Christopher Ruud has been a part of the performing arts since birth. Growing up back stage at San Francisco Ballet he was immersed in the art of professional dance, performance and stagecraft. Receiving the majority of his dance training at San Francisco Ballet School he began his performing career on the War Memorial Opera House stage at the age of 9. Mr. Ruud was hired into Ballet West in 1998. Quickly moving through the ranks he was named Principal Dancer in 2004. He spent 21 years as an artist for Ballet West performing a huge range of classical and contemporary repertoire. Mr. Ruud is grateful to have seen sold out houses at home, all over the United States and internationally most notably in China, Cuba, New York and at the Kennedy Center receiving glowing reviews. In his time with the company he has danced major roles in the great works of Balanchine, Kylián, Forsythe, Ashton, Tudor and Cranko to name a few. He has worked personally with some of the great names in the ballet world such as Sir Anthony Dowell, Cynthia Gregory, Hans Van Mannen and Bruce Marks. Mr. Ruud has seen success as a choreographer having his ballets performed in the Ballet West Innovations program and at the annual gala performance garnering such awards as a New York Choreographic Institute Fellowship as well as several NEA grants. He spent two years as the Director of Ballet West 2 teaching, coaching and choreographing for a group of 10-12 young dancers, most of whom were hired into the main company. For several years, Mr. Ruud directed his own small company, RUUDDANCES, performing in the Annual Utah Arts Festival and touring to Jacobs Pillow. Having retired from being a professional dancer in 2019, he is thrilled to have joined the artistic team at Kansas City Ballet that same year. Since taking the position of KCB Second Company Manager and Rehearsal Director for the company, he has created many new works, ballet mastered many new and existing works, and spent time in the community educating children about ballet and performance with the Lecture Demonstration program “Studio to Stage”.
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Tomm Ruud joined San Francisco Ballet in 1975, following ten years as a principal dancer with William Christensen’s Ballet West. Born in Pasadena, California and raised in Afton, Wyoming, he earned his Bachelor of Fine Arts and Master of Fine Arts degrees from the University of Utah. During his tenure with Ballet West he performed a wide range of roles in the Christensen repertoire, contemporary works, and the entire classical repertoire. He won particular acclaim as Albrecht in Giselle, and Franz in Christensen’s Coppélia. His leading roles with San Francisco Ballet included Colas in Ashton’s La Fille mal gardée, the Cavalier in Christensen’s Nutcracker, Romeo in Smuin’s Romeo and Juliet, Ferdinand in The Tempest (Smuin), and step-sister in Cinderella (Christensen-Smuin). He also performed featured roles in Jerome Robbins’ Moves and In the Night, George Balanchine’s Western Symphony, Symphony in C and A Midsummer Night’s Dream, John Butler’s Three, Jiri Kylian’s Forgotten Land, Maurice Bejart’s Firebird, and Arthur Mitchell’s Manifestations. Mr. Ruud made guest appearances with several national and international ballet companies and dance festivals, including the National Ballet of Canada, Jacob’s Pillow Dance Festival, the Ninth International Ballet Festival in Havana, Cuba, the Los Angeles Philharmonic at the Hollywood Bowl, the 88th Conference of the International Olympics Committee at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion in Los Angeles, the Pacific Northwest Ballet, the San Antonio Ballet and Oakland Ballet. Ruud was named a Principal Character Dancer of San Francisco Ballet at the end of the 1986-87 season, having shown complete versatility as a dancer. He won praise for his dramatic performances of Drosselmeyer in Nutcracker (Christensen/Tomasson), the Rich Boy in Lew Christensen’s Filling Station, Widow Simone in Sir Frederick Ashton’s La Fille mal gardée, Lord Capulet in Michael Smuin’s Romeo and Juliet, the Tutor in Helgi Tomasson’s Swan Lake, and the Master of Ceremonies in Tomasson’s The Sleeping Beauty. San Francisco Ballet lists several ballets choreographed by Ruud in its repertoire, including MOBILE, Metamorphoses, Trilogy, Introduction and Allegro, Richmond Diary, and Step for Two. In 1986 he choreographed the Student Sampler, a fifty-minute program to educate young audiences about ballet and to introduce them to the San Francisco Ballet. The performance included an original ballet set to Dvorak’s Carnival Overture; this program was repeated for three years. He also created ballets for several other companies, including American Ballet Theater, National Ballet of Canada, Kansas City Ballet, Ballet West, Pittsburgh Ballet Theater, the Harbinger Dance Company, National Ballet of Cuba, the Columbia National Ballet of Bogata, Oakland Ballet, Ballet Met, Alaska Dance Theater, and Pennsylvania- Milwaukee Ballet Company. A short-subject film, “Balances,” released in 1981, is based on his best-known ballet, MOBILE. MOBILE was a highlight of San Francisco Ballet’s 1994 Opening Night Gala and the 50th Anniversary Gala in January 1983. As a member of Tomasson’s artistic staff, he was the Rehearsal Assistant for Nutcracker (Christensen/Tomasson), Sunset (Paul Taylor), Giuliani: Variations on a Theme (Tomasson), Forgotten Land (Kylian), Swan Lake (Tomasson), The Sleeping Beauty (Tomasson), and Company B (Taylor). Ruud also taught ballet extensively, not only at the San Francisco Ballet School but also master classes wherever he had been invited to choreograph. He taught at the Marin Ballet Center for Dance, and in July of 1987 was invited to teach at the Second International Dance Congress in Rio de Janeiro. Ruud died February 28, 1994 from AIDS related illnesses.
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Devin Gores has been running his own design/fabrication business for over 13 years. He combined his talents with Charles Lefkowitz after ten years of working together to form Perspective Design Fabrication. Devin loves working across a broad palette of mediums and stays grounded by remaining committed to developing environmentally conscious projects from design to demo. He especially thrives with the challenge of helping his clients solve complex design, engineering and construction problems. Devin brings a professional level of determination, commitment and thoughtfulness to all his projects to ensure they will pass the test of time with an enduring sense of functionality and style.
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Charles Lefkowitz began doing fabrication work in 2007 for several restaurants and translated that experience into a full-time career in design and fabrication in 2009 while continuing to create and show his metal sculpture. The pursuit of both fine art and fabrication helps continue to fuel a very creative and synergistic relationship between his personal and professional goals. Charles’s commercial experience includes designing and fabricating beer gardens, large-scale public art, stage sets for events at the Denver Center for the Performing Arts, and original, economical railing systems and bike racks around Denver. charleslefkowitz.com.
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George Peters has a thirty year history of working with aerial forms from gallery works to installation sculpture, kites, mobiles and banner works. During that time he has worked primarily as a studio artist and in the public art realm. His artistic experience includes film animation, graphic arts, theater set and costume design, photography, architectural modeling, painting and sculpture. He has completed over eighty large scale national and international commissioned works for private, corporate and public institutions.
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Jeff Rusnak is the Assistant Technical Director at the University of Colorado’s Center for Innovation and Creativity. Jeff supervises and implements most aspects of technical production. He also serves as the scenic shop foreman and crew manager for opera and musical productions. With his own company, Modular Creations, Jeff has designed and created innumerable set pieces for arts organizations throughout the state. The “Portals” set design marks his fourth major collaboration with Zikr Dance Ensemble.
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Jesse Manno is Music Director of the University of Colorado, Boulder Dance Division. He is also a frequent accompanist/composer in residence with The Bates Dance Festival, ACDA, Florida Dance Festival, and others. He has composed around 200 dance, theatre, circus art and film scores for a variety of collaborators, including David Dorfman, David Taylor, Michael Foley, Robert Moses, Chris Aiken/Angie Hauser, Frequent Flyers, and Turning The Wheel, Inc. His work has been presented all over the U.S., and sporadically in Europe and Asia. His group SHEREFE performs Balkan and Middle Eastern music at festivals, weddings, and conferences throughout the Rocky Mountain Region. Please visit www.jessemanno.com and www.sherefe.org for more information.
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The Museum of Outdoor Arts was established as a non-profit arts organization in 198. MOA is a forerunner in the placement of site-specific sculpture in Colorado. Its art collection is located within various public locations throughout the Denver metro area. From commercial office parks to botanic gardens, city parks and traditional sculpture gardens; art is placed to interpret space as “a museum without walls.” Foremost, MOA believes in its mission of ‘making art a part of everyday life.’ MOA is now headquartered at Marjorie Park, adjacent to the Fiddlers Green amphitheater in Greenwood Village. Marjorie Park is now the primary venue of the Museum of Outdoor Arts that serves many purposes. Foremost, it is an outdoor museum and exhibits over 40 artworks from MOA’s permanent sculpture collection. MOA offers self-guided and guided art tours, arts education programs, temporary art installations, and seasonal community arts related events. The space may also be rented for private and corporate events. Lastly, the park is used as the VIP entrance and amenity to concerts at Fiddler’s Green Amphitheatre.
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Travis Powell graduated with a BFA from the University of Denver’s Emergent Digital Practices program in 2016 with distinction. His thesis revolved around how memory is affected by current perception and vice versa. After graduating he pursued these concepts by moving into augmented reality, projection mapping and immersive installation, working with establishments like the Museum of Outdoor Arts, Cleo Parker Robinson Dance and Denver School of the Arts for projections and as a freelance photographer and VJ. Since founding DSDI he has also engaged in more community work, trying to provide a space and community for collaboration, to help local artists thrive. Travis is currently the CEO at Deep Space Drive-In.
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Geoffrey Dohrmann is an immersive artist and interactive designer originally from Chicago. He graduated from University of Denver in 2016 with a BA in Emergent Digital Practices. After college Geoff worked in graphic design for a year before completing a graduate certificate in information technology with a focus on web design. The base of code education facilitated moving into immersive art and interactive design with Deep Space Drive-In as it was an intersection between his art and computer science education. Currently, he serves as Artistic Director and develops interactive new media concepts that engage audiences with motion/sonic information tracking. Geoffrey engages in community outreach and social activism and was featured in several publications for leading DSDI’s Monday Night Activism projections series featuring activism pieces from artists and organizations across the country.
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