Nearly Sighted/
Unearthing the Dark
(Gibney, 2018)




About
In Nearly Sighted / Unearthing the Dark, Kayla explored the gaps and knowledge that exist between what we perceive, how we interpret, and what we understand in a sight centered (performance) world. The Audio Descriptions in the show are delivered live by people who become an integral part of the piece. Their tone, style, and point of view as a playwright, an actor, and a certified Laban instructor are made ‘visible’, finding humor and insight in their subjectivity. Kayla’s dancing, entangled and chasing the literal light, mirrors the exhaustion of having a sight impairment in a visually obsessed world, and offers the possibility of accepting the darkness, and the faith that the light will come when it comes.
Credits
Choreography by: Kayla Hamilton in collaboration with Azure D. Osborne-Lee, Nicole Y. McClam, Lamin Leroy Gibba, Crystal U. Davis, Francine E. Ott, Christal Brown, and Ja me Dzandu
Performed by: Kayla Hamilton, Nicole McClam, Azure D. Osborne-Lee, and Lamin Leroy Gibba
Audio Description by: Nicole Y. McClam, Azure D. Osborne-Lee and Lamin Leroy Gibba
Video Design: Jessica Ray
Dramaturgy: Shawn Rene Graham
Music: Various artists with 911 call written / recorded by Denae Hannah and Autumn Scoggan
Special Thanks: Jerron Herman, Italy Welton, Denae Hannah, Alice Sheppard, and every other black woman that I have shared space, time and energy with.




Press
Arika
Nearly Sighted/Unearthing the Dark
“Kayla Hamilton practices what she preaches. A fulcrum between disabled and non-disabled dance, a fiercely thoughtful artist, and a generous soul: these are those qualities that endear Kayla to the world. By enlarging and enlivening our awareness of sightedness, she offers us vastly fresh pathways to liberation in our own bodies. In her work is an undercurrent of freedom and that freedom is palpable and intoxicating as she dances. Ultimately, Kayla establishes a world where our body is celebratory. With resonate humor and precise pauses, her work cuts to our core.”