Image Description: HOW WE MOVE logo in black text and an red ‘W’ and purple ‘M’ hugging.
Media Contact:
Mariclare Hulbert, PR Contact for Embraced Body
mariclare.hulbert@gmail.com
585.278.2302
EMBRACED BODY ANNOUNCES SECOND COHORT OF HOW WE MOVE PROGRAM – Dance Intensive Created By and For Multiply Marginalized D/deaf & Disabled Artists, Applications Open September 2 - October 15, 2025 –
Phoenix, AZ (August 5, 2025) Embraced Body, the Disability Justice and inclusive arts organization founded by artist and Disability Justice consultant India Harville, announces the application period for the second round of its How We Move program. Funded by the Mellon Foundation, How We Move is a dance intensive created for and by multiply marginalized D/deaf and Disabled artists from across the United States; the program centers agency, multiplicity, interdependence, and creative power. Applications for the 2026 program are open September 2 - October 15, 2025.
“We’re interested in what happens when we bring multiply marginalized artists from the margins into the center, define our own spaces, and explore how we move together. That’s really the creative question behind the work,” India Harville, Embraced Body Founder & Executive Director, shared with Dance Magazine.
The How We Move Program centers D/deaf and Disabled, multiply marginalized (BIPOC, LGBTQIA+) dancers. The second round of the program will welcome six artists and will include two virtual weekend gatherings, followed by a 10-day in-person intensive in the Movement Research studios in New York City (June 2026), and culminating in a final virtual weekend. This hybrid gathering format provides multiple access points to Disabled dance artists wishing to build and expand cross-disability community.
The in-person intensive will include somatic/movement/dance workshops; each participant will have an opportunity to lead a workshop and will receive support to ensure their workshop is accessible for all attendees. The intensive will also include space to build power together towards a transformation of the colonial, eugenicist, and ableist lineages still present in the dance field. This intensive will provide a rigorous access framework, allowing cross-disability artists from across the country the opportunity to come together, create, learn from one another, and cultivate opportunities.
How We Move collaborators include India Harville, Kayla Hamilton, JJ Omelagah, with space partner Movement Research. Artists for the pilot program included Assaleh Bibi, kumari giles, Devin Hill, Hector Machado, Jackie Robinson, and Zen Spencer.
Program details are available at embracedbody.com/hwm. Applications are open September 2 - October 15, 2025. An informational webinar will be hosted on September 25. All accepted How We Move participants will receive a $2,000 stipend and the program will cover access, travel, housing, and food costs for the June in-person intensive. Funding is also available for Personal Care Attendants.
About Embraced Body
Centered in the belief that our bodies should feel radically welcomed in all spaces, Embraced Body advances Disability Justice through inclusive performing arts, accessibility consulting, and anti-ableist education for all. Our work is for and by people like us: Black Disabled people, queer and genderqueer Disabled folks, Disabled survivors, folks who don’t neatly fit into one identity category or one canonized way of making dance—those who need to re-make the world in their image in order to find a place where they can be in their entirety. Embraced Body is driven by a profound commitment to fostering accessibility and inclusivity for multiply marginalized Disabled individuals. By highlighting the interconnectedness of ableism with other forms of oppression and addressing these systemic inequalities head-on, we endeavor to dismantle oppressive structures and create a more equitable society for all.
INDIA HARVILLE (SHE/HER)
As a Disability Justice activist, performance artist, public speaker, and somatics practitioner, India Harville has made it her mission over the past 20 years to open people's minds to the wonder of their own bodies as a vehicle for growth and transformation, both personal and collective.
India has danced with Sins Invalid, Dance Exchange, California State East Bay, The Queer Arts Festival, the Black Spirit Dance Collective, Mouthwater Festival, and Movement Liberation. She’s a two-time recipient of the Access Movement Play Residency funded by Mellon and is currently working on a one-woman show, Liminal. She’s certified as a dance instructor in: NIA, Zumba, Dancing Freedom, and DanceAbility, where she is both a Master Teacher and Master Trainer.
