Career Achievement Awards
The 2020 Herb Lockwood Prize in the Arts
The Herb Lockwood Prize aims to reward the pinnacle of arts leadership in a state blessed with creative energy disproportionate to its population. Read more >
The Vermont Arts Council Walter Cerf Award
The Walter Cerf Medal is presented to individuals who have made a sustained contribution to the arts and had an impact on Vermont's cultural life. Read more >
The Herb Lockwood Prize in the Arts
Photo: Andy Duback
*From herblockwoodprize.org
“How does someone become the matriarch of an art form for an entire state? This is the question raised by this year’s winner of the Herb Lockwood Prize.
The answer begins in the 1980s, in an upstairs studio on Main Street in Burlington. Dancers of all ages and abilities came there to learn movement. Their teacher treated dance as a means of conveying what it is to be human, a way for an individual dancer to express emotions that anyone can recognize and feel.
She soon became known for incredible focus. For having eyes that light up at a good idea. For being raw and direct, and for having a great belly laugh. She also developed two traits that are essential for success in dance: First, determination. This show will come together. The performance will come off. And second, savvy. Uniquely among Vermont dance producers, she pays her dancers for rehearsal time. She is repaid, of course, in devotion.
This combination of attributes soon outgrew Main Street, to become Cradle to Grave Arts. Piece by piece, that company expanded notions about where dance can be performed. How about a bus depot? Or an abandoned building? How about a show that is 54 hours long?
The Mill Project considered the lives of textile workers in Vermont’s past. The Rose Street Bakery Project was a ten-hour performance in an abandoned building. The Waterfront Project involved a performance on the first Sunday of the month all year, and in all weather. The next year brought Spirit of Place, a two-person dance performed in silence, and the Hay Project, down at Shelburne Farms. Next, the Five Sisters area of Burlington became the stage for the Neighborhood Project. People were, quite literally, dancing in the streets.
Time after time she found new places to perform, and new ways to introduce people to this art form. The role of dancers, by expressing history and culture and emotion, was being enlarged.
She produced a show in Burlington’s Bus Barn, where buses had been maintained for decades. The musical score was a reading of the bus workers’ names. The show was self-directed: The audience would drift through the space to discover a performance around one corner or in front of one old window.
In 2012, she attained new levels in Dear Pina, a tribute to the groundbreaking German choreographer Pina Bausch. This idea required 28 dancers. The venue was equally ambitious: the Breeding Barn at Shelburne Farms. Imagine a stage fifty times larger than the one at the Flynn. Yet it was moving and engaging from the first moment to the last. Dance in Vermont had reached a new scale.
Almost inversely, her next work, Threads and Thresholds, was performed inside the snug Kent Museum in Calais. In that immersive show, dancer and audience were close to one another, breathing the same air. A thump from another room meant dance was going on in there too.
By then she had taught hundreds of dancers. Any place could serve as the set. Any sound, or even silence, could accompany the choreography. The range of ages and body types grew. People with different physical abilities joined the cast. Always, at the center, there was human movement, exacting and emotive. Technique was not some cold mechanism for making shapes with bodies. Technique was a tool of expression. Technique was a way to connect.
Meanwhile she nurtured other choreographers and dance producers. She attended shows by new groups, and she’d rush backstage after the show to bestow praise and fierce hugs. She has caused all boats to rise in Vermont’s dance harbor.
And now she is embarked on her greatest production yet: “The Quarry Project.” This is a performance within the walls, and on the water, of the Barre Granite Quarry. Dancers will float, musicians likewise, while the unique acoustics and reflections of light on the water, create a stage like no other. This show could only happen in Vermont. “The Quarry Project” requires the involvement of dancers, musicians, companies, sponsors, and eventually an audience that will see something rare, ephemeral, and unforgettable.
The Herb Lockwood prize is awarded to people who not only create their art at the highest artistic level, but have also nurtured the state’s other practitioners of that art. The prize has gone to an actor, a bookmaker, a filmmaker, a novelist, a musician, and the founder of a puppet theater company. Dance is different. It’s an especially hard art form, punishing on the body, difficult to finance, hard to stage. Yet this year’s winner has bested these challenges over and over. Most incredibly, her greatest work is still ahead.
