boo. In 2006 & 2007 he delved into community engagement through the arts with Urban Bush Women as a participant in their Summer Leadership Institute in Brooklyn, NY. In 2015, he performed with his Bomba Afro-Puerto Rican dance mentor, Isha Renta and VA-based bomba group, Semilla Cultural, at the Kennedy Center’s Millennium Stage. He currently serves as a member of the board of directors for Dogtown Dance Theatre where he also creates and presents concert dance performances and productions.

William Sterling Walker
VBDF Performance
Choreographer
Ballet
WILLIAM STERLING WALKER began dance training at the age of 14, at the Chamber Ballet (now the Virginia Regional Ballet) in Williamsburg, Virginia. He went on to receive the Artist Merit Award from the Virginia School of the Arts, and was a Regional Dance America scholarship recipient. He also trained with the Allegheny Ballet Company, and Central Pennsylvania Youth Ballet. He has danced professionally with the Richmond Ballet, Starr Foster Dance Project, Chris Burnside and Dancers, Charisma Dance Theater, and has guest taught and performed throughout Virginia and as far reaching as central Mexico, the coast of Columbia South America and Southern Spain. He is a certified teacher in the Wolf Trap teaching method for children. William taught for eleven years Ballet, Jazz, Modern, Latin, Flamenco and Techno Hip-Hop at Henrico County High school's Center for the Arts, and The School Of The Latin Ballet Of Virginia in which he was the Junior Company Director and veteran dancer of it's professional company The Latin Ballet Of Virginia. He is most pleased to currently teach full time at Virginia Regional Ballet having returned full circle to where he was first given the opportunity to discover the world of dance.
Mr. Walker believes Movement is a means to transcend color and race. It can lift us all up to the same unified dance floor. He is very excited to share his love for Ballet and movement in general at Virginia Black Dance Festival.
William Sterling Walker
Ballet

Julinda Lewis
Dance Faculty &
VBDF Performance
BeMoved with Julinda
More Information Coming Soon

Christine C. Wyatt
Workshop Facilitator
Women in Resistance: Reflecting Creative Cultural Process
Black, femme mover, from Baltimore, MD (Piscataway Land), continuing legacies of resistance, love, equity, & care through community based movement and organizing practices. Currently residing in Richmond County (Chickahominy Land) a freelance artist and organizer/podcast co-host with The Dance Union; Christine curates, choreographs, facilitates, and archives. She’s been livin’ and breathin’ art, music, theatre and dance her entire life, starting her “training” at the age of 9. Her B.F.A in Dance & Choreography was obtained in 2018 from Virginia Commonwealth University.

Talita Jackson
Dance Faculty
Modern Hip Hop Fusion
Adelle Talita Jackson is a native of Richmond Virginia, driven by creativity, arts and passion; so it was no surprise that Jackson would choose a career that embodied all of those principles. In 2005, Talita Jackson received her BFA in dance and choreography from Virginia Commonwealth University. For over 20 years, Ms. Jackson had been a dance educator. To give back to her community Talita started teaching in and around the local community centers, dance studios and even founded a local dance team that still operates today. Ms. Jackson taught dance and enrichment and dance as an interdisciplinary subject for 9-12 grade students in Richmond Public Schools. Talita Jackson is currently the director of the City Dance Program, where she implements extensive dance programming and training for the citizens in the community of Richmond, Virginia. While programming for the City DanceThe program, Jackson also is the co-director of the City Dance Theatre, a multi-award-winning dance company, comprised of the city’s youth that travels and competes around the world. Jackson has won numerous awards from attending dance conferences and for choreography including the prestigious, Choreographer’s Cup Award, an award awarded to the educator that has presented the greatest body of work. Talita Jackson is currently an adjunct faculty member at Virginia Commonwealth University and most recently held a residency at Mary Baldwin University where she continues to pour her talents and share her experience and knowledge with the young adults of the future. She is also formerly an adjunct faculty member at University of Richmond. Recently, Ms. Jackson was privileged to earn another movie credit for her choreography of the Netflix original movie entitled Burning Sands. Talita Jackson is also a member of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority Incorporated.

Tribal Unicorn Collective
Workshop Facilitator
Cues and Moves for Group Improvisation
Tribal Unicorn was founded in 2017 by April LaMar and Debbie Richardson to promote diversity, inclusion, variety, and love in the belly dance realm and beyond. With the addition of Missy Moore in 2019, Tribal Unicorn continues to be a beacon of black belly dance excellence. With culturally aware passionate performances, these ladies have graced stages from coast to coast, leading by example every time. For more info on Tribal Unicorn performances, workshops and classes please follow them in IG.

