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WERK: Vogueing Dance
Museion Art Club presents its second participatory residency of the year: a workshop dedicated to vogueing.
This style of dance emerged during the 1960s to 1990s in Harlem, New York, as a form of self-expression, fluidity and ethnic, gender and sexual intersection.
The residency will culminate in a themed dinner and event open to the public, offering an authentic experience of Ballroom Culture.
During the four-day Vogueing workshop (24-28 October), William Briscoe will introduce participants to the history of Vogue and elements of Vogue Fem. Together they will then explore forms of self-expression in a protected space.
Vogueing is a highly stylised form of expressive dance created by African American and Latino LGBTQ+ drag communities in Harlem between 1960 and 1990. It is enjoying increasing popularity and is now a global phenomenon. There are three different dance styles of vogueing: Old Way, New Way and Vogue Fem, all of which participants can learn during the workshop. The feminine essence as well as expressivity and hypnotic, sensual movements form the heart of this dance, which expresses social resistance and queer liberation.
This style of dance emerged during the 1960s to 1990s in Harlem, New York, as a form of self-expression, fluidity and ethnic, gender and sexual intersection.
The residency will culminate in a themed dinner and event open to the public, offering an authentic experience of Ballroom Culture.
During the four-day Vogueing workshop (24-28 October), William Briscoe will introduce participants to the history of Vogue and elements of Vogue Fem. Together they will then explore forms of self-expression in a protected space.
Vogueing is a highly stylised form of expressive dance created by African American and Latino LGBTQ+ drag communities in Harlem between 1960 and 1990. It is enjoying increasing popularity and is now a global phenomenon. There are three different dance styles of vogueing: Old Way, New Way and Vogue Fem, all of which participants can learn during the workshop. The feminine essence as well as expressivity and hypnotic, sensual movements form the heart of this dance, which expresses social resistance and queer liberation.