BFA dance concert explores emotions that unite us
CU Boulder students explore fear, empathy and interconnectedness through danceÌę
The University of Colorado Boulder dance division kicks off 2018 with â,â a dance concert of original pieces by four BFA candidates. The performance, held Feb. 2-4 in CUâsÌę, showcases each womanâs eclectic dance background and delves into several unexpected topics, including philosophy, neuroscience and nature.
âCatapultâ has allowed Kaitlyn Lawrence, a neuroscience and dance double major, to explore two very different passions in one project. Her piece deals with the relatively new discovery of mirror neurons, the brain system that causes us to feel empathy.
âWhen we see someone fall, we flinch,â Lawrence says. âWhen someoneâs sad, we feel compassion. I wanted to explore the connection between our own personal memories and the empathy we feel.â
Lawrence explains that we all undergo similar big, emotional life eventsâperiods of love, loss, confusion and painâso when those events happen to others, we tend to feel empathy because we remember an analogous event that took place in our own lives.
In her untitled piece, Lawrence hopes to show the function of mirror neurons through dance. She and other dancers will draw on their own memories of key life events, such as starting a new job or experiencing heartbreak, to show how all their memories are interconnected.Ìę
âAnyone you ask says thereâs been a time when theyâve felt lost, or a time when theyâve felt pure joy,â Lawrence says. âIâm hoping that audiences who see my piece think about these invisible connections we have with each other and how those connections are essential to our survival.â
Mattie McGarey, a philosophy and dance double major, also hopes her piece inspires introspection. Like Lawrence, sheâs using âCatapultâ to explore the connections between her two main areas of study.Ìę
âIâm interested in the way fear influences how we interact with the world,â McGarey says. âIâm interested in how fear impacts our relationships with nature, animals and each other, and how it shapes our vision of reality.â
McGarey believes fear, like empathy, connects all of us. To some degree, she says, we all fear unknown people, places and things, which drives much of todayâs political and social divisions.
âThe pain people feel right now, the instincts people have to protect those they love or protect the future of the worldâitâs all based on fear,â she says. âWe live in fear of the unknown, and recognizing that is the first step in freeing our minds and being able to truly connect with each other.â
The raw, powerful, animalistic dance on display in McGareyâs piece is meant to help audiences explore the idea that weâre often uneasy with whatâs unfamiliar.Ìę
âI want people to ask themselves why weâre uncomfortable when we see movement on stage that isnât totally human,â she says. âI hope people wonât write it off as âother.â I hope theyâll try to recognize themselves in it.â