Momentum

Choreographic

Mentorship

about

Momentum: Choreographic Mentorship is a five-month program for emerging artists, both from within and outside of academia, to create artistic works in the Tampa Bay Area. This mentorship offers budding artists the opportunity to receive creative, financial, and administrative support toward a fully produced two-night performance at The Dalí Museum.

2025 Momentum Artist Fernando Chonqui premiere work “Re-defining.” Muralist Nicole Salgar featured in Outside In: New Murals Inspired by Dalí

Featured: Momentum Artist Autumn Christian (front) and Momentum Artist Delaney Hatfield (visual dance artist)

propelling dance artists forward

Artist selected for the cohort will:

• Receive one-on-one mentoring with projectALCHEMY artistic director Alexander Jones

• Learn about budgeting, funding, and marketing their work

• Have access to rehearsal space and peer dialogue to aid the artistic process • Engage and expand their artistic footprint through artist talks and web postings

• Receive a $200 stipend and technical support for their new work

• Have the opportunity to present their work in a two-night performance

Introducing the 2026 Momentum Cohort

  • Curvacia Elysée

    Curvacia Elysée is an emerging choreographer who creates from a place of identity, constant observation, and intuition. Fascinated by the overlooked and the unspoken, she finds significance in movements that reveal the unseen currents of experience. She is currently pursuing an education in dance at the University of South Florida, seeking to invite audiences to encounter new perspectives, connections, and ways of being.

  • Victoria Gonzalez

    Victoria Gonzalez is a contemporary dancer and choreographer who resides in Tampa and has performed in pieces by Jennifer Nugent, Chris Aiken, Angie Hauser, and fellow emerging artists. Previously a member of the Venus Wheeler Dance Collective in Massachusetts for several years, Victoria has a deep love for experimentation, collaborative play, improvisation, and the endlessly engaging and winding process that is creating dance. Since receiving her BA in Dance from Smith College in 2017, movement continues to be a home for Victoria– a place where she goes for freedom, strength, and community. Her dance pieces often blend abstraction with elements of the everyday to invite audiences to make their own connections and interpretations, experiencing a natural, free range of emotions. Incorporating elements of experimentation, the ridiculous, the "ugly", and multidisciplinary collaborations, her dance works seek to push the boundaries of what is expected in dance, in performance, and in society.

  • Sami Mangione

    Sami Mangione is a dancer, choreographer and somatic educator based in St Petersburg, Florida. Sami studied dance and psychology at the University of Florida, with a strong focus on dance and mental health.

    Sami has danced with Sarasota Contemporary Dance Ensemble and Phoenix Fire & Performance Art, and works as a freelance performer and choreographer. She has performed the choreography of Bill T. Jones & Arnie Zane, Rennie Harris, Dante Puleio, Leymis Bolaños Wilmott and Xiao-Xuan Yang Dancigers. Sami holds certifications in mat pilates, yoga therapy, the Functional Awareness method, and Dance in Medicine.

    Sami is a teaching artist at Project Alchemy Dance and teaches yoga, pilates, and dance to her local and online communities.


  • Aynsleigh Morehouse

    Aynsleigh Morehouse is a Florida-based freelance dancer and choreographer who began training at age four. She holds a BFA in Dance Performance with a concentration in Ballet from the University of South Florida, where she focused on ballet, modern, and contemporary techniques, along with studies in choreography, pedagogy, and kinesiology.

    Aynsleigh has performed with Tampa City Ballet and across a range of freelance projects, while also creating original works that reflect her evolving artistic voice.

    As both an artist and educator, she is passionate about fostering creativity, sharing her love of dance, and continuing to explore new collaborative and performance opportunities.

Momentum Alumni Cohort

  • Rachel Lambright

    (2019)

    Rachel Lambright is a graduate of the University of South Florida, earning a BFA in Dance Performance with a Modern Dance concentration. During her undergraduate career, she presented original choreography and performed in works by national and international dance artists alike, such as Ohad Naharin, Robert Moses, John Parks, Bliss Kohlmyer, Jeanne Travers, and Andee Scott. She has presented choreographic work in SCD’s “Voices” productions showcasing rising choreographers as well as in St. Petersburg, FL, as part of MOMENTUM: Choreographic Mentorship, curated by Alex Jones of projectALCHEMY. Rachel continually finds joy in pursuing her interest in dance film, bringing honesty and emotion to the forefront. Her film “Introspection” is an official selection of the Austin Dance Festival 2020. She is grateful for another year of growth with SCD as she continues to develop her artistry.