Dr. Benita “Oshun” Brown
Panelist
More Information Coming Soon

Christina Leoni-Osion
Workshop Facilitator
Women in Resistance: Reflecting Creative Cultural Process
Christina Leoni-Osion is a performance artist, circle facilitator, and full-spectrum doula based in Powhatan Confederation Territory/Richmond, Virginia. They received their BFA in Dance and Choreography from Virginia Commonwealth University and are continuing to refine their skills in movement, facilitation, and support techniques.

Rodney L. Williams
Dance Faculty
Modern Hip Hop Fusion
Singer, Composer, Dancer, Choreographer, Master Teacher
Rodney L. Williams, or Mr. Rodney as he is known by the thousands of dance students he has nurtured during his career. A graduate of William and Mary with a BA in Music Composition and Dance Choreography. Where he received the 1976 Martin Luther King, Jr. academic scholarship and the Steven Palades Music Scholarship. After completing his BA at William and Mary, he went on to teach in Richmond Public Schools from 1980-1992 as a music teacher. While there, he won a Teacher of The Year award. Also, in 1980 he became director of City Dance Theatre (CDT) through Richmond City Parks and Recreation, the youth performance company for the Richmond City Parks and Recreation Dance program.
Mr. Rodney made a career change in 1992 when he became the Director of Dance for Longwood Company of Dancers, and a Professor at the University. During this time, he went on to win College Dance Educator of the year with Virginia Health Physical Education Recreation and Dance (VaPHERD). Where, over the years, he has taught numerous professional development workshops for VaPHERD conference attendees. In addition to music performances, he has adjudicated dance for Miss America (2000) and received a John F. Kennedy Center for the Arts Teacher Fellowship. He continues to work as director of Richmond City Dance Troupe and enjoys creating powerful choreographic works that showcase the virtuosity of the students in the program. In his tenure as director for CDT, students have received scholarships for dance programs, won pageants, dance company positions, and some have become educators as well. Mr. Rodney continues to inspire the inner artist in everyone he meets.

Kendra McNeal
Dance Faculty
Jazz
Kendra is a performer and choreographer here in Richmond, VA. She grew up in Northern Virginia where she studied dance and performed on the competition team at Barton and Williams School of Dance. After high school, she attended Virginia Commonwealth University where she studied dance and choreography and also performed on the Gold Rush Dance Team. While still in the school, she continued to teach and choreograph while also coaching the dance team at Colonial Forge High School. After college, she continues to teach and choreograph here in RVA and in northern Virginia.

Alicia Díaz
Workshop Facilitator
Women in Resistance: Reflecting Creative Cultural Process
Alicia Díaz is a Puerto Rican dance artist and associate professor of dance at The University of Richmond, located on the ancestral lands of the Powhatan and Monacan people. Her choreographic work speaks to legacies of slavery, colonialism, and cultural memory. She is co-facilitator of Pepatián’s Latinx dance artists initiative “Dancing La Botánica: La Tierra Vive.”

Johnnie Cruise Mercer
Dance Faculty
Contemporary
Johnnie Cruise Mercer is a queer black thinker, maker, performer, educator and social entrepreneur born in Richmond, VA and based in New York City. Recently acknowledged as a 2021 Princess Grace Award Recipient in Choreography, and nominated for two 2021 Bessie NY Dance and Performance Awards (Outstanding Production for _AShadowPrince, and Outstanding BreakOut Choreographer), Johnnie’s processes and work have been supported, produced, and/or presented by: The 92Y Harkness Dance Center, The Dixon Place, Danspace Project Inc, The Fusebox Festival, Mana Contemporary, Freeskewl, The NADA Conference, Abrons Arts Center, The Clarice Performing Arts Center’s The BlackLight Summit, The Cuny Dance Initiative, NYU Tisch Dance, Goucher College, Bates Dance Festival, The American Dance Festival, Abrons Arts Center, Ping Chong and Company, Brooklyn Arts Exchange, The New Dance Alliance, SirenArts, The Wassaic Project, and Stephen Petronio Company’s Bloodlines(future) Initiative!
Johnnie is the founding producer and Company Director of TheREDprojectNYC (TRPNYC), a multidisciplinary network of artists dedicated to the study of movement philosophy, and its use towards building communal spaces for black/other process, documentation, and investigation.
Currently Johnnie leads the team,TRPNYC, into their fourth year of a six year project entitled; “A Process Anthology: The Decade from Hell and the Decade that Followed Suite.” Charted as ten individual memoir driven chapters, the full project will soon come to a close with two DocuEpic Works in the Fall 2022 (commissioned by Gibney), and Spring/Summer 2024/2025!
Find more info on this project and his other work on Instagram

