Deborah Jinza Thayer is an American choreographer, dancer, and artistic director of Movement Architecture, located in Saint Paul, Minnesota, United States. Thayer has created more than fifty original works. Her conceptual pieces take over entire spaces, transforming her performances into vividly illustrated “other worlds” to create dance theater that is both smart and architecturally sound. In recognition of her dance creativity and outstanding design, Thayer received a 2010 Sage Award.
Thayer has received numerous awards and honors, including a Sage Award for Outstanding Design, “Ode to Dolly”, a Minnesota State Arts Board, Artist Initiative Grant “to create a full-length work in a modular format that can be presented in its entirety or in parts to initiate a national touring experience, a Music in Motion Award, and a McKnight Artist Fellowship for Choreographers. She has twice been a semi-finalist for France's Recontres Choregraphiques Internationales de Seine-Saint-Denis, and was an invited Guest Choreographer for the 15th Annual Minnesota Dance Festival.
Choreography
Thayer has presented her choreography and original works around the United States, most notably in Minneapolis, New York City, and the Washington, D.C. metro area. Her work is frequently featured in the Minnesota Fringe Festival, sponsored by the Minnesota Dance Alliance, and is strongly influenced by Laban Barientief Funadamentals ; Butoh ; Vocal Dance ; Global Somatics and Body-Mind Centering Approach ; the International School of Theater Anthropology ; and various movement theater techniques.
Select original works
"Meet the Nation" translates the political machine into a hive-like hoop structure and culminates in debate gibberish.
"All That Glitters" tackles our instinctual attraction to shiny objects of desire. Score by Tom Scott.
"Bizarre Mating Ritual," a species-bending work that plays out in a forest of toy baby limbs.
“Dougieland 60: Seven Dances”
“Ode to Dolly,” Inspired by the physiological processes of fascia, the connective tissue that organizes our musculoskeletal system, elastics and artificial baby parts are stretched to create geometric grids, tangled canopies, and sculpturesque forms, this award-winning piece tackles “instinctual reproductive behaviors and artificial ideas of creation.” Choreography/Installation by Deborah Jinza Thayer with music composed by Matthew Smith. Costumes by Lisa Axell, set design by Bryan Axell/3 Ring Scenic, puppetry by Deirdre Murnane and lighting design by Jeff Bartlett. Dancers include Rachel Barnes, Sarah Jacobs, Penelope Freeh, Christine Maginnis, Kimberly Richardson, and Sharon Picasso.
Quotable
“I believe that freedom and expression of the body is ultimately important because how you live in your body influences how you are in your environment and in all aspects of your life." Deborah Jinza Thayer