  • Luis Torres

    (2019)

    Hi my name’s Luis and I’m from California I like to challenge the norms or the social world . Also I am what I call a fusion dancer, I don’t limit myself to one style, I like to mix and integrate several styles into one dance to create art. I quote I’d like to share is, “A lotta people will tell you, you can't do something

    But the reality of the situation is they can't do it” -Jabbar Hakeem.

  • Dakota Kuharich

    (2019)

    Dakota Kuharich {BA} is a performer, instructor, and creator in the Tampa Bay Area. Originally from Litchfield, CT, Dakota attended the Greater Hartford Academy of the Arts where she spent her four years of high school as a Musical Theater Major studying acting, voice, and all styles of dance. Dakota is a graduate from the University of Tampa where she was able to explore her passion for movement as an Applied Dance Major through performance and Brain Compatible Dance Education. She has been given multiple opportunities to choreograph and perform for the University of Tampa’s Dance Program and Theater Program.

    Post- Momentum 2019, Dakota continues to teach Brain Compatible Dance Education at various studios around Tampa Bay, including The Patel Conservatory and Tampa Preparatory School, and has joined contemporary company Moving Current Dance Collective in Tampa, FL as a dancer. She has enjoyed moving and collaborating with new and old artists around the Tampa Bay Area, as well as, guest choreographer's from Orange Grove Dance Company from Washington, D.C.

    Dakota has been able to share more of her choreography around Tampa Bay in the Thesis2020 Showcase this past January! In addition, she looks forward to performing in the new year with fellow dancers from the University of Tampa in the Beacon 2020 Performance in St. Petersburg, FL and at the WAXworks Showcase in NYC.

    Dakota is extremely honored to have been a part of Momentum2019; for she believes it was a strong force jump starting her professional dance career via networking, collaboration, and encouragement post-university.

  • April Newcity

    (2020)

    April earned her bachelor’s degree in Anthropology at the University of South Florida in 2017 with a focus in Cultural, Linguistic, and Visual Anthropology. There she conducted research involving movement analysis cross-culturally, as well as focusing her studies on the African American Diaspora in modern day literature. She was also student choreographer at the University of South Florida staging two works in 2016 and 2017.


    As she continued her education, she explored the incorporation of culture, literature and dialogue in her movement research and choreography. She later received a Flash Fiction Award for her writing. Her work was also featured in American Stories, a collaborative book written by the University of South Florida’s students and faculty, featuring the lives of various refugees currently living in the Tampa Bay area. The book was later published by the Hillsborough County School District, assisting as a learning tool for CARIBE’s English-language classes, providing refugees with informational texts that are culturally relevant. April wishes to continue sharing her artistic work, using an anthropological perspective as a platform to challenge cultural norm and advocate diversity.

  • Mads Waterman

    (2020)

    Mads Waterman is a dance teacher, choreographer and performer currently studying at the University of Tampa for their Bachelor of Arts in applied dance with a focus on Anne Green Gilbert’s principles of Brain Compatible Dance Education. They have choreographed work for the University of Tampa’s Fall Dance Happening and the American College Dance Association. They have over 15 years of performance experience, and have performed works by artists such as Nick Blaylock and Alex Jones. In their final year of their degree, they are currently researching how dance can be used as a tool for activism.

  • Renée Williams

    (2020)

    Renée Williams is a native of St.Petersburg Fl. She started her classical training at the Academy of Ballet Arts and Pinellas County Center for the Arts under the direction of Suzanne Pomerantzeff and Patricia Parks-Paige. She will graduate with her Bachelors in Fine Arts from the University of Florida's New World School of the Arts in April of 2020. Renée has performed works by Ohad Naharin, Robert Battle, Eric Wagner, excerpts from Alonzo King’s works and more.

