India Harville – Dance/USA Artist Fellow

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Image Description: India Harville, African American cis woman smiling with long black locs wearing a long white dress, brown belt, red nail polish, and gold bangles. She is seated on a white couch with her right hand crossed over her left forearm. Photo by A. Marie Studio.

India Harville

she/her

Goodyear, Arizona | Akimel O’odham lands

India Harville is an African American, femme, queer, disabled multi-media artist, politicized somatic healer, and Disability Justice activist. She has performed with Sins Invalid, Dance Exchange, California State East Bay, The Queer Arts Festival, the Black Spirit Dance Collective, Mouthwater Dance Festival, and Movement Liberation.

Her creative work is rooted in the belief that art is a pathway to survival, freedom, and collective transformation. Through movement and ritual, India explores themes of resilience, interdependence, and liberation, drawing on somatics as both a healing practice and a creative tool.

India’s dance roots are in modern dance, African dance, and hip hop, and she draws from these traditions to ground her work in rhythm, storytelling, and embodied resilience. Over the past two decades, she has studied a wide range of accessible dance, somatics, and bodywork practices to develop her own fusion of movement. Her work integrates improvisation, contact improvisation, massage-based explorations, and tools from both the Dance Exchange and DanceAbility methodologies to craft a more inclusive and adaptive movement style. India is recognized internationally as a Master Teacher and Master Trainer in the DanceAbility method, and she continues to innovate approaches that invite Disabled and non-Disabled dancers alike into deeper connection with their bodies, communities, and collective liberation.

She is the co-founder of How We Move, a national dance intensive and leadership program for Deaf and Disabled artists. The program nurtures artistry and cultural organizing, building a vital ecosystem of support for Disabled artists of color. India is also a core artist in the Black Spirit Dance Collective, a ritual performance ensemble weaving movement, song, and ancestral practice to honor collective resilience and transformation.

A 2018 Queer Cultural Center National Queer Arts Festival–Sponsored Artist, India presented her solo work Enough. She is a two-time recipient of the Mellon-funded Access Movement Play Residency and is currently developing her solo piece Liminal, the ensemble On Our Own Terms with Black Spirit Dance Collective, and L-E-A-K-Y with Elisabeth Motley.

Learn more about India Harville:

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Image Description: Four fat, Black, queer, Disabled members of Black Spirit Dance Collective standing together, gesturing reverently towards a colorful altar. They are all looking towards a bowl of water on the altar. The altar also has many candles of different sizes and colors, crystals, and flowers. From left to right, Tammy Johnson, TaMeicka “Ifasina” Clear, JJ Omelagah, and India Harville. Photo by iki nakagawa.
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Image Description: Four Disabled dancers moving together in a studio. From left to right, Cory Nakasue is facing away from the camera, balancing on her left leg, with her right leg lifted slightly off the ground and her left arm over her head. India Harville is kneeling next to her Zeen mobility device with her left palm on the floor and her right palm over her head. Elisabeth Motley is lying on the floor, with her left arm up extended towards the ceiling and her right arm extended above her head. Jose Miguel “Miggy” Estaban is standing as their upper body is curling forward into a ball, with their left hand on their right shoulder. Photo by Whitney Browne.
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Image Description: India Harville, Black cis woman with long black braids wearing a sleeveless black/white top with black leggings. She is facing the camera and leaning back in her Zeen mobility device. Her arms are above her head with fingers pointing towards the ceiling, and her left leg is outstretched with soft, flexed toes. Photo by A. Marie Studio.
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Image Description: India Harville, Black cis woman with long black braids and white decorative body paint, wearing a strapless white dress and bracelets. She is dancing behind an altar containing candles, crystals, honey, and a smoking cauldron on a multicolored tablecloth. Photo by A. Marie Studio.
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