Featured

FlowState

The goal of this performance was to raise awareness of the challenges facing Great Salt Lake, reveal the connections between the ecosystems that surround her, and hold space for the Salt Lake City community to express their experience of the present situation. To take the essence of the work beyond the theater, 10% of the donations, merchandise sales, and ticket proceeds totaling $360 were donated to Boa Ogoi and the Westminster Great Salt Lake Institute to support a future with clean air and a bountiful lake.

To create the movement and projections, I brought the movement collaborators to various places within Great Salt Lake’s watershed, on Shoshone, Paiute, Goshute, Ute, and Dine land. We observed various elements of the ecosystem and responded to the sensations our body met with like the wet snow, buzzing flies, and blowing wind. We reflected on our individual relationships to Great Salt Lake and the bounty that would be lost without her. These experiences were the source of the dance that was created for the performance, with changes made in response to the lake words poetry read live.

During this performance, the audience was prompted with several questions that allowed them to reflect on their relationship to Great Salt Lake and the surrounding ecosystems. The results included thoughtful and lighthearted responses to guide us through the uncertainty ahead:

What is held in our snow and ice?

Future life, play, history, water, pollutions, fish, fresh water, beauty, habitats, relief, pee, ice worms, temperature, microplastics, petrochemical pollution, security, particles, earth, fun, sand, blood, stories of the past and prophecies for our future, hope, promise, C02, trash, frogs, bad times with no tan lines, my skis, Captain America, memories, tears, oxygen, nitrogen, soil, filth, sustenance, the cold, time, H2O, fragments of times past, dust, toxic waste, chemicals, life, algae, bacteria, atoms, little bugs, the future, the past and present.

What qualities allow life to thrive?

Harmony, art, connection, fairness, unity, radical love, abundance, generosity, consistency, interdependence, understanding, love, care, community, trust, intention, togetherness, reciprocity, guidance, empathy, freedom, cooperation, creativity, collaboration, trade offs, purpose, responsibility, safety, passion, a reason, compassion, patience, water, equity, air, health, sunlight, relationship, basically yolo, happiness, diversity, limits on greed, selflessness, efficiency, support, excitement, non-judgement, nourishment, respect, laughter, humility.

What sensations arise during times of extreme change and loss?

Confusion, isolation, finding, grief, overwhelmed, numbness, tears, instability, clarity, avoidance, doubt, fear, sorrow, anxiety, hopelessness, pain, emptiness, opening, silence, heaviness, disturbance, anger, quiet, rumination, trauma, stillness, dread, worry, nostalgia, longing, despair, panic, mourning, tension, resistance, hatred, sadness, disconnection, yearning, grounding, teeth grinding, loneliness, seeking, digestive upset, hope, discombobulation, questions, depression, groundlessness, community, heat.

What actions are necessary for the renewal of lost spaces?

Value beyond monetary, art, community, cultivate contentment instead of consumerism, a sense of place, reparations, restructuring, change, good for the whole, being content, reconnection, rest, action, humility, awareness, acknowledgement, learning what to fight for not just against, letting go, ritual, an end to greed, understanding, communication, sacrifice, respect, teamwork, reclamation, interdependence, stewardship, accountability, more sustainable food practices, compromise, land back, education, belief, caring, aide, speed, empathy, courage, trade offs, effort, security.

Huge waves of gratitude for all those who supported this project:

  • Movement Collaborators: Olivia Beck, Elizabeth Chaillé, Sophie Greenwood, Rachel Miller, Seryna Rogers, and Severin Sargent-Catterton
  • Poetry Collaborators: milo and the lake words team
  • Music: Seth Alexander, Hotel Neon, and Michael Wall
  • Lighting Design: Leo Lynn
  • Spanish Translation: Lorraine Rogers
  • Photography: Shaun Paddock
  • Videography: Kyle Aldridge

This project was presented by Repertory Dance Theatre’s LINK series, fiscally sponsored by Brolly Arts, and received funding from the Salt Lake City Arts Council and the Utah Division of Arts and Museums.

Show Me All of It

This work is the third iteration in a series that explores relationships, consent, power dynamics, and vulnerability using light to represent the gaze of others. How do we witness the people we love? What does it feel like to be seen? Who gets to choose what is revealed?

