Performance artist wins USA Fellowship, $50k
A University of Colorado Boulder dancer and performance artist has won a $50,000ÌęUSA Fellowship Grant, an award designed to put unrestricted grants âdirectly into the hands of Americaâs finest artists.â
Ellsworth, an assistant professor of theatre and dance at CU, says sheâs honored, humbled and surprised by the award. Judging by the reviews sheâs gotten in recent years, others were not taken off guard.
In early December, United States Artists named 50 new fellows in visual, performing, media and literary arts across the country. The awards have been distributed since 2006, providing $15 million to artists to use as they see fit.
Ellsworth, who holds a master of fine arts from CU-Boulder and who has taught here since 2000, has been getting rave reviews for her performance art across the nation.
ââPerformance artist Michelle Ellsworthâs onstage persona is a fascinating mix of humility and daring, mockery and gentleness,â writes Westwordâs Juliet Wittman. âShe comes across as a deferential satirist, a playful deep thinker, someone who expresses serious concerns with effervescent humor, operating sideways and using movement, objects and a highly eccentric take on everyday concerns to make her point.â
âSheâs brilliantly neurotic and writes text that is as pungent and funny to hear as it is to see,â wrote Ann Murphy of The Oakland Tribune.
Jennifer Dunning of The New York Times pronounced Ellsworth âsmart, cute and profoundly irritating,â adding that her ânutty witticisms popped up continually.â
The Times was reviewing one of Ellsworthâs energetic and eclectic performances called The Institute for Potential Religious Artifacts, Beliefs and Procedures (or TIFPRABAB), the essence of which Ellsworth distilled on the web atÌę.
The Village Voiceâs Elizabeth Zimmer added: âHer personality and the clear conceptual through-line of her story are quite winning.â
And The Dallas Morning Newsâ Margaret Putnam characterized Ellsworthâs work as a rare treat. âEvery once in a while, a choreographer equally deft with words and movement appears and makes the hybrid form a delight.â
Though the awards were announced this month, Ellsworth learned that sheâd won in September.
âI feel very humbled and grateful,â she told Boulder Weekly. âIâm very shocked.â
So shocked, in fact, that she repeatedly asked the president of United States Artists if there had been a mistake, she told the paper.
After the award, she told Westword that CU-Boulder has been a good fit for her. âI felt there was a community of experimentation here, and I felt sufficiently cloistered,â she said.
âMy ability to listen to the pieces has become stronger and Iâve become more devout as an artist in terms of my commitment to the pieces. I really try to do everything they ask of me. When I make one of these pieces Iâm not even asking myself if it sucks ⊠I donât know if a piece if going to suck or not, but I do know Iâm doing everything I possibly can for it.â
Ellsworthâs performances tend to view quotidian things through an unconventional lens. âThe Burger Foundation,â for instance, was âdedicated to the re-evaluation of the relationship between hamburgers and humans,â Ellsworth says in a video introduction.
âThe Objectification of Thingsâ was described as âpart performance art, part ritual and part ethnography, illuminating the importance, impact, and fragile nature of the material world.â
This year, Ellsworth read a newspaper story reporting that the human Y chromosome was shedding genes at a rate that would ultimately lead to its obsolescence.ÌęThe result was a performance called âPreparation for the Obsolescence of the Y Chromosome.â
Colorado Public Radioâs Ryan Warner asked Ellsworth if the âY Chromosomeâ performance were comedy or drama:
âAs an artist, I have no loyalty whatsoever to humor, but I have noticed that when I perform that people will laugh. I would say Iâm never pursuing a comedic path. I find the story rather sad. This piece was made not only because I read that article in the Times but also because my friendâs father died, and I just started thinking about, âOh, whatâs that mean?ââ
This month, Ellsworth emphasized her gratitude for âthe profound support of the Department of Theatre and Dance,Ìęthe ATLAS Institute,Ìęthe college of Arts and Sciences, the Center for Humanities and the Arts and my many CUÌęcolleaguesÌęand collaborators.â Additionally, she said, the National Performance Network has been âkey to the creation of many of my pieces over the last 15 years.â
Bud Coleman, associate professor and chair of the Department of Theatre and Dance, said students and faculty âjoin in the celebrationâ of Ellsworthâs fellowship.
âTo receive this award in the same year as such dance luminaries at Liz Lerman, Lar Lubovitch and Donald Byrd is a powerful statement that the peer-review panel recognizes that not all cutting-edge solo dance is created by artists living in New York City,â Coleman said.
âWe are pleased to see that Professor Ellsworth is getting national attention for what we have known for a long time: Her work is original,Ìęfunny, intelligent, thought-provoking and always engaging. Brava!â
See Michelle Ellsworthâs work atÌę.