HARI KRISHNAN

A PAGE IN HISTORY

BIOGRAPHY

Born: Singapore
Hari Krishnan is a dancer, choreographer, scholar, and professor who specializes in Bharatanatyam and post-colonial, queer dance and film studies. Born in Singapore to Indian parents, Krishnan trained with hereditary courtesan teachers in South India who were the original repositories of Bharatanatyam. In 1991 he moved to Canada. He founded inDANCE in 1999 for which he is artistic director. Krishnan has a Bachelor of Arts from the University of Winnipeg, a Master of Fine Arts from York University, and a PhD in Dance from Texas Woman’s University. He is currently an Associate Professor of Dance in the Department of Dance and Feminist, Gender, and Sexuality Studies at Wesleyan University in Connecticut. Krishnan’s choreography explores post-colonial complexities in Indian dance and queer themes, as well as the intersection of traditional South Asian and global contemporary dance forms. His extensive body of work is based on critical perspectives on Bharatanatyam, fused with contemporary global dance styles and postmodern social critique. His pieces are bombastic, boldly confronting political and sociological issues. Works such as Holy Cow(s)! (2017) – spawned when, while eating lunch together, someone expressed surprise that Krishnan was eating a beef burger – are designed to challenge stereotypes and reclaim control over narratives of sexuality, religion, and culture in a Western-dominated global arts world.

inDANCE does not only exhibit Krishnan’s work. He frequently collaborates with and mounts productions from an expanding roster of similarly experimental artists. On top of its innovative original repertoire, inDANCE is also known for its critical reconstructions of Indian dances and techniques from the 18th and early 20th centuries. These representations are rarely seen on global stages today. inDANCE remounts and recreates them through extensive research. The goal is to preserve South Asian dance’s history, while expanding its contemporary methods and creating contemporary currency for South Asian classical dance. Krishnan’s scholarly repertoire is as extensive as his choreographic one. His research covers historic and sociological themes, from queerness and global cultural politics in dance to the history of devadasi-courtesan dance to representations of Bharatanatyam on film. These themes bleed into his choreography, and vice-versa. In 2019 his first book, Celluloid Classicism: Early Tamli Cinema and the Making of Modern Bharatanatyam, was published by Wesleyan University Press.

CONTENTS

  • Programs, magazines, press kits, publicity materials (pamphlets, postcards).

NOTABLE

  • inDance press kit
  • House program for Quicksand and Pissing off the Neighbours, Canada Dance Festival, 2013
  • House program for Holy Cow(s)!, March 23-25, 2017

CROSS REFERENCES

PORTFOLIOS

  • Kaeja d’Dance Portfolio

BOOKS / PUBLICATIONS

  • Grundy, Pamela. Rocking the Boat: Queer Content in Canadian Concert Dance, virtual exhibition
  • Szporer, Philip. “A Man’s World: The Singular Path of Hari Krishnan.” The Dance Current magazine January/February 2013.
  • Krishnan, Hari. 2019. Celluloid Classicism: Early Tamil Cinema and the Making of Modern Bharatanatyam. Middletown: Wesleyan University Press. ISBN-10: 081957886X; ISBN-13: 978-0819578860.

WORKS

  • Movements/Monuments (1996)
  • When God is a Customer (1999)
  • Ishma (1999)
  • Exhalations/Prashvasa (1999)
  • Chol (with music by Ernie Tollar and Maryem Hassan, 2000)
  • 3=1 of whatever happens (with Devraj Patnaik and Priya Thomas, 2001)
  • 3 blind (2002)
  • …owning shadows (with Sandra Wong, music by Michael Smith, 2002)
  • Pulse (music by Taylor Ho Bynum, 2003)
  • Equals (2003)
  • black and white in COLOR (with music by Timothy Sullivan, 2003)
  • 10 Questions (with Michael Du Maresq, 2003)
  • Deities Four (2004)
  • Bollywood Hopscotch (with music by Debashis Sinha, 2004)
  • Difference|Desire (with Ananya Chatterjea, music by Peter Chin, 2004)
  • One Fifth (2005)
  • Uma (2006)
  • Purnima/Full Moon (2006)
  • Lyric Memory (2006)
  • Recipes for Curry (with music by Timothy Sullivan, 2007)
  • Inverse (with music by Phil Strong, 2007)
  • Yogurt and Venom (with Allen Kaeja, music by Eric Cadesky, 2007)
  • Mea Culpa (2007)
  • Tension Red (with Daniel Phoenix Singh, 2007)
  • 5 Gods, 2 Kings and the Frog Princess (2008)
  • Red (2008)
  • Liquid Shakti (with music by Justin Luchter, 2009)
  • The Frog Princess (2009)
  • Box (2009)
  • Fallen Rain (with Srividya Natarajan, 2010)
  • Quicksand (with music by Niraj Chag, 2011)
  • Nine (2012)
  • Gold (with Srividya Natarajan, 2012)
  • I, Cyclops (with music by Niraj Chag, 2013)
  • Skin (with music by Niraj Chag, 2014)
  • The Book of Sandalwood (2015)
  • Tiger by the Tail (with Kajan, 2016)
  • From the Horse’s Mouth (2017)
  • Holy Cow(s)! (with music by Niraj Chag, 2017)
  • 16 Shades of Red (with Srividya Natarajan, 2018)
  • Black Box 3 (2018)
  • Mea Culpa-redux (2019)
  • Holy Cow(s)! redux (2019)
  • Uma redux (2019)
  • Box 3, 7 & 8 (with music by Niraj Chag, 2019)
  • Skin redux (2019)
  • The Frog Princess redux (2019)
  • Come to me (2019)
PERSONNEL

Miriam Adams, C.M.
Co-founder/Advisor

Amy Bowring
Executive and Curatorial Director

Jay Rankin
Administrative Director

Vickie Fagan
Director of Development and Producer/Hall of Fame

Elisabeth Kelly
Archives and Programming Coordinator

Michael Ripley
Marketing & Sales Coordinator

CONTACT

1303 – 2 Carlton St.
Toronto, ON
M5B 1J3
Canada
Phone: 416-365-3233
Fax: 416-365-3169
info [AT] dcd.ca

HOURS

Mon. – Fri. 10 a.m. – 5 p.m.
Appointment Required
Contact our team by email or call one of the numbers above

Canadian Heritage Wordmark