Welcome!

Top: Photo by Federica Capo (2022), Lava Field, at the Agropoli Festival, Italy;
Christiana Axelsen, Molissa Fenley, Timothy Ward
Below: Photo by Art Davison (2024), Double Beginning, at the Judson Memorial Church; Betsy Cooper, Molissa Fenley, Bob Holman, Timothy Ward

Current and Upcoming Projects/Performances:

In New York City:

September 28, 7:30pm and 29, 2pm, 2024 - Fall for Dance - Sara Mearns performs State of Darkness as part of Fall for Dance at New York City Center, 131 West 55th Street.

December 5-7, 2024, dancers of Marymount Manhattan College perform a new work by Molissa at the Theresa Lang Theatre, 221 E 71st St, New York, NY 

May 4, 2025 - Molissa Fenley and Company perform Bardo, music by Somei Satoh, choreographed in homage to Keith Haring and premiered at his memorial on May 4, 1990. NYC AIDS Memorial Park at St. Vincent's Triangle, 76 Greenwich Ave, New York, NY

In Venice, Italy

Molissa will be in residence at the Emily Harvey Foundation in Venice, Italy for three weeks, November 4 - December 2, 2025

Best wishes to all!
Love, Molissa
Photo by Steven Pisano (2024), Timothy Ward (l), Justin Lynch (r) in Entre Les Lampes
Photo by Art Davison (2024), Molissa Fenley in Double Beginning

Rhythm Field, Molissa Fenley

Molissa Fenley, one of the most influential artists of postmodern dance, has had a lasting impact on performance. In dance, she has explored extreme effort and duration in highly crafted patterns and performed with an explosive, joyous energy that infused her work with endurance, balance, and life force. She challenged modern dance orthodoxy and redefined the character of a woman’s moving body in the late twentieth century, bringing postmodernized ritual to the stage.

Rhythm Field is a vivid and probing portrait of Fenley’s four-decade career, written by her fellow artists. The collection functions as a multifaceted look into one woman’s complex performing arts legacy. The result is itself an aesthetic undertaking that investigates the ways in which Fenley straddles dance traditions, art genres, and gender norms and has been a model to the field. The collection offers several scholarly analyses of the choreographer’s work, and is, above all, a vibrant record from the field. Rhythm Field sits at a necessary midpoint between criticism and scholarship.

Click Here to Purchase


Fall for Dance at City Center
September 28 and 29, 2024, 7:30pm
Click here for details

Theresa Lang Theatre Marymount Manhattan College
December 5 - 7, 2024
Click here for details

Cosmati Variations I-IV

Join Our Mailing List

Go