mission & core values
our mission
Founded in 1984 by choreographer Jawole Willa Jo Zollar, Urban Bush Women (UBW), is a Brooklyn-based performance ensemble and dance company. UBW seeks to bring the untold and under-told histories and stories to light through dance. We do this from a woman-centered perspective and as members of the African Diaspora community in order to create a more equitable balance of power in the dance world and beyond.
We continue to use dance as both the message and the medium to bring together diverse audiences through innovative choreography, community collaboration and artistic leadership development.
UBW CORE values
Our individual histories are authentic in and of themselves. Collectively, our histories and identities create a rich and diverse palette from which to do our work. Each individual has a unique and powerful contribution to make.
Validating the Individual
UBW’s work helps people make sense out of the world and prepare to take action in it. We offer bold and provocative viewpoints in our performance work. Our work encourages critical, creative and reflective thinking.
Catalyzing for Social Change
The answers to many challenges and creative investigations can be found within a group of people who share a commitment to working together. Building work and strategies together enhances learning, organizational development and creative works. Trust is key to the building of these relationships. A transparent process of artistic and managerial leadership builds and nurtures trust. We acknowledge the need for Leadership to provide vision and give focus to the inherent creativity within a group. The Leadership is responsible for transparent and ethical processes that build trust.
Building Trust through Process
No two communities are alike. Each community is unique and has the answers it seeks to uncover. In our Entering, Building and Exiting (EBX) work, we are not doing the thinking for a community but helping to facilitate its thinking through listening and bringing to the table what we are hearing. We then interpret what we hear through the use of our artistic medium. Inspired by work like historian Howard Zinn and his book A People’s History, our work gives voice to untold and undertold stories and perspectives.
Entering Community and Co-Creating Stories
UBW is committed to highlighting the power, beauty and strength of the African Diaspora. Dance from the African continent values the whole body in motion through a sophisticated use of polyrhythm, weight, pelvic and spinal articulation. The Urban Bush Women technique builds upon these principles.
Celebrating the Movement and Culture of the African Diaspora
While we are a touring company that does work all over the country, we intend to be good neighbors. We recognize that being part of, responding to and contributing to the overall well-being of our home community, BROOKLYN, is of the utmost importance.
Recognizing Place Matters
Strategy Statement
We create learning communities where people, especially women and girls, can find their power through dance. We nurture leadership skills and facilitate the use of art as a means of encouraging social responsibility and civic engagement. We aspire to ensure continuity by strengthening and expanding our community via ongoing professional education, development of new audiences, nurturing young talent and presenting bold, life-affirming dance works as a vehicle for self-expression and catalyst for social change.
UBW Guiding Principles for Community Engagement
In order to be effective in building community, community representatives must be part of the planning and implementation of any community-based arts project.
Self-awareness, self-management and a socio-political overview are essential ongoing learning modes for anyone involved in community transformation. All change starts within.
The Community Engagement Processes UBW uses must help people gain a sense of their own power. The UBW workshops also employ this concept. UBW’s job is to help people know what they already know. We start with the familiar and expand our knowledge base from there.
In order to move powerfully into the future, a community must “own” its history, for better or worse.
Accountability is key to working in communities. If we want to effectively build community, we ultimately must answer to our community and to one another.
We acknowledge differing spiritual principles and practices as key to our continuing growth.
We commit to exploring a critical understanding of social context and cultural traditions as an integral part of dance training.