Dzul Dance fuses dance with aerial arts and acrobatics as a means to communicate indigenous pre-Hispanic and Mexican culture and create bridges between contemporary art and historical heritage. By transforming bodies into earthbound and airborne forces of nature Dzul breaks physical, cultural and political boundaries. This daring and unique company connects the ancient and the modern in order to illuminate the vast array of drama and beauty inherent to the natural world and the human condition.
Dzul Dance was created in 2003. Artistic Director Javier Dzul and his
culturally diverse company of dancers and aerialists have been presented
throughout New York and Mexico and in South America, Europe, Canada,
Asia and the Virgin Islands garnering reviews along the way that hail
Dzul’s “acrobatic wizardry” (Attitude: The Dancer’s Magazine) and his
ability to turn his dancers of “remarkable elasticity” into “creatures
of the air as well as of the earth” (The New York Times). His
choreographies have been described as “electrifying” by Magazine.Art,
“sophisticated and eloquent” by Attitude: The Dancers’ Magazine and
“beautiful…extremely effective” by The New York Times.
Dzul
Dance’s intense physicality and creative appeal have won them
invitations nationally and internationally to perform at a variety of
venues that include: the United Nations, Smithsonian National Museum of
the American Indian, El Museo del Barrio, Banff Centre for the Arts
(Canada), Gerald W. Lynch Theater at John Jay College, Tribeca
Performing Arts Center, Saint Mark’s Church, Kaye Playhouse, Baruch
Performing Arts Center, American Indian Community House, Dixon Place,
Teatro Cancun (Mexico), Castillo Theatre and Reichold Center for the
Arts (USVI). International festivals include; Mexico Now Festival (NYC),
Festival Internacional Cervantino (Mexico), Bard College Summerscape,
Festival Indigena de Puebla (Mexico), Mazatlán Cultural Festival
(Mexico), Gunvor Festival (Switzerland), The Open Project (France),
Festival Internacional del Centro Historico (Mexico), Festival del Arte
Contemporaneo (Mexico), Muestra Internacional de Danza de Oaxaca
(Mexico), Festival Santiago de Queretaro (Mexico), National Dance Week
(NYC), Dancers’ Responding To AIDS (NYC), Festival Otonos Culturales en
Merida (Mexico), Teatro IATI’s Performing Arts Marathon (NYC) and Latin
Choreographer’s Festival (NYC). Dzul has created performances for a
number of corporations and production groups that include: NYC Big
Events, Latin Grammy Week (NYC), Canadian International Bank, Mall
(Mexico), Whirl Inc. (Canada), Em Polham (NYC/Korea), and EZ Paisano
(California). Dzul is also widely supported and promoted by several
Hispanic and Mexican organizations including: United States-Mexico
Chamber of Commerce (Northeast chapter), Mexican Board of Tourism and
Adelante: JPMorgan’s Latino Employee Network.
Dzul has
collaborated with a variety of artists. Among them, Guatemalan composer
and musician Sergio Reyes, Columbian singer/songwriter Lucia Pulido,
photographers Tim Petersen, Rojelio Rodriguez, Acey Harper and Matthew
Smith, internationally acclaimed vocalist Sussan Deyhim, award winning
filmmaker and human rights activist Rebecca Sommer, sound/image artist
Jacob Robinette and grassroots community activist Dr. Lenora Fulani.