News: May 2020

Return to dance: Principles and framework for restarting dance activities post-Covid-19

In response to huge demand from dance teachers, dancers, independent artists and dance companies across Australia, Ausdance, the peak body for dance, has today released Return To Dance: Principles and framework for restarting dance activities post-Covid-19.

This document provides guidelines for practising dance safely whilst meeting the required health and safety guidelines in a new post-Covid environment. It applies to all members of the dance community: dancers, teachers, studio owners, companies and organisations.

The guidelines directly reference the Framework for Rebooting Sport in a COVID-19 Environment developed by the Australian Institute of Sport. The Ausdance guidelines have received the endorsement of Dr David Hughes, Chief Medical Officer, Australian Institute of Sport Medical Director, Australian Olympic Team, Tokyo 2020.

We recognise that our sector has been decimated by this pandemic, but COVID-19 has also provided an extraordinary opportunity for individuals, companies, small and medium businesses and communities to work together as never before to ensure a safe and productive future as soon as possible.

We also recognise that all dance in Australia sits within the context of 100,000 years of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander dance continuum. This is a powerful and extraordinary fact, and protection of First Nations Elders as the source of First Nations storytelling and knowledge in Australia is the first principle of this framework.

Teachers, parents, students, organisers and administrators can use the ‘Return to dance’ document to inform dance practice in classes, rehearsals and performances.

It’s important to remember that these are guidelines for operating within State or Territory directives: they are not an exemption from these directives. If necessary, the Ausdance network may seek exemptions to specific directives supported by ‘Return to dance’, alongside Workplace Health and Safety documentation through the COVID-19 Taskforce.

The Australian dance community has been united in its support for these guidelines which were developed by Ausdance Queensland in collaboration with BlakDance, and with the support of Arts Queensland and the guidance of many vital members of the dance and arts community.

All media enquiries: Julie Englefield, ph 0426296050

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Nominations for Australian Dance Awards 2020 now open

Ausdance is delighted to announce that nominations are now open for this year’s Australian Dance Awards, with the selection panel ready to receive your nominations for 2018 and 2019.

The announcement for this year’s Awards was postponed due to the COVID-19 lockdown, but the ADAs are open for business again, and nominations are welcome until Monday 22 June.

Anyone can nominate, and artists and companies can also now self-nominate in categories other than Lifetime Achievement, Services to Dance and Dance Education, with verifiable audience feedback and/or published reviews to support nominations.

We are now charging a nomination fee to support the Awards at a time when Ausdance National continues without funding. We will collaborate with our sponsors Harlequin Floors, Aon Risk Services, designfront and the Ausdance network to present the Awards later in the year (probably online), but your nomination fee will support whatever presentation ceremony is possible at the time.

The selection panel has been enlarged and diversified, and its voluntary members are ready to start work as soon as nominations close.

Please support this effort to keep the amazing achievements of the Australian dance community in the public eye. Acknowledgement of professional dance and its practitioners is enormously important, especially now.

You can see what Ausdance National has been doing this year via our online News.

If you are not already an Ausdance member, please consider joining so we can continue working with you.

Stay safe and nominate here!

Photo: David Kelly. Performers: Pol Andrés and Thió-Libby-Rose Niederer, Queensland Ballet.

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From the Vault – an Australian dance retrospective

This project highlights the work of some of Australia's most innovative choreographers, and demonstrates what has been lost over the last two decades as funding for dance diminishes.

We urge you to participate in advocacy for dance, and here’s how you can get started. The Politics of Dance – an action plan will help you to speak up for dance, and to use our new dance archive, From the Vault, to illustrate what has been lost over the last two decades.

From the Vault begin with some of those artists who have been awarded an Australian Dance Award for Outstanding Achievement in Independent Dance since 2003.

In coming weeks we'll also profile choreographers from other dance sectors, including First Nations dance, youth dance practice, small companies & projects, dance & disability and community dance. We also hope to include some of the Australian pieces commissioned by the larger companies in recent years.

We will add new videos from various sectors each week, so watch this space each Monday!

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