Rosy Simas' first thought, when the foundation called, was: "Oh, I'm in trouble."
The dancer, choreographer and transdisciplinary artist is outspoken, she said. "I think of it as saying the things that need to be said, especially around inequity and injustice, and sometimes people can't receive that."
But the Doris Duke Foundation was calling, instead, to congratulate her. Simas had won a 2023 Doris Duke Artist Award.
A national honor given to just six performing artists, it comes with an unrestricted grant of $550,000 — double the prize from previous years.
"The award is, for me, a real recognition of my work cumulatively over the last 30 years," said Simas, 55, founder of Rosy Simas Danse, based in Minneapolis.
An enrolled member of the Seneca Nation, Simas has for decades self-produced her dance works, layered with video she captured and history she researched. Created in conversation with her dancers and collaborators, they unspool in galleries and on stages here and across the country.
It's difficult work. It's slow, expensive work.
"With Rosy, there is a complete lineage," said composer François Richomme, who has collaborated with Simas for more than a decade, including on "Weave" and last year's acclaimed "She Who Lives on the Road to War." "It's a cultural lineage, and it's also family lineage for her, and something very strong through her energy and veins and blood."