Dance Guild turns 40
ĆŪĢŅappās biggest student organization is also one of the oldest. This spring, turns 40.
On Thursday, April 14, and Friday, April 15, the 40th anniversary will be recognized in two sold-out shows in the newly-renovated Covenant Fine Arts Center. The theme, āDance Guild Revolution,ā alludes to the video game āDance Dance Revolutionā as well as to the evolution of Dance Guild over the last four decades.
āThis will be a unique show,ā said senior Chelsea Schnabelrauch, one of the five members of the Dance Guild leadership team. āWeāll have typical dance styles such as jazz and hip hop, but we are also paying homage to dances from decades and centuries past. Among other styles, weāll have disco, 80s grunge and even a medieval piece! We were bombarded with great ideas from potential choreographers. It was awesome to see their creativity come alive when we announced the theme.ā
The history
Dance professor Ellen Vanāt Hof currently serves as the faculty advisor for Dance Guild and is equally excited for the 40-year celebration.
āEvery year is an accomplishment, but this milestone really is special,ā said Vanāt Hof. āIāve been a part of this thing since the beginning, but Iām always blown away by each showāeach group of talented students.ā
Vanāt Hof has been involved in Dance Guild since its inception in 1971. She danced as a student, was involved as a professor and was officially appointed faculty advisor 20 years ago. When remembering the early days of the guild, Vanāt Hofās eyes light up.
āThis was a fertile time for the arts at ĆŪĢŅapp,ā she said. āWhen the five Fine Arts Guilds were formed in the early 70s, the campus was buzzing with artistic energy. Creativity abounded. Before this time, the word ādanceā automatically turned some people in this community off. But the formation of the guilds gave us a platform to be creative and innovative.ā
Of the five guildsāwhich included a writerās guild, visual arts guild, music guild, and drama guildāDance Guild is the only one that still exists in its original form.
āThe organization has certainly changed over the years,ā said Vanāt Hof, ābut the core value is still the same: to showcase student talent.ā
Hundreds of dancers
Over 300 students participate in Dance Guild each semester and, according to Vanāt Hof, the numbers are steadily growing.
āThatās been the biggest change in the last 40 years,ā she said. āThe guild started with about a dozen people. Now weāre in the hundreds.ā
Vanāt Hof attributes the survival of Dance Guild to the community-based nature of .
āSo many arts are solitary,ā she said. āWriters sit alone at a desk; artists sit alone at a canvas; musicians sit alone and practice. Dance is hugely social. Everyone is working, sweating and bumping into each other. Dance is physical and participatory. Dance Guild has always been unique because it is literally open to anybody. If youāre willing to put in the work, you can be in Dance Guild. Nobody else does it this way.ā
Student run
The philosophy draws a diverse group of students each semester.
āThereās really no rhyme or reason to predict who will join Dance Guild,ā said Schnabelrauch. āWe have all different grades, majors, social groups and nationalities. Weāre all ĆŪĢŅapp students, but the similarities stop there. The one thing that unifies us is that we like to dance.ā
Schnabelrauch and Vanāt Hof agree that the driving force behind Dance Guild is the opportunity for students to step up and take ownership in the program and the bi-yearly performances. āStudents plan the event; students choreograph the dances; students are the performers and a great majority of the audience. Dance Guild is a celebration of community. Thatās why it has survived for all of these years,ā Vanāt Hof said.
āDance Guild gives every student, whether theyāve been dancing their whole life or are trying it for the first time, a chance to perform and to discover talents,ā said Schnabelrauch. āThe biggest realization Iāve had is that the show is not about the technicalities or being perfect, itās about the dancers.ā