  • Kayla Gupta

    (2021)

    Kayla Gupta (BA) earned her degree in dance from The University of Tampa, focusing on a Brain-Compatible Dance Education curriculum. She has studied with artists such as Luba Gulyaeva, Maurice Brandon Curry, and Theresa Stone. Kayla has performed professionally with the New Jersey Ballet, Ballet Hispanico, the American Youth Dance Company, the Bolshoi Ballet Summer Intensive and multiple New Jersey / New York based production companies. Kayla has also had the opportunity to choreograph for multiple University of Tampa dance concerts, where she was able to work closely with faculty mentors to evolve her own choreographic process.

  • Deisha King

    (2021)

    Deisha A. King was born on traditional Seminole-Tequesta homelands(Plantation, Florida). Deisha credits the beginning of her dance education to On Your Toes in Broward County and Dance Attack Dance Studio in Miami-Dade County, where she trained in ballet, jazz, hip-hop, acro, ballroom and contemporary forms. At the age of 14, she was a semifinalist as a member of Twitch dance group on Paula’s Adul’s” Live to Dance”and also won Univisions’ “Sabado Gigante.”

    Her training led her to the University of South Florida, where she received her BFA in Dance and minor in Nutrition. Deisha was awarded talent based grants that allowed her to supplement her training during summers at Deeply Rooted Dance Theatre in Chicago, Illinois, and the American Dance Festival at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina. Deisha was chosen to be 1 of 12 representatives invited by Beijing Normal University (BNU) and the Chinese government to participate in the Creative International Dance Conference and Festival in 2015.

    While attending USF, Deisha has worked closely with -- and performed works by -- Robert Moses, John Parks, Alex Ketley, Gesel Mason, Alonzo King, Gierre Godley, and Kevin Iega Jeff, among others.

    Inspired by her Senior advocacy project at USF, Deisha has developed a passion for community outreach and engagement through the arts. Upon graduating from USF in 2018, Deisha joined Tampa City Ballet for 2 seasons and partnered with the Straz Center for the Performing Arts where she teaches dance education to underserved partnership schools and community organizations.

    Deisha is a proud member of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority Inc., and Black Dance Change Makers, an online social platform helping to sustain and connect black creatives globally. She is always looking for professional development opportunities. Currently, Deisha is exploring the intersection of holistic wellness and movement as a healing modality. Deisha is excited to see where this journey will take her as a performer, choreographer and educator. She thanks God for the gift of dance and for the unwavering support of her village of family and friends.

  • Shannon Smyth

    (2021)

    Shannon Smyth has been dancing since the age of 2. She has studied ballet, tap, jazz,  jazz funk, lyrical, contemporary, hip hop, heels and Musical theater. Her choreography has won numerous placements and top awards at competition. Shannon has performed in the Chick-Fil-A Bowl, danced in the parade at Disney World,  background for American Idol contestant Tyler Rayn, Vanderbilt Dance Theater and headlined World of Dance Orlando with Motiv Crew. She has assisted master choreographers from So You Think You Can Dance such as Lauren Froderman, Mollee Gray, Laura Edwards, Adi Chike Torbert and Ellenore Scott with Excel in Motion Dance Convention.  

    Shannon attended The Tennessee Governor’s School for the Arts on Scholarship. She had the privilege to be accepted to the work Study program at Millennium Dance Complex Nashville and is on staff with Envision Dance Company (TN) where she teaches and choreographs for their competition team. 

    Shannon is currently attending Florida Southern College on academic and dance scholarship. She is pursuing her B.F.A in Dance Performance and Choreography.

    Shannon splits her time residing in Spring Hill, TN and Lakeland, FL.

  • Emily Goonan

    (2021)

    Originally from Manitowoc, Wisconsin, Emily Goonan began her training at the Jean Wolfmeyer School of Dance under the direction of Jean Wolfmeyer and Crystal Kay-Curkeet Lavallee. She graduated with a B.A. and B.S. in Dance and Psychology with a Human Services Emphasis at the University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point in May of 2017. She studied with Michael Estanich, Jeannie Hill, Joan Karlen, Pamela Luedtke, Amy Beversdorf and Patrick Strong. Currently, Emily is in St. Petersburg Florida, training at A & G Dance Academy and Academy of Ballet Arts Inc.

