Fall After Grace: SNDO Graduation Festival 2025 PROGRAM ONE

SNDO
Thu 13 Mar ’25 - Sat 22 Mar ’25
The graduation works of 2025
Thu 13 Mar ’25
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Sat 22 Mar ’25

In March School for New Dance Development (SNDO) invites you for a three-part performance festival in Frascati and Tempel Amsterdam. Several students show in Fall After Grace their work in Frascati.

The 4th year students of the SNDO graduate by creating two works next to writing a thesis and completing their internship. Public programs take place in venues outside the school providing the students with professional working conditions and an artistic context. 

This year’s SNDO graduates are: Tom.s Boyaval, Kairo Fumilayo Edward, Mia La-Brossard, Luqui Lagomarsino, Sancha Meca Castro, Billy Morgan, Helene Ridderberg, Horatcio Vlijter and Jakob Wittkowsky.

PROGRAM ONE: Thursday 13th until Saturday 15th of March

Luqui Lagomarsino

Billy Morgan

Helene Ridderberg

PROGRAM TWO: Thursday 20th until Saturday 22nd of March

Sancha Meca Castro

Jakob Wittkowsky

Tom.s Boyaval

For the whole program click here.

Credits

production manager Lysanne van Esch sound Rik van der Veen light Vincent Romijn SNDO production Ariadne Sergoulopoulo PR coordinator Antonella Fittipaldi social media coordinator Karina Villafan graphic design Milo mentor SNDO 4 Ana Vujanović artistic director Bojana Mladenović

About SNDO

The SNDO, School for New Dance Development, offers a full-time four-year professional education course leading to a Bachelor's degree in Art/Choreography. The school was founded in 1975 as an attempt to find new directions for dance next to the existing forms and styles that dominated the field. After forty years, the SNDO remains inquisitive, open minded, and in the foreground of progressive developments in the fields of dance and performance. In the curriculum, the school establishes the conditions from which the creativity of the student can emerge. Reflection on the specific qualities of dance and performance as art forms is developed, and awareness of the body and the artistic, social and political implications of working with it take precedence.