Back to all news stories

Multidisciplinary

UMS announces the 2018-19 21st Century Artist Interns

By Mallory Shea

U-M School of Music, Theatre & Dance rising senior Kandis Terry will complete her 21st Century Artist Internship in NYC with Camille A. Brown & Dancers (pictured). Photo by Christopher Duggan.

The University Musical Society (UMS) and the University of Michigan’s School of Music, Theatre & Dance EXCEL Lab are proud to announce the 2018 cohort of 21st Century Artist Interns. These four students, all SMTD undergraduates, will spend the summer working with a professional dance, theater, or music ensemble that UMS will present during the 2018-19 season. When they return to campus, the interns continue their work via a one-credit independent study. To fulfill course requirements, each student will serve as a campus ambassador, educator, and marketer to support the ensemble during its visit. Each intern earns a competitive stipend of $5,000 to cover the cost of lodging, travel, and living expenses during the internship. The $5,000 stipend is on par with similar internship programs in the sciences, and a rarity in the arts, where internships are often unpaid, volunteer opportunities.

The 2018 cohort includes:

Bruna D’Avila, Theatre Performance – Directing, Class of 2019 Placement: The Office, which is theindependent arts production company producing multi-media artist Carrie Mae Weems’s provocative theater piece called Past Tense. Inspired by both President Obama’s singing of “Amazing Grace” at the memorial for nine African-Americans shot to death at a church in South Carolina and by Antigone, Past Tense will be performed in the Power Center on February 15 and 16 as part of UMS’s International Theater Series. Summer Location: New York

 

Johanna Kepler, Dance and Latino Studies, Class of 2020 Placement: Hubbard Street Dance Chicago, which will present two different programs on UMS’s Dance Series on October 19 and 20 in the Power Center, including one with Third Coast Percussion. Summer Location: Chicago

 

Allison (Allie) Taylor, Violin Performance and Communications Studies, Class of 2019 Placement: Philharmonia Orchestra, which comes to UMS for an orchestral residency that culminates in two public performances at Hill Auditorium on March 12 and 13. While in London, Allie will also intern at the artist management firm Askonas Holt. Summer Location: London

 

 

Kandis Terry, Dance and Community Action and Social Change, Class of 2019 Placement: Camille A. Brown & Dancers, which performs Brown’s latest work, ink, at the Power Center on Saturday, January 26 as part of UMS’s Dance Series. Summer Location: New York

 

 

Launched five years ago, the 21st Century Artist Internship program was developed to help prepare students for the new demands that working artists face in the contemporary marketplace. In addition to generating outstanding creative work, today’s artists are also tasked with reaching potential audiences in innovative ways. They must be able to speak dynamically about their work and creative processes, provide interactive experiences for novice audience members, and transmit themselves and their artistry across rapidly changing media platforms. The 21st Century Artist Internship program provides real-world work experience and professional connections to young artists-in-training at U-M and a chance to practice these skills within the context of UMS’s programming.

Past 21st Century Artist Interns have gone on to interesting careers in the arts, whether as performers or administrators. Former 21st Century Intern Hillary Kooistra now serves as the company manager for Kyle Abraham Dance Company (now called AIM), a direct outgrowth of her internship; another, who interned with Théâtre de la Ville in Paris, subsequently won the Julie Taymor World Theater Fellowship and now runs his own theater company in Mexico City. Others have continued their studies through graduate work at The Juilliard School or through choreographic apprenticeships in New York City.

“The 21st Century Artist Internship was a true life-changing experience,” said Kooistra. “As a rising senior interning for a prominent dance company in New York City, I made the connections and developed the skills that ultimately prepared me for a career in performing arts management, which I began almost immediately after my graduation from the University of Michigan. My internship led me to my current position as a professional arts administrator, and sent me on a career path that has shaped my perspective on the dance field that I spent so much time and energy preparing to enter while I was earning my undergraduate degree.”