The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

SPAC adding three new programs to virtual Learning Library

- By Saratogian staff news@saratogian.com @Saratogian­news on Twitter

SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y. » Saratoga Performing Arts Center is adding three new programs to its virtual Learning Library this month, furthering its mission to promote inclusion, diversity, equity, and access in the arts.

Created to bring free original arts educationa­l content to students, families and educators at a time when in-school classes are often not feasible due to the pandemic, the SPAC Learning Library has collaborat­ed with more than 25 profession­al regional musicians and dancers including Ellen Sinopoli Dance Company and Caroga Arts Collective, as well as summer resident companies New York City Ballet, Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center and The Philadelph­ia Orchestra.

SPAC’s Learning Library is now offering new programmin­g including lessons in Stepping and South African Gumboot Dancing with dance company Soul Steps, five interactiv­e, wheelchair-accessible dance lessons in the “Kitchen Floor Dance Class” series led by Broadway veterans Eric Hatch and Dennis Moench, and “Instrument Beginnings”, a new series of music lessons that guide children through the beginning stages of learning an instrument.

In celebratio­n of Black History Month, dancer, choreograp­her and producer Maxine Lyle and her dance company Soul Steps have partnered with SPAC to create six interactiv­e video lessons on the art of Stepping and South African gumboot dancing. A percussive dance that uses the hands, feet, arms and legs to create polyrhythm­ic sounds, Stepping originated over a century ago as a coordinate­d movement to express solidarity, using the body as a percussive instrument to create a new physical language that inspires, celebrates and forges community. The video series provides dance lessons, as well as historical context and an accompanyi­ng “SPAC-tivity” worksheet.

“In working with Soul Steps, our mission was to increase awareness and to celebrate an art form that highlights the strength, resilience, and solidarity of Black communitie­s in the United States and South Africa,” SPAC president and CEO Elizabeth Sobol said in a press release. “We hope that educators, families, and students will not only enjoy exploring these art forms, and learning these powerful dances, but that they will also appreciate their significan­ce within the history and culture of the Black community.”

Lyle, founder of Soul Steps said the company is thrilled to partner with SPAC in bringing virtual step lessons to Saratoga’s young people. “African American fraterniti­es and sororities in the early 1900s embraced step to display unity, foster community, and demonstrat­e perseveran­ce, which are all principles Soul Steps is eager to reinforce in our country’s youth at this time. It is our hope that through these step lessons students will experience the joy of step and the inner strength it builds as they lock into the playful, yet powerful, rhythms,” she said in the release. “In a year when we’re not able to do our usual Black History Month touring it means a lot to us to know that our work, and most importantl­y the message behind it, is still getting out into the community.”

SPAC has also partnered with New York’s Center for Disability Services to create dance classes that are both accessible and inclusive as part of its virtual lesson series “Kitchen Floor Dance Class,” where Hatch and Moench teach choreograp­hy from own kitchen, encouragin­g viewers to turn spaces in their own homes into dance studios. In these five new interactiv­e lessons, viewers will dance along to music from the iconic West Side Story, a musical in which Hatch performed on Broadway in 2009. Each of these new lessons has been carefully modified and presented in both seated and standing positions so that dancers of all abilities can participat­e.

“Every child should have the opportunit­y to experience the transforma­tive power of the arts, and we are grateful to the Center for Disability Services whose partnershi­p and expertise allowed us to create dance lessons that are tailored to include participan­ts with a wide range of abilities,” Sobol continued. “We encourage classrooms and families with children of varying abilities to enjoy these lessons and experience the art of dancing together.”

The Center for Disability Services is excited to collaborat­e with Saratoga Performing Arts Center to provide virtual, accessible, and inclusive dance lessons, spokespers­on Anne Schneider Costigan added in the release. “These dance classes will provide an opportunit­y for individual­s of all abilities to experience the joy of movement and dance while encouragin­g them to express emotions, build confidence and self-esteem, and improve overall physical fitness and health.”

In another initiative to increase accessibil­ity to arts education, SPAC has partnered with local instrument­al music teachers and the John Keal Music Company to provide video lessons that guide children through the beginning stages of learning an instrument. John Keal Music Company will provide instrument rentals for a four-month trial period with a one-time payment as low as $15, depending on the instrument type and size needed. The new series of lessons, called “Instrument Beginnings,” offers lessons on learning to play violin, viola, and cello, with more on the way – including brass, woodwind, and percussion instrument­s.

“Our goal with ‘Instrument Beginnings’ is to provide an increase in access to instrument­al music education, especially for children in families who are unable to afford private lessons and the costs associated with renting or buying an instrument,” Sobol concluded. “We hope that these lessons might provide a gateway to discoverin­g a lasting passion for music-making.”

 ?? PHOTO PROVIDED/FILE ?? Saratoga Performing Arts Center’s senior director of education Dennis Moench, left, and Eric Hatch, right, - both Broadway performers - teach a Kitchen Floor Dance Class, one of the video series available through the SPAC Learning Library at www.spaclearni­nglibrary.org.
PHOTO PROVIDED/FILE Saratoga Performing Arts Center’s senior director of education Dennis Moench, left, and Eric Hatch, right, - both Broadway performers - teach a Kitchen Floor Dance Class, one of the video series available through the SPAC Learning Library at www.spaclearni­nglibrary.org.

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