    Emily participated in workshops with Eddy Ocampo, Rennie Harris, Brenda Bufalino, Tania Perez-Salas, and Larry Keigwin. She also trained at Point Tap Festival with Max Pollak, Olivia Rosenkrantz, Lynn Schwab, Mark Goodman, Mark Yonally and Katherine Kramer.

    Emily was in student and faculty performances while being at university and presented her choreographies: Conference Room, Hindered Attention, and Boom Knock Knock Slap Cough. Emily also made Hindered Attention: On Screen as her first video dance.

  • Kinsey Vaughen

    (2022)

    Kinsey Vaughen is a current senior at Florida Southern College with a major in dance performance and choreography and a minor in exercise science. She is graduating in December of 2022 and plans to continue her passion of dance and choreography after school. Kinsey is from Spring Hill, Tennessee and grew up dancing from the age of three years old. Her favorite styles include contemporary, jazz funk, tap, hip hop, musical theater, and heels. She has performed for multiple Florida Southern Dance shows, assisted So You Think You Can Dance Dancers at the convention Excel in Motion, and has choreographed school musicals and operas. Most recently, one of her own works was chosen to be showcased at the American College Dance Association at Florida State University. Kinsey has always loved performing, but she has found a recent spark with choreography, and she is so excited to explore more of it through Momentum.

  • Khasilan

    (2022)

    Tampa Bay Area-based director and dance artist, Si Renaissance (Sai) has been evolving his craft continuously for the past 12 years. Originally a solo improvisational dancer, he extended his reach branch by branch to incorporate various styles, mediums, and inspiration into his realm as an artist. He combines multiple dance styles with storytelling via screenwriting, acting, sound design, and effects to bring his inner world outwards. His themes intuitively explore the duality and dichotomy of the boundless human experience.

  • Ambar Cesari

    (2022)

    Ambar Cesari is currently a Senior student and will be graduating from Osceola County School for the Arts (OCSA) in spring of 2022. She has been dancing since the age of 5 and has studied ballet, modern, tap, jazz, hip hop, lyrical and musical theater. She was introduced to the art of choreography at the age of 14 and has gotten lots of recognition from her pieces and projects. The art of dance became her passion and decided to go to high school and learn more about it, starting her high school experience in dance major in 2018. She has trained in ballet, contemporary and modern dance for the last 4 years, and while at school, she has been introduced more into the choreography world. Ambar created her first project as freshman, in high school, and ever since, every year she has been involved in projects collaborating and choreographing for musical shows, teachers, other students and for her own performances. Also gaining other people’s trust with her work, she has been involved in choreographing for main stage performances for non dance majors. Ambar was a student choreographer for her school's entry for the Florida Dance Performance Assessment (FDPA) and the performance has won a superior ranking.

  • Autumn Christian

    (2023)

    Autumn Christian is an 18 year old dancer based in Central Florida, spending a majority of her years training in Orlando with choreographers such as Dawn Branch, Aretuza Garner, and studio In Motion Dance Project. She found her love for choreography early on and had several opportunities to work with other dancers during her time as a Maintenance Choreographer at In Motion Dance Project as well as an apprentice for Dawn Branch Works. Autumn is currently studying at the University of South Florida as a dance major with a Modern Dance concentration. Recently, she was selected as a choreographer for the USF Student Dance Concert being one of the only three freshmen chosen. She hopes to continue her journey as a choreographer, working with and learning from as many people as she can. 

  • Delaney Hatfield

    (2023)

    Delaney Hatfield is originally from Pasadena, Maryland, and moved to Tampa, Florida in 2019 for her studies. She has always had multiple creative interests, beginning with art at a young age and starting her dance training at the age of 10 at Dancers Dreams Dance Studio in Pasadena, MD. She is currently pursuing a B.F.A. in Studio Art with a minor in Psychology at The University of Tampa and is on track to graduate in May of 2023. She primarily works in the medium of paint but enjoys combining photography and dance into her work. Her current body of work explores the realm of kinesthetic identity through the consequences of fabric material and movement. 