Performers: Liv Beck, Meagan Bertelsen, Frankie Henderson, Grace Smith, Taylor Tumminia, Olivia Willden

Program Note: Show me your fear, show me your grief, show me your rage, show me your softness. Show me what you don’t want me to see, show me what you are proud of, show me what you need to be held. Show me what I think I know, show me what I haven’t seen, show me what I didn’t know to look for.

“The piece lucidly translated into movement the organic emotional dynamics in an evolving relationship of what we decide to reveal about ourselves to each other and when we feel comfortable and confident enough to do so. The idea of dance as a tangible, practical language fluent in meaning and imagery is well evidenced here. “ Review by The Utah Review

“’Show Me All of It’ was an intricate dance of light and shadow, featuring a dancer holding a flashlight to cleverly illuminate solos and duets on the stage. The overall theme—the vulnerability of showing oneself and allowing oneself to be seen —was captured in both the movement of the flashlight beams and through a repeating motif of exaggerated breath and heartbeat. The choreography—twisting, turning, and visually arresting— spoke to something primal and human, an expert example of dance having the capacity to do things that words cannot.” Review by Fjord Review

Lake Bodies, accompanied by lake words

Selected for Utah Dance Film Festival, Queer Spectra Arts Festival, and Equinox Mountain Film Festival 2025.

A creature of grief emerges from the phragmites – their changing form holding hundreds of years of death and loss. An eared grebe wanders the d(r)ying mudflats – tracing the pattern of salt the only way they know how, wondering how much of a home will be left in their lifetime. A body communes with the lake – worshiping, offering, surrendering. 

Executive Direction and Choreography: Kara Komarnitsky

Videography and Editing: Veronica Harvey

Performance: Severin Sargent-Catterton

Poetry: milo and the lake words collective

Costume Design: Nathaniel Woolley

Music: Michael Wall

Sound Engineer: Steph Kasallis 

Production Support: Mica Vainwright, Sophia Cutrubus, and Kitty 

Co-produced by Artists Climate Collective with support from the Salt Lake City Arts Council

Salt Lake City Premiere – August 17 at Atelier Mill presented by 801 Salon and Yardworks Presents

The process of making this film taught me that magic happens in the coming together, that is what the art is for. The skills that I lack are not weaknesses, but opportunities to seek relationship. We are not meant to imagine or create a new world alone. Thank you to all who brought their energy, awareness, and attention to this work and who continue to seek right relationship with Great Salt Lake.

Direct support for Great Salt Lake via Wuda Ogwa project by the Northwestern Band of Shoshone here.

Review by Dance Informa

Review by Slug Magazine

Show Me Yours and Mine

I recently created a new work for Wasatch Contemporary Dance Company’s Movers and Makers Showcase with an incredible group of dancers who worked with focus and dedication over two days. We explored how relationships can reveal parts of ourselves… whether we want them to or not… and the many power dynamics, emotional responses, and physical textures that creates. It was a quick but tender process that I hope to take to a few festivals over the next year and share this work with more audiences. This one felt personal and important.

Program Notes: Show me what I want to see, show me what you’re trying to hide, show me what you’re proud of, show me what hurts, show me the soft parts of yourself, show me what needs to be held, show me your rage… and see mine.

Photos by Katie Sorenson, courtesy of Wasatch Contemporary Dance

Snowmelt

This work was originally set on Hillcrest High School Dance Company’s officers in April 2023 and it was such a treat to work with these young dancers that I have seen grow over the years. This trio was based on the idea of snow slowly melting and traveling through space, rippling and overlapping as it becomes water.

Recently, this work was selected for Red Rock Dance Festival in St. George and I had the opportunity to restage Snowmelt on Tori Meyer, Amy Symonds, and Mads Ward. We were featured in the finalist showcase and shared the stage with an incredible group of artists.

University of Alaska Anchorage Residency

I feel so grateful to have had the opportunity to travel to Anchorage for a week and teach the students at the University and within the community. They were such a joyful group and were so open to what I asked. I taught several contemporary classes, some somatic practices, and choreographed a duet on two students titled Mine and Yours. We played a lot with the idea of shadows, reflections, and layering, while thinking about how our relationships can reveal different parts of ourselves, both for us and our partners. It was such an inspiring landscape and community to join for a few days. I hope to be back very soon!