Sacred Places Summer 2019 | Page 4

Grounds That Shout! took shape in Philadelphia over the last two years when a collaborative relationship formed between Partners for Sacred Places, Philadelphia Contemporary (an or- ganization dedicated to presenting contemporary art through popup exhibits and performances), and the New York City-based Danspace Project. The Pew Center for Arts & Heritage funded the collaboration in its entirety. An earlier iteration of Wilson’s vision was organized by Danspace Project, Dancing Platform, Praying Grounds: Black- ness, Churches, and Downtown Dance (see sidebar). Grounds That Shout! added a number of substantial layers to this initial work. For this project, the collaborators invited the participation of seven dance groups beyond Wilson’s Fist and Heel Performance Group. The project employed the services of a dramaturge, Ari- elle Julia Brown, who compiled a rich dossier of historical back- ground to inform and undergird the site-specific creations of the dancers. This background ranged from information about the Lenni-Lenape people native to the region, to histories of each congregation and its building. As Brown says in her program notes, “In some cases, the artists engaged these histories and geo- graphies as historical architecture around which the dance was built. In other cases, these histories were regarded as atmosphere encircling the work.” <fidget> performing “Malo,” between St. Peter’s Episcopal Church and Old Pine Street Church, for Grounds that Shout! procession. Credit: Daniel Kontz All of this resulted in three nights of performances at Church of the Advocate, a series of three panel discussions, and a procession through Philadelphia’s Society Hill neighborhood beginning in St. Peter’s Episcopal Church’s cemetery, continuing into Old Pine Presbyterian Church’s cemetery and interior, and ending at Mother Bethel African Methodist Episcopal (A.M.E.) Church—with different performance groups at and in between each site. Audience walking through St. Peter's Episcopal Church cemetery during Grounds that Shout! procession.  Credit:  Daniel Kontz 4 SACRED PLACES • SUMMER 2019