In Fifth Year, Richmond Dance Festival Brings Together Local and National Artists

by | May 4, 2018 | PERFORMING ARTS

As The Richmond Dance Festival enters its fifth year, organizer and dance artist Jess Burgess took a quick break from her preparations to sit down with RVA Mag and highlight some of the best national and local artists performing in this year’s edition of the annual event.

The project of Manchester-based Dogtown Dance Theatre is a celebration of diversity and talent across multiple genres and disciplines.  “I hope that every show offers something for everyone… even if the show has a piece you don’t like, it has two you do like,” said Burgess of the festival.

Burgess seeks to serve two audiences: Dance fans and local artists who need venues and performance spaces. She accomplishes that with a special free series, called the informal showcase. ”It’s open to anyone to submit any genre of art. We’ve had dancers, writers, poets, film artists show work.”

Image may contain: one or more people, people dancing and text

Including ballet, modern contemporary, hip hop and film works, the festival holds a variety of performance genres and talent here in Richmond. Featured companies include KARAR, Mamluft&Co, RADAR, and Agua Dulce. With all the national talent at this year’s festival, Burgess wanted to highlight the newer artists, saying they were shining just as brightly as the more well-known performers. “All the work in the Richmond Dance Festival this season, even the work that set on students is really smart,” she said. “And it’s cool to see Richmond have such a strong artistic voice alongside some of these national artists.”

For this weekend, RDF will feature a showcase from University of Richmond’s assistant dance professor, Alicia Diaz and her company Agua Dulce. Mamluft&Co, who Burgess calls an “insanely strong” modern dance company, stars in their own showcase as well. Alongside performances by Nina Simone and Eric Mullis, the English National Ballet will feature their film work directed by Jessica Wright. The final weekend show on May 11 & 12 will feature groups such as RADAR, Turning Key, KARAR and RVA Dance Collective with films by Nick Zoulek and Dylan Wilbur.

For the show on May 5, there will be a special matinee performance titled, RDF Next Generation. A brand new addition to the festival, the showcase will feature high school students having the chance to perform in a professional setting, something that Burgess hopes will help aspiring dance students. “They also get the opportunity to see Richmond Dance Festival, the professional performances that weekend as well,” she said. “I’m working with Appomattox Regional Governor’s School and they’re coming in the first weekend and I’m going to give them a tour of the building and talk about Arts Administration and other opportunities in the field for dancers and what you can do with a career, and they get to take a master class with one of the visiting artists and they perform in the second weekend.”

No automatic alt text available.

Although RDF is their big annual event, Burgess also wanted to point to the daily work at Dogtown as something to watch. “More and more I find I’m inspired by the artists that are coming in and out of this building as I progress in my career,” she said. “There’s just so many types of movement vocabulary out there and it’s cool to see them all have a home they can live in.”

On the 5th anniversary of the festival, Burgess said she was proud to see the ongoing growth both in the show and the talent. “It’s getting bigger every year, actually we increased the overall number of choreographers this year and got the additional funding for the Next Generation Performance,” she said. “So yeah, it’s definitely gaining traction and showcasing really cool work. It’s a mix of a lot of Richmond artists and then some national artists and then a lot of the film artists are international actually – the dance film that we’re showing. So, it’s a really cool show.”

This year, Richmond Dance Festival will showcase the work of 18 choreographers and nine film artists. The festival’s shows will continue to run on May 4-5 and 11-12 at 7:00 p.m. Tickets are $15 and can be purchased here.

RVA Staff

RVA Staff

Since 2005, the dedicated team at RVA Magazine, known as RVA Staff, has been delivering the cultural news that matters in Richmond, VA. This talented group of professionals is committed to keeping you informed about the events and happenings in the city.




more in art

After Strong Turnout, Richmond Arts Park Enters Holding Pattern

Under the Manchester Bridge, what had been an idea for years turned into something tangible, at least for a day. Hundreds of people moved through the space as muralists painted, DJs played, and passersby stopped mid-bike ride or walk to figure out what was going on....

The Veiled Mirror Comes With Ghost Stories Included

If you are in the market for a glass eye in the same shade as your lover’s, some elaborate hair jewelry, or even an electric couch to use as a Victorian cure-all, then you need to head over to The Veiled Mirror. This Victorian antique store opened downtown in January,...

Richmond Had a General Strike and a First Friday on the Same Night

It was 72 and breezy. Unseasonably pleasant, almost chilly. VCU students were splayed out on picnic blankets in Monroe Park enjoying soft serve and the sunshine. Citronella and the smell of hot dogs wafted through the air from some folks having a cookout. “High...

My Life As a Spider: The Two Years I Tried to Delete

Editor’s Note: Max Winter is a University of Richmond alumnus reflecting on his time at UR in the late ’90s and the campus culture he experienced. You can read more of his work on his Substack HERE. Recently, while eating carnitas in East LA, I check my phone and get...

It’s Still Our City Ep. 20 | Katie Davis, Salvation Tattoo

“Katie Davis left home (Maine) at 16 and moved to Richmond Virginia. She started working in a tattoo shop at age 17. A total dream job for a music and art loving minor delinquent. While apprenticing and working full time, she also attended/graduated VCU with a BFA in...

Proof In The Park! Richmond Arts Park Gets Trial Run This Weekend

The City of Richmond is giving organizers behind a proposed arts park under the Manchester Bridge a one-day opportunity to test the concept in real time. Scheduled for Saturday April 25 from 12-5pm, the event will serve as a live proof of concept for what supporters...

Virginia MOCA Launches New Era

Before the Institute for Contemporary Art at VCU was even around, and before the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts really began to embrace contemporary work, especially anything connected to street art or artists working in the present, Virginia Museum...