    Delaney has exhibited work at the University of Tampa's Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition in both 2021 and 2022, receiving an honorable mention award in 2021. She has also exhibited in the Albrecht-Kemper Museum of Art's Undergraduate Juried Exhibition in St. Joseph, Missouri in 2022. Additionally, she received the 2023 Gasparilla Festival of the Arts Board of Directors Collegiate Scholarship. She has long-term goals of sharing her passion for communication between visual arts and dance with others, as well as continuing to create interdisciplinary work with dancers.

  • Sydney Lemelin

    (2023)

    Sydney Lemelin was born in California under a libra moon.  She holds a BA in Dance and BS in Information Science from the University of Maryland, College Park (Go terps).  She has enjoyed dancing with Moving Ethos, BANDportier, Heart Stück Bernie, PEARSONWIDRIG DANCETHEATER, Britta J. Peterson, Jo Lloyd (Melbourne, AUS) and Orange Grove Dance.  She has presented work at Sarasota Contemporary Dance’s Rising Choreographers Showcase, Dance Place, Baltimore Theater Project, The Clarice Center for Performing Arts, and more.  She spent a post-bacc year in rural Vermont helping open The Field Center, an interdisciplinary performing arts center.  A fan of finding the edges, Sydney relocated from Vermont to Southern Florida In 2022, and now works as The Ringling’s Performance Producer at The Historic Asolo Theater.

  • Olivia London

    (2023)

    Olivia has danced since her childhood in Jacksonville, FL when her grandmother wisely remarked, “she’ll never be a prima ballerina, but she’d make a great showgirl.” Despite that early confidence booster and a memorable high school performance of “Hey Big Spender,” Olivia danced less frequently beyond her teens. Then, while in Boston pursuing a graduate degree in public health, she fortuitously tried an improvisational dance class. From the first wiggly roll across the floor, she knew she was in love. Rather than focusing on the pursuit of technical mastery, she could explore movement for the sake of curiosity and authenticity, collaborating with other people eager to create unpredictable things together. Her devotion to improvisational movement and composition grew, along with her belief in the insight of a favorite instructor, that you should approach movement to be interested, not to be interesting. Olivia’s deepest interest is in how people move and express themselves physically, especially when they don't think they can “dance.” With that foundation, she went on to teach workshops with the Movement Arts Collaborative in South Carolina and has been an avid learner of many dance styles. Now, living, working, and dancing in St. Petersburg, she’s convinced she wasn’t put on earth to be exceptionally good at things, just to love doing them. Hopefully, she can model and expand opportunities where others will feel that way too.

  • Alyssa Braud

    (2024)

    Alyssa Braud is a modern and contemporary choreographer and dancer from Baton Rouge, Louisiana. She has dedicated her life to two careers, teaching students with Visual Impairments, and freelance dancing. Throughout her career, she has danced with companies like Of Moving Colors in Baton Rouge, Louisiana and Tennessee Ballet Theater in Memphis, Tennessee that aim to bring people’s life stories to the stage and community. In 2019, she had the pleasure of performing in the streets of Sant’Agata, Italy through the Staib Dance summer intensive. In 2022 and 2023, Alyssa choreographed works for Tennessee Ballet Theater's spring performances. Recently, she created a piece for MicroWIP @theHAT and the completed work will be performed as part of Sarasota Contemporary Dance's in-studio series this coming season. Throughout each of Alyssa's choreographic pieces, the breath and flow of energy helps connect the audience to their own emotions and experiences. In 2023, she founded Saoirse Movement, meaning Freedom Movement, to find the freedom, beauty, and breath with everyday movement through dance.

  • Nicolás Andrés Rodríguez Cruz

    (2024)

    Nicolás A. Rodríguez Cruz was born and raised in Cali, Colombia, where he began his dance training at the age of 10 in a variety of styles, including Salsa, Ballet, Modern, and various Hip-Hop styles. In Cali, Nicolás performed Modern and Jazz works by renowned Colombian artists such as Edwin Quintero and Daniela Chavarría, and participated in different competitions in Colombia, Costa Rica, and the United States.

    In 2018, Nicolás moved to Tampa, FL to attend the University of South Florida. He graduated Magna Cum Laude with a BS in Marketing in 2021, and a BFA in Dance Performance in 2023. In his time at USF, Nicolás has worked in both Ballet and Modern pieces by choreographers such as Andrew Carroll, Michael Foley, Stephanie Martínez, among others. Additionally, he has participated in dance films by choreographers like Jeanne Travers and Paula Nuñez. Nicolás has also made several of his own works, exploring movement through an interdisciplinary lens, combining dance with disciplines like business, film, and visual arts.

