The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Core Dance leader to head Poland project

Sue Schroeder in charge of launching center for art, cooperatio­n.

- By Gillian Anne Renault

The Popiel family lived in a manor house outside Kraków, Poland, for generation­s, but in World War II the Nazis and then the Soviet Army invaded the peaceful home. The family was forced to leave, and over the years the house became a crumbling ruin.

Enter Atlanta’s Sue Schroeder, artistic director of Core Dance. Under her leadership, the building is being renovated and reborn as the róza Centre for Internatio­nal and Interdisci­plinary Art and Cooperatio­n, named for the last person to live there, Róza Kieniewicz Popiel.

It’s an improbable story that brings Polish history, the arts and Atlanta together in unexpected ways. Says Schroeder: “I would never have guessed I’d be doing this, but it’s an interestin­g thing when someone says I have this building, would you like to do what you do there and how can I support you? I could have said no, but it feels like a great opportunit­y.”

The manor’s current owner, Michael Popiel de Boisgelin, Schroeder and the center’s co-founder Joshua A. Poole have a shared vision. Róza will be a gathering place for artists in multiple discipline­s — dance, music, architectu­re, theater, film, visual art and literature. Participan­ts will be encouraged to develop their art and build relationsh­ips that generate social change and promote sustainabl­e living, diversity, inclusion and accessibil­ity. Schroeder conceives of it as a “living laboratory.”

Schroeder’s title is founding director of creativity, which for now encompasse­s a multitude of responsibi­lities — bringing artists together, learning about communist repatriati­on funding, hiring photograph­ers and videograph­ers, arranging for water, food and glamping-style tents and explaining to the Polish team what mulch is. “Mulch is not a thing there,” Schroeder says. “The language and cultural translatio­ns require a lot of energy.”

For several weeks in May and June, she will live on the grounds of the center with the inaugural group of artists, two of them

Ukrainian, while constructi­on is underway. Hence the tents. “We want to embed ourselves in the dust of the place,” she says. There will be process, discussion, relationsh­ip building and three events: a sound installati­on, a video mapping project and a new iteration of Core Dance’s “No Time to Lose” project.

The creative practice that birthed “No Time to Lose,” which premiered at Atlanta’s B Complex in March 2021, will propel the creation of a new work based on the theme “re:member.” Three people who participat­ed in the Atlanta performanc­e — movement artist Keith Hennessy, filmmaker Adam Larsen and composer/musician Christian Meyer — will embed with the group and help develop the process.

Schroeder has always been drawn to Europe. She has presented work in museums there and has practiced her collaborat­ive, non-hierarchic­al

methodolog­y in France, Israel, Poland, Sweden, Germany and beyond.

The pandemic prevented her from traveling but ironically expanded her reach. “We did so much virtual programmin­g, our internatio­nal audiences got to experience us more than usual,” she says.

Schroeder admits that her priorities are shifting from running an organizati­on to creating, teaching and curating internatio­nally.

A gallery in Britain has commission­ed her to curate an exhibition of seven live performanc­es in their collection, a huge project she anticipate­s will keep her busy for the next 10 years.

“At Core Dance we do all these things around the world, but Atlanta benefits because we bring back new flavors and new ideas,” she says, confirming that Atlanta is still her physical and artistic home. Flux Projects, for instance, has commission­ed her to co-create “a water piece” with conceptual artist Jonathon Keats to premiere in fall 2023. The pilot Resident

Artists program she launched in 2021 will come to a close in August. For the remainder of 2022, Schroeder intends to hire dance artists on a project by project basis and will reassess and restructur­e the program for 2023 and beyond.

Schroeder’s focus may be shifting, but her vision is not. She believes deeply in community and breaking down the world’s visible and invisible divisions through the practice of artmaking. The róza Centre is the next step in that creative journey. “It’s what I’m being called to do,” she says.

Gillian Anne Renault has been an ARTSATL contributo­r since 2012 and was named Senior Editor for Art+design and Dance in 2021. She covered dance for the Los Angeles Daily News, Herald Examiner and Ballet News, and on radio stations such as KCRW, the NPR affiliate in Santa Monica, California. Many years ago, she was awarded an NEA Fellowship to attend American Dance Festival’s Dance Criticism program.

 ?? COURTESY OF JERRY SIEGEL ?? Sue Schroeder, artistic director of Core Dance, will lead the
internatio­nal center in Poland.
COURTESY OF JERRY SIEGEL Sue Schroeder, artistic director of Core Dance, will lead the internatio­nal center in Poland.
 ?? COURTESY OF SUE SCHROEDER ?? This historic building in Poland is being renovated and reborn as an arts center under the leadership of Atlanta’s Sue Schroeder and her team.
COURTESY OF SUE SCHROEDER This historic building in Poland is being renovated and reborn as an arts center under the leadership of Atlanta’s Sue Schroeder and her team.

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