Wednesday, May 23, 2007

KQED Profile: Erika Chong Shuch

"I want to take big questions of life that are the most intimidating and find a way to make them relatable."
--Erika Chong Shuch

Choreographer, director, dancer and teacher, Erika Chong Shuch crosses over boundaries in her works, which meld together theater, dance, science, poetry, music, video and mechanics to formulate multidisciplinary works of art-- in the truest sense of the term. Inspired by a wide range of subjects, from cannibalism to extraterrestrial intelligence, Chong Shuch nevertheless puts the focus on the drama of human experiences.

SPARK follows Chong Shuch from the earliest stages of the creative process, as she embarks on One Window, a work that explores our relationship to boundaries and confinement and which was created as part of Intersection for the Arts' year-long Prison Project.

A restless intellect, Chong Shuch dropped out of high school in San Jose at 17, yet still found her way into theater and dance at the University of California, Santa Cruz. After graduating, Chong Shuch danced in Seattle and in Berlin with Alex B Company and Sommer Ulrickson (Wee Dance Company) before returning to California to earn a master of fine arts degree at San Francisco's New College of California, where she also co-founded the multi-disciplinary Experimental Performance Institute.



Read more on the KQED Spark website.

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