Keyierra Collins
Keyierra Collins, is an Afro-interdisciplinary dancer and choreographer based in Chicago, but recognized internationally. In 2020, she received the 3Arts/Walder Foundation Awardee grant, and she has also been honored with grants from organizations like Chicago Dancemakers Forum and The Ignite Fund. A graduate of Columbia College Chicago with a BA in Dance, Collins studied various dance forms, apprenticed under educators like Onye Ozuzu and Dr. Raquel Monroe, and collaborated with notable artists including Aaliyah Christina and Dorothee Munyaneza. Her extensive portfolio includes work with celebrated Chicago-based artists like Anna Martine Whitehead, Erin Kilmurray, Jovan Landry, and Sonita Surratt. Collins’ artistic practice and research are rooted in Afro-Diasporic traditional and social dance forms, culture, and history. Her work acts as a platform for Black Womanists to voice a shared expectation for change, liberation, and healing. Her process is kinesthetically driven and often inspired by conversations between peers and abstract reflections related to socio-political issues.Alongside Brianna Alexis Heath, she co-founded Take Some Leave Some (TSLS): a multidisciplinary performance collective that uses original sound, choreography, film, and installations to create experiences reflecting and celebrating Black women’s worldmaking artistries. TSLS creates experiences inside homes and neighborhood spaces on the Southside of Chicago to reference “home” as a kind of a communal safe space maintained by Black women’s resilient and unapologetic experiential knowledge. After touring and collaborating with artists in Haiti, Nigeria, and France, Collins feels a strong drive to persist in her travels, continuing to work alongside like minded artists, creating spaces for her community, and delving into research on how Afro-Diasporic movement can positively impact both mental and physical well-being.
Featured Artworks
- How I Found My Feet Again photo by: Jovan Landry, Location: Columbia College Chicago Dance Center A part of Columbia College Dance Center 2022 Spark Plug comissioned programing
- How I Found My Feet Again photo by: Jovan Landry, Location: Columbia College Chicago Dance Center A part of Columbia College Dance Center 2022 Spark Plug comissioned programing
- HIFMFA: iin the finding photo by: Jovan Landry, Location: Lawndale Pop-Up Shop, apart of Tectonic Black Summer Festival 2022 An excerpt from HIFMFA
- Love Offering photo by: Jovan Landry, Location: Pullman Artspace Lofts apart of the Pullman Laboring Together performance series 2022 A work by my performance collective, Take Some Leave Some, cofounded by Brianna Alexis Heath and myself.
- How I Found My Feet Again, a series of writings by Keyierra Collins photo and design: Keyierra Collins, Location: Pullman Chicago The first graphic image apart of my 6 part series with Performance Response Journal in response to my solo HIFHFA
- NEW-phoric "i like these new blooms" image by: Keyierra Collins, published on Performance Response Journal a part of my published series on Performance Response Journal, in response to my solo How I Found My Feet Again, 2022
- The Shwang Out: Take Some Leave Some photo by: Jovan Landry, Location Links Hall A part of Links Hall's 2023 CO-Misson Curational Residency
- The Shwang Out photo by: Jovan Landry, Location: Links Hall , a part of their curators residency 2023 a work by Take Some Leave Some, co founded by Brianna Alexis Heath and myself.
- Tati's Buttah Joint: Take Some Leave Some photo by: Jovan Landry, Location: Block House Gallery A part of Links Hall's CO-Misson Curational Residency
- Tati's Buttah Joint: Take Some Leave Some photo by: Jovan Landry, Location: Block House Gallery A part of Links Hall's CO-Misson Curational Residency
Keyierra Collins has crowd-funded a project with 3AP
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- $6,235 raised of $5,000 goal
- 0 Days 0:00:00 LEFT
I am creating a collaborative, durational installation set inside a house on the South Side of Chicago that uses movement and performance to reflect on lessons learned and passed down to Black women. For one week in 2021, we will …
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