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Clintonville dance studio Flux + Flow puts on socially distanced show


Russell Lepley gives dancers directing while videographer Doug Carraway films part of the Flux + Flow performance titled

Last March, when the coronavirus pandemic necessitated the suspension of in-person classes at the Flux + Flow Dance and Movement Center in Clintonville, Laura Steinmaus wasn’t sure how she would keep moving.

“I was used to going then regularly to the dance classes, so I knew I was going to really miss that,” said Steinmaus, 45, a Columbus resident who had been taking classes at Flux + Flow for several years.

Steinmaus is one of about 100 “community members” at the center — that is, adult, non-professional dancers who participate in classes and appear in some performances (under the auspices of FluxFlow Dance Project, the group also has its own professional company members).

“I’ve taken a lot of classes there, anything from contemporary to ballet and everything in between — I’ve done belly dancing,” Steinmaus said.

Adorned in a handmade costume, Charity Blosser participates in the filmingof

Yet, after the initial shock of shutting down, Flux + Flow co-founder Russell Lepley wasn’t about to let the dancing come to an end.

“We flipped immediately to going online,” Lepley said. “Initially, we were doing Facebook Live classes.”

About two weeks later, though, Lepley felt it was time to do something more ambitious: with co-founder Filippo Pelacchi, Lepley decided to invite community members to collaborate on a new piece via Zoom.

The resulting dance, titled “Spatula,” was filmed last fall in the Park of Roses and premiered Saturday on the website of Flux + Flow, flux-flow.com. The 20-minute dance film will be shown in limited-capacity in-person screenings on weekends in April at the center on Crestview Road.

Carolina Lopez-Ruiz dances among the trees during the filming of the Flux + Flow dance performance titled

‘Spatula’ makes the best of what’s on hand

Co-directed and co-choreographed by Lepley and Pelacchi, “Spatula” borrows its title from the common kitchen utensil found in most dancers’ homes. In the choreographers’ conception, however, the item could be used to metaphorically ward off the coronavirus.

“We all have spatulas and pot lids in our house, so we’re going to fight this unknown thing,” Lepley said. “We could swing our spatula around in frustration, but also it’s kind of ridiculous and funny at the same time.”



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