Tamara “Ṣàngóbámikẹ́” Williams – Dance/USA Artist Fellow
Tamara “Ṣàngóbámikẹ” Williams
she/her
Charlotte, NC | Land of the Catawba, Sugaree, Cherokee, Coharie and Lumbee nations & Salvador, Bahia, Brazil | Tupi-Guarani Land
Tamara Ṣàngóbánke Williams is a choreographer, scholar, and educator dedicated to preserving and elevating African Diaspora dance traditions. She earned her BFA from Florida State University and MFA from Hollins University in partnership with The American Dance Festival, The Forsythe Company, and Frankfurt University. As founder of Moving Spirits, Inc., her choreography has been presented nationally and internationally in Brazil, Jamaica, Trinidad and Tobago, Mexico, Benin, Germany, Switzerland, and Serbia. Her publications include “Reviving Culture through Ring Shout” in The Dancer-Citizen Journal; “Living the Movement: An exploration of dance in Òrìṣà, Orixá, and Orisha cultures” in the Jonkonnu Arts Journal; the chapter, “Dance: A Catalyst for Spiritual Transcendence” in the manuscript, Fire Under My Feet; her book Giving Life to Movement was published by McFarland & Co. in 2021; and her forthcoming manuscript, The African Diaspora and Civic Responsibility, will be published in late 2025.
Williams was commissioned by Kaatsbaan International Dance Center to create a new work for Moving Spirits, Inc.; she has received multiple grants from the Mecklenburg County Arts & Science Council (ASC), including support for free African diaspora dance workshops in Charlotte and for the annual African-Brazilian LAVAGEM Festival. She was awarded the 2019–2020 UNC Charlotte Board of Governors Teaching Award, a 2020 commission from the National Center for Choreography (NCCAkron), and the 2021 ASC Emerging Creative Fellowship. In 2022, she received the NC Dance Festival’s Jan Van Dyke Legacy Award. In 2025, she was awarded the Harvey B. Gantt Center’s Black Artist Residency.
In 2023, Williams co-created the Benin Movement Research and Exchange in Cotonou and Ouidah, Benin, focusing on African diaspora dance and music in dialogue with Beninese traditions. In 2024, she launched the first bi-annual International African Diaspora Dance Traditions Conference in Salvