GroundWorks Executive Artistic Director David Shimotakahara, General Manager Beth Rutkowski, and Trustee Tamera Brown, discuss GroundWorks vision at 16 and moving forward – “being a caretaker and curator of, and catalyst for curiosity.”

INTRODUCTION

About GroundWorks

Founded in 1998, GroundWorks is a ballet-based contemporary dance company whose activities include fully-produced performances of new work in traditional theater venues, events in non-traditional settings, master classes and workshops throughout Northeast Ohio. By embracing risk and imagination, GroundWorks seeks to encourage interdisciplinary collaborations and expand the parameters of how and where dance is presented. Approximately 6,000 people attend GroundWorks events each year.

About the Project

Hoping to expand the ways in which audiences connect to the organization outside the performance experience, GroundWorks has embarked on two new experiments. The first—Common Ground—is a social convening of approximately 30 people who gathered to discuss broad questions or issues related to Cleveland and the arts. The second—It’s Your Move—is a video collection of spontaneous moves created by GroundWorks artists and volunteers that are posted on GroundWorks website and the It’s Your Move YouTube channel. Using these video motifs as inspiration, GroundWorks invites viewers to respond by sharing videos of their own moves, which will be posted on the organization’s website.

Starting Conditions

As an organization, GroundWorks was in a “pretty good place,” according to staff. As Artistic Director David Shimotakahara says, “We’ve always been focused on innovating around the artistic product, and we’re really good at what we do.” The organization also had an expansive artistic approach that, according to Board member Tami Brown, unlocked the potential for creative thinking within the organization. “GroundWorks is all about the joy of creativity that just happens to be expressed through movement,” she says.

To Shimotakahara and General Manager Beth Rutkowski, however, this joy was not shared widely enough, and they were both feeling a sense of urgency within the organization. “The company had gotten to this point of success,” says Shimotakahara, “and I didn’t want it to just plateau. We were kind of isolating ourselves in a strange way, and it made sense that if we were going to grow as an organization, then we were going to have to look at how we intersected with the community.” Comparing GroundWorks to a beautifully outfitted oil rig that is “incredibly technically put together and obviously built for the job,” Shimotakahara says, “It’s a great platform, but it’s a very small platform… it could create a much larger platform for new creativity.”

Rutkowski sensed that what they needed was a way to connect with people beyond what was happening on stage—a two-way exchange that would build emotional connections and involve the audience in more participatory ways. But how could an organization that had always followed a traditional performance model of working from one performance to the next rethink its relationship with its audience in order to stay in touch with people in a more meaningful way?

Taking a cue from his own intuition and philosophy of dance, Shimotakahara suggested that GroundWorks begin to see itself as “a curator, catalyst and caretaker of the audience’s curiosity… purposely leaving out the ‘D’ for dance,

[in order to] leave open a much more interesting and wider and more dimensional arena where this exchange can happen.”

Just as GroundWorks was beginning to explore what this all might mean, the Engaging the Future/Incubating Innovation Program was announced by the Cleveland Foundation, and staff saw the new program as an opportunity to buy itself some time to think and dream. Full of optimism and confidence, GroundWorks applied for and received a grant from the Foundation in 2012.