  • Olivia Schmiedeke

    (2024)

    Olivia, a passionate student studying dance at the University of South Florida, finds herself enchanted by the beauty of movement and expression in dance. Whether it’s the graceful sway or the energetic beats, Olivia pours her heart into every step, practicing hard and always seeking to improve. Her passion for dance drives her ambition, and she dreams of taking her skills to Amsterdam after graduation. Olivia looks forward to connecting with other artists, sharing ideas, and creating breathtaking performances that bring people together through the universal language of dance. The prospect of collaborating with diverse talents and sharing her art on an international stage fills her with immense excitement and anticipation.

  • Madison Pineda Bender

    (2025)

    Madison Pineda Bender began her early dance training in Sacramento, CA, and Keller, TX. At 16, she moved to New York City to attend The Joffrey Ballet School Jazz and Contemporary Program. In 2021, Madison graduated from The Juilliard School with a B.F.A. in Dance, receiving the Martha Hill Award and the Juilliard Career Advancement Fellowship Grant. She also trained at the Jacob’s Pillow Contemporary Dance Festival, the Nederlands Dans Theater Summer Intensive, and the Arts Umbrella Summer Dance Intensive. 

     Madison has performed the works of Martha Graham, Crystal Pite, and Paul Taylor and new creations by Ohad Naharin, Desmond Richardson, Andrea Miller, and Darrel Moultrie. She was chosen to present her work in Juilliard’s 2019 ChoreoComp program and later worked as Rena Butler’s choreographic assistant for the Juilliard New Dances: Edition 2021 production. 

     From 2022-2023, Madison worked as a company dancer and teaching artist with GroundWorks DanceTheater, performing new creations by Antonio Brown, Peter Chu, Rena Butler, David Shimotakahara, Spenser Theberge, and Sidra Bell. Madison staged and rehearsed choreography by Rena Butler on the students at George Mason University and recently worked as her choreographic assistant for a new creation at the University of North Carolina School of the Arts. 

    Madison recently joined Peter Chu's company, chuthis., and performed last summer at Orsolina28. She premiered new work on Tampa City Ballet in their “Era” show last fall and performed as a soloist in their recent “Carmen” production. In February, she performed in visual artist Jason Hackenwerth’s “Sparrow’s Dream” at the Palladium. 

    Most recently, Madison premiered a new solo by Peter Chu and showcased her work, “How Water Smoothes a Stone,” at the BEACON 2025 dance festival. She looks forward to being a 2025 Momentum Artist and learning more about her artistic process.

  • Justin Brock

    (2025)

    Justin Brock, a recent graduate of Harrison School of the Arts, received his training at Highland School of Dance in Lakeland. He has attended workshops and intensives with MODAS Dance, Florida Dance Arts, and Florida Southern College among others. His performances over the years include The Nutcracker, Don Quixote, Alice in Wonderland, and The Sleeping Beauty. Justin is the 2024 recipient of the Betsye Kay Finch Performing Arts Foundation and is currently continuing his training as a dance major at Hillsborough Community College, as well as working on choreography opportunities such as “effeminate”, “Arboreal Cover”, and “Travelers”.

  • Fernando Chonqui

    (2025)

    Originally from Ecuador, Fernando Chonqui (he/him) is a USF Dance Program graduate who is actively exploring the rekindling of his dance making through identity, protest, and collaboration. As a queer, immigrant artist, his choreographic-curiosity comes from personal and political themes through intentional, emotionally resonant movement. Reigniting their artistic practice, he looks to create work that fosters connection, uplifts marginalized voices, and sparks meaningful dialogue.

  • Faith Elizabeth Miller

    (2025)

    Faith has been dancing since the age of three, using movement as a way to tell stories and create connection. She holds a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Dance from New World School of the Arts and has performed professionally with Atlas Modern Ballet and the Zubrick Magic Theater. She now teaches dance, studies aerial arts, and works at a local pottery shop, continuing to explore creativity across different disciplines.