Adelle Barrow
Workshop Facilitator
Music Editing for Dancers
Adelle is the Owner and Master Editor at Mixed Karma Productions. A graduate of VCU in Richmond VA, she has been teaching dance and editing music in the Richmond and surrounding areas for the past 15 years. She also dances professionally with the Latin Ballet of Virginia, and teaches dance at J'Adore Dance in Chesterfield. She has done freelance editing work in the Williamsburg and Richmond VA dance scene for the past 10 years including dance studios, companies, college audition pieces/videos, and individual dance/cheer/school groups, etc.)
She began editing music when she was 15 years old. (Back when she used tape decks and boomboxes to make mixes for her high school dance team.) Having an ear for music as a dancer, dance teacher, and choreographer gives her an edge. She uses a variety of newer and older programs such as Ableton, Fruity Loops, Reason, Acid, Cubase, Cool Edit, Final Cut and many more to add to the diversity of peoples needs while perfecting her editing skills. She is happy and excited to launch her own music editing service for those who want quality edits/mixes for their dancers/performers without having to worry about their music editing services! She hopes to bridge the gap between choreographers, coaches, directors, Moms, teachers, brides and the students, dancers and audiences they wish to reach with quality and affordable mixes for all!

Sankofa Dance Theatre of VSU
Dance Minor Program, HPER Department, Virginia State University
Contemporary
Sankofa Dance Theatre is the Academic dance company of the Dance Minor program at Virginia State University. founded in 1999 by Dr. Benita Brown, Sankofa Dance Theatre members develop one concert per semester, work with guest choreographers, and collaborate with other student organizations on campus.

William Sterling Walker-Students
Virginia Regional Ballet
Dance Instructor, Choreographer, Dancer
WILLIAM STERLING WALKER began dance training at the age of 14, at the Chamber Ballet (now the Virginia Regional Ballet) in Williamsburg, Virginia. He went on to receive the Artist Merit Award from the Virginia School of the Arts, and was a Regional Dance America scholarship recipient. He also trained with the Allegheny Ballet Company, and Central Pennsylvania Youth Ballet. He has danced professionally with the Richmond Ballet, Starr Foster Dance Project, Chris Burnside and Dancers, Charisma Dance Theater, and has guest taught and performed throughout Virginia and beyond as far reaching as central Mexico, the coast of Columbia South America and Southern Spain. He is a certified teacher in the Wolf Trap teaching method for children. William taught for eleven years Ballet, Jazz, Modern, Latin, Flamenco and Techno Hip-Hop at Henrico County High school's Center for the Arts, and The School Of The Latin Ballet Of Virginia in which he was the Junior Company Director and veteran dancer of it's professional company The Latin Ballet Of Virginia. William has returned full circle to Virginia Regional Ballet where he was first given the opportunity to discover the world of dance. He wishes to continue to pass along the joys and strength that dance has given him to aspiring young people and adults alike.

MK Abadoo
Workshop Facilitator
Community Building within Creative Practice
MK Adadoo, considered a "rising star" by Dance Magazine, crafts dance events that combine Africanist and post-modern movement vocabularies with site activating audience and community engagement. Their creative practice is rooted in the justice work of Gesel Mason Performance Projects, Angela's Pulse, Urban Bush Women, and the People’s Institute for Survival and Beyond. Abadoo is an assistant professor in the Department of Dance + Choreography at Virginia Commonwealth University (VCU), and in the Racial Equity, Arts, and Culture Core of VCU's ICubed, the Institute for Inclusion, Inquiry & Innovation.