Please join us in congratulating the winner of the 2020 Herb Lockwood Prize, the state’s matriarch of dance, Hannah Dennison.”
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I was born in 1947 into a middle class family (there was a middle class back then because we had a more balanced, equitable tax structure). Living in the country, I was given lots of latitude to roam, invent and figure things out on my own. I just had to be home by supper and do my chores.
My mother was the one who encouraged my budding creative efforts. She also was the one who made me aware of our advantages as she picked raspberries with my brother and me and told us about migrant workers and their children who did this labor all day long. She shaped my view on society and trusted that I would bring fairness to all interactions. She was gentle, kind, quiet, strong and patient. I miss her and thank her.
In 1974, I moved to Burlington where, by 1979, I found dance. It was what I had been seeking and threw myself into learning.
I was in the right place at the right time. People’s Airlines made travel affordable – NYC round trip for $19 and Europe for $99, enabling me to study, first-hand, the work of several choreographers I admired. Bernie was the mayor. Artists had a place at the table.
The contemporary dance community was given free space at the top of Memorial Auditorium to create, no strings attached. There was a clear understanding that offering artists access and support would enrich the community in profound and lasting ways. The atmosphere was exciting and very political. The doors were open and I and many others stepped through. It was a lively and potent time.
In the three weeks since I got the phone call from Todd, I have been thinking about all the people I got to know through the art I make. A very long list of people saying YES, brought me and my work to this point. Initially, I start something alone, but for the rest of the journey, I am in good and steady company.
Dancers, Musicians, artistic collaborators, teachers, mentors, colleagues, volunteers, donors, presenters, business people, city and town officials, neighbors, family, and friends.
Without your belief in my ability, I would not be here, and that is the truth. I want to speak this very long list, but it would take the rest of the afternoon and night and we would need a warm coat. Instead, know that behind each name is a pyramid of people who lift every single artist on their journey.
Thank you to…
Todd Lockwood who honors his brother Herb with significant and unfettered support for artists.
Ellen Smith Ahern, Emily Boedecker, Selene Colburn and Lida Winfield, – the board of Cradle to Grave Arts – who know what it takes to be an artist and give to each other the gift of deep attention.
My artistic collaborators in The Quarry Project, the biggest project of my career. – Leslie Anderson, Julia Barstow, Lukas Huffman, Amy LePage, Linda Provost, and Andric Severance, who commit themselves to the highest quality work in this amazing site under these extraordinary conditions. The calm each person brings to every step has made this project not just possible but truly profound.
And Dave Severance with whom I have walked, weathering the numerous storms of living together. For 30 years, we have begun our day with tea, looking out at our world, quietly breathing in the new day. He enriched my pieces with his considerable talents as a set designer, carpenter, composer, editor, collaborating artist and thoughtful problem-solver. Thank you.
In closing, I have written a poem that seems to sum it up for me.
To leave the shore & simply slip out into this powerful space
Moving slowly in and on the water,
Well over my head,
towards that mysterious gap that shimmers.
Hannah Dennison – September 15, 2020
The Vermont Arts Council Walter Cerf Award
“There’s a tremendous sense of caring and unity in her projects, a great integrity and thought in her work — for the space and place and for the hundreds of dancers and nondancers involved in her productions,”
-an anonymous review panelist at the VAC
The Walter Cerf Medal is presented to individuals who have made a sustained contribution to the arts and had an impact on Vermont’s cultural life. The award is named in honor of the late philanthropist Walter Cerf whose generous gifts, exceeding $5 million, have benefited numerous Vermont institutions including the Arts Council. Mr. Cerf was instrumental in establishing the Arts Endowment at the Vermont Community Foundation, and his contributions have created a $1 million fund to assist Vermont’s artists and arts organizations.
Selected by the Council, the medals may be awarded to artists of renown or to those in a closely related field, such as philanthropy, administration, production, education, advocacy, or mentoring, according to the criteria for the Cerf Medal.