In 2016, she founded what is now known as Embraced Body, a Disability Justice and inclusive arts organization that began by providing accessible movement classes to Disabled communities. Since then, they’ve made disability-affirming dance funded by major philanthropic organizations, while also consulting on accessibility and Disability Justice.
The intersection of India’s own identities as an African American, queer, Disabled/chronically ill, femme, cis woman informs all her work. No matter what she is doing, she sets forth the example that however our bodies show up in the world, they are perfect, worthy of existence, and capable of magic.
KAYLA HAMILTON (SHE/THEY)
Kayla Hamilton is a Texas-born, Bronx-based dancer, performance maker, educator, consultant, and artistic director of Circle O—a cultural organization uplifting Black Disabled and other multiply marginalized creatives.
She has developed & designed access-centered programming for the Mellon Foundation, Movement Research, DanceNYC, and UCLA, and is a co-director of Angela’s Pulse/Dancing While Black.
Kayla is a Jerome Hill Artist Fellow, Pina Bausch Foundation Fellow, United States Artist Disability Futures Fellow, NEFA National Dance Project Production Grant recipient, and Bronx Cultural Visions Fund recipient. Her work has been presented at the Whitney Museum, Gibney, Performance Space NY, New York Live Arts and Bronx Academy of Arts and Dance. Kayla was also part of the Bessie award winning ensemble Skeleton Architecture.
As an educator, Kayla co-developed ‘Crip Movement Lab’ with fellow Disabled artist Elisabeth Motley—a pedagogical framework centering cross-disability movement practices. She also worked as a K-12 public school special education teacher in NYC for 12 years.
JJ OMELAGAH (THEY/THEM)
JJ Omelagah is the Program Director, Access Doula, and Healing Artist for Embraced Body and the founder of Sounds of Kayode.
With two decades of experience in human services and healthcare, JJ brings a unique perspective on care. They provide crucial access support and education while contributing to the organization's overall operations.
As a transgender sound artist, JJ’s mission is to create vibrant frequencies resonating with collective care, healing, and transformation. Each note contributes to the co-creation of a sonic environment where energies converge, intertwine, and uplift. They’ve performed at events such as SF Pride and the National Queer Arts Festival.
JJ studied at Howard University and City College of San Francisco and holds a certification in Project Management from the University of Arizona. They are also a trained Circle Sing Facilitator, Reiki practitioner, Orisha priest, and a committed advocate for Disability Justice and LGBTQIA+ rights. With comprehensive experience in Access Doulaship, project management, customer service, case management, conflict resolution, and volunteer management, JJ brings a wealth of knowledge to their work in access, care, and community building.
MOVEMENT RESEARCH
Movement Research, founded in 1978, is one of the world’s leading laboratories for the investigation of dance and movement-based forms. As a creative incubator for artists and emerging ideas, Movement Research provides space and resources for adventurous dance. Valuing the individual artist, their creative process and their vital role within society, Movement Research is dedicated to the creation and implementation of free and low-cost programs that nurture and instigate discourse and experimentation. Movement Research strives to reflect the cultural, political and economic diversity of its moving community, including artists and audiences alike.
In January 2019, Movement Research moved into its first permanent home at 122 Cultural Center. In 2024, Movement Research broke ground on the build-out of its two studio spaces located in 122CC to create: two dance studios to house MR programs and to serve artists and the community with subsidized rates for rehearsals, practice and convenings; a vestibule outside of the studios that offers a space to gather, stretch and converse; a resource room to provide meeting and lounge space for artists, and access to MR’s library and publications.
Funding Credits
The How We Move program is funded by the Mellon Foundation. Embraced Body is fiscally sponsored by Dancers' Group and is grateful for funding support from Mellon Foundation, Solidaire Network and Borealis Philanthropy.
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