Candice Deisher, Carey Mitchell, Crystal Bullock, Rudy Saint Julien
Salsa Connection Dance Company
Latin Dance Instructor
Salsa Connection Dance Company, LLC (“Salsa Connection” or "SCDC") is a dance company based in Richmond, Virginia. Initially teaching and performing as a continuation of Latin Vintage Dance Company under the guidance of Julissa Cruz, co-owners Carey Mitchell, Candice Deisher, Crystal Bullock and Rudy Saint Julien first offered instruction out of the Ezibu Muntu dance studio before permanently locating their classes to Dogtown Dance Theatre (“Dogtown”) until the fall of 2022. In November 2022, Salsa Connection opened its own studio at 23 W Broad St, Richmond, VA 23220.
In 2019, Carey, Candice, Rudy and Crystal incorporated under the name Salsa Connection because it aptly encompasses their mission: (1) to remain connected to the Salsa community through our continued training, teaching, and performances; (2) to connect new dancers to Latin dance through classes and personal instruction; and (3) to maintain personal connections with fellow dancers in the RVA community through social events and community outreach. Salsa Connection's technique-based training gives students the tools to be proficient leads and follows anywhere in the world. Because much of what makes Latin dance enjoyable is social dancing and community, Salsa Connection's classes are designed to ensure students are well-equipped to enjoy social dancing wherever they may be!
As dancers, we continue our own growth and training by traveling to dance conventions/congresses across the country and by bringing in world-class instructors/choreographers. In 2019, Candice and Rudy put RVA on the map when they competed at the World Salsa Summit in Miami.
In 2020, Salsa Connection was the RVA Dance Awards winner for the category of "Best Latin Dance Studio." We are both humbled and excited to be awarded such an honor and we look forward to continuing to serve the Richmond dance community for years to come.

Ingram Brown
Workshop Facilitator
Community Building within Creative Practice
As a minister who loves to dance, Ingram has studied dances of the African diaspora, ballet, jazz, modern, West and South African dance as well as banner making and movement with fabric (flags, billows, veils, dance ribbon) and dancing with tambourines. During the year of 1995 in Houston, Texas, she had the opportunity to combine her passion for dancing with her spiritual life as she joined the dance ministry as Windsor Village United Methodist Church and as well as she danced for an African-Caribbean Company called Ballet Caribe. After this experience, Ingram continued to with church dance teams in Akron, Ohio; Nederland Texas; Jacksonville, Florida and Richmond, Virginia.
Over the next 15 years, Ingram would go on to choreograph pieces for church and community events; advise/teach new dance leaders directly or through her Legacy Bearer (general ministry), Representing (the standard and signs and symbols of the church), Victory (tambourine) and Out of Africa into the Diaspora (dances from countries influenced by the continent of Africa) workshops.
In 2010, she decided to return the Richmond, Virginia to assist with the care of her disabled father and continued to assist dance ministries at local churches and started participating in the activities of CLAVES UNIDOS. Claves shares and celebrates the historical, political and social connections of African diaspora dances world-wide. In her studio at ArtWorks in Richmond, Virginia, Ingram has designed costumes for dancers and continues to make be a textile artist making wall hangings, rugs and scarves.
Day by day, Ingram is discovering the truth that “For in Him we live and move and exist” and her passion is encouraging people to walk in their G-d given purpose and destiny and sharing what she is learning on her adventure in following, trusting and loving God. She graduated from the University of Virginia with a B.S. in chemical engineering and later obtained a B.A. in Christian Arts and Ministry through Logos Christian College and Graduate School in Jacksonville, Florida

Candice Deisher, Carey Mitchell, Crystal Bullock, Rudy Saint Julien
Salsa Connection Dance Company
Latin Dance Instructor
Salsa Connection Dance Company, LLC (“Salsa Connection” or "SCDC") is a dance company based in Richmond, Virginia. Initially teaching and performing as a continuation of Latin Vintage Dance Company under the guidance of Julissa Cruz, co-owners Carey Mitchell, Candice Deisher, Crystal Bullock and Rudy Saint Julien first offered instruction out of the Ezibu Muntu dance studio before permanently locating their classes to Dogtown Dance Theatre (“Dogtown”) until the fall of 2022. In November 2022, Salsa Connection opened its own studio at 23 W Broad St, Richmond, VA 23220.
In 2019, Carey, Candice, Rudy and Crystal incorporated under the name Salsa Connection because it aptly encompasses their mission: (1) to remain connected to the Salsa community through our continued training, teaching, and performances; (2) to connect new dancers to Latin dance through classes and personal instruction; and (3) to maintain personal connections with fellow dancers in the RVA community through social events and community outreach. Salsa Connection's technique-based training gives students the tools to be proficient leads and follows anywhere in the world. Because much of what makes Latin dance enjoyable is social dancing and community, Salsa Connection's classes are designed to ensure students are well-equipped to enjoy social dancing wherever they may be!
As dancers, we continue our own growth and training by traveling to dance conventions/congresses across the country and by bringing in world-class instructors/choreographers. In 2019, Candice and Rudy put RVA on the map when they competed at the World Salsa Summit in Miami.
In 2020, Salsa Connection was the RVA Dance Awards winner for the category of "Best Latin Dance Studio." We are both humbled and excited to be awarded such an honor and we look forward to continuing to serve the Richmond dance community for years to come.
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