American Circus Educators Magazine Summer/Fall 2018 (Issue 2, Volume 13) | Page 18

in fall 2017. We were just barely able to pull together the financing to make an offer. The church accepted our offer, but then ran into their own legal and logistical delays. We would not be able to close on the property until late summer and Circadium’s opening day was September 5. In the end, our settlement date was September 1 — which was also our final day of summer camp in the old building—and so we held a parade, marching from the old building to the new, with kids on stilts and unicycles and waving banners (and adults in vehicles, moving all of our props, furniture, and supplies!) It was a very intense weekend, and it culminated with the welcome of our Class 1. Circadium was formed both to meet a need (of young people who want to be professional circus artists) and to set a trajectory. We believe that American contemporary circus is stuck in a vicious cycle of poor funding, sprawling geography, skeptical audiences, and pessimistic 18 artists. In order to break this cycle, some major steps are needed. Higher education is one of them. Higher education is how we grow more sophisticated artists (more on that below)—and it’s also how we relate circus to the wider world. HOW DO WE GROW SOPHISTICATED ARTISTS? There is no denying that we want to have the best space and the best coaches. But all circus schools want that. We want something else: a 3-year time commitment with a very clearly-designed, mission-focused curriculum that gives the students time and space to develop their own path. To this end, we spend a lot of time researching how artists evolve, and how young people achieve self- sufficiency. take courses in subjects such as Music, History, Writing, Stage Tech, Prop-Building, Costume Design, and Photography. But in the end, we have no gurus, and education is what you make of it. If we accomplish nothing else, we must teach our young artists to be independent thinkers, and to take responsibility for securing their own livelihoods. There will be no handouts waiting for them upon graduation. International networking is critical in the development of Circadium’s worldview. One of our Advisory Board members, Jay Gilligan, is the Head Teacher of Juggling and Object Manipulation at the University of Dance & Circus in Stockholm. I asked him about how expectations of circus artists have changed over the years. JAY SAYS: With the recent growth of infrastructure, politics, and institutions surrounding circus in the past few decades, circus artists now need to navigate a much more structured and nuanced environment. They need to be more aware of context and have a much more defined agenda (or at least know who or what they are serving). There is a conservatism in the system of how circus is sold and seen, and this translates into the type of supported work itself—artists are expected to "play the game" and fill these roles to keep the whole machine moving forward. At the same time, they are also often tasked with being wildly inventive and hyper personal... both qualities that do not exactly square with a conservative approach. And like everything else, the Internet has accelerated the culture as a whole, to the point where circus artists have to be excellent at business now more than ever. With more funding opportunities also comes the need to justify why circus (or even art in general) should exist, something that many older performers did not have to deal with in this context. We certainly provide our students with expertise. In addition to high- level circus technicians, our faculty includes theatre artists, dancers, and academic instructors. During their three years, the students will 19