And I Begin: A response by Keyierra Collins
Keyierra Collins responds to a prompt from PRJ2.0 presented in conjunction with the “Deconstructing Language: Liberationist Writing for Performance” workshop series during PRJ’s satellite residency in Summer 2021 with the National Center for Choreography at the University of Akron.
And new morning begins
A new taste creeps up the back of my throat forcing swallows
A bead of new sweat sways down my spine
A rumble shakes new sounds from my belly
New bullshit permeates the matter
Tomorrow ain’t no more, and neither is today
So I begin
One foot then two
Two foots then one…heel pressed
New feeling
One finger rotates wrapping air
Then three
Three, three…three more times now
Finish
No pause
Grab air with throat
Wait for it…begin again
Head back, eyes wide as arms unfolding off back
Knees bend
New press, press the floor away
Press the dead awake
Auntie, get out that ground child
Put on and STAGE for me
Mount spirits and get down for me
Get labor through me
Permit me to show them generations of who we be
Hold me still and hold me shaky
My hips have been through more than this
So they dip under my weight to hold this girl on surrendered feet
Finish
The volume of my breath ascends
Presses hard against my ears
Skin wet, eyes wet, dry tongue
The first tear plummets pooling memories across the floor
My work left behind, still rattling my joints
So full is the residue
Finish…again
This time I’m not done
Still more, more give, more say…
I have only just begun
[Writer’s Note: This series is based on my latest work in-development, How I found my feet again which is an explorative journey of me rediscovering myself as a movement artist. I use process, dance/movement, writing, and routines as tools for discovery. My NOW body, values, and current stage in life inform who I am now, in this moment in time as a movement artist. I utilized the tools offered by Brianna Alexis Heath during her “Deconstructing Language” workshop.]
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Keyierra Collins is an international dancer, choreographer, and teaching artist based in Chicago. In 2020 she was awarded the 3Arts/ Walder Foundation Awardee grant. As a dance artist Collins worked with artists like educator, international performer, and choreographer Onye Ozuzu as well as France-based Rwandan artist Dorothee Munyaneza. She also has had the pleasure of working with many Chicago based artists like Paige Cunningham, Emily Stein, Anna Martine Whitehead, and Sonita Surratt to name a few. Collins’ work explores how dance and movement can be used to heal trauma, particularly the collective and individual trauma experienced by people of the African diaspora. She graduated from Columbia College Chicago in 2016 with a BA Dance.There she studied various dance forms, including West African, modern, jazz, ballet, hip-hop, and improvisation. Having toured and worked with artists in Haiti and Nigeria, Collins wants to continue to travel and collaborate with artists around the world.
You can find Brianna Alexis Heath’s “Deconstructing Language” workshop here.