The National Arts Club to Present THE LIVING LEGACY: An Evening With The Limón Dance Company
The free event at Gramercy Park South features works by José Limón, Doris Humphrey, and Kayla Farrish.
The National Arts Club will presens The Living Legacy: An Evening with the Limón Dance Company on June 4, 2026, at 6:30PM at 15 Gramercy Park South, NYC.
Three extraordinary works. Eight decades of American modern dance. One unforgettable evening. Experience excerpts of Doris Humphrye's Two Ecstatic Themes, José Limón's The Moor's Pavane, and Kayla Farrish's The Quake t hat Held Them All - works that span generations and define a genre - performed by the celebrated Limón Dance Company, founded in 1946 by José Limón and Doris Humphrey. This evening of performance and conversation brings together Artistic Director Dante Puleio, former Limón soloist Daniel Fetecua, Jacob's Pillow Archivist Norton Owen, and Limón principals Joey Columbus and Mariah Gravelin to illuminate the past, present, and future of a living legacy. It will be a rare window into an art form that continues to inspire audiences worldwide.
The José Limón Dance Foundation exists to perpetuate the Limón legacy and its humanistic approach to movement and theater, and to extend the vitality of that vision into the future, through performance, creation, preservation, and education.
The José Limón Dance Foundation supports two entities: the Limón Dance Company, this country's first modern dance repertory company, and the Limón Institute, an educational and archival resource center. In our home base of New York City, the Limón Institute reaches close to 5,000 students and scholars annually through its education programs (including Limón4Kids), archival library, and New York City classes and workshops.
Founded in 1946 by José Limón and Doris Humphrey, the Limón Dance Company has been at the vanguard of American Modern dance since its inception and is considered one of the world's greatest dance companies. Acclaimed for its dramatic expression, technical mastery, and expansive, yet nuanced movement, the Limón Dance Company illustrates the timelessness of José Limón's work and vision. The Company's repertoire, which includes classic works in addition to new commissions from contemporary choreographers, possesses an unparalleled breadth and creates unique experiences for audiences around the world.
Choreographer and dancer José Limón is credited with creating one of the world's most important and enduring dance legacies- an art form responsible for the creation, growth, and support of modern dance in this country. Numerous honors have been bestowed upon both Limón and the Company he founded in 1946, including most recently the White House's 2008 National Medal of Arts for Lifetime Achievement. José Limón's story is a powerful vehicle for reaching young people today. Immigrating to the United States from Mexico in 1918, Limón is considered one of Mexico's greatest artistic exports and a role model for Latinx communities throughout the United States. Limón4Kids is an important addition to the Institute's mission, taking the Limón legacy directly into the classrooms of the most underrepresented New York City public schools and community centers. Tickets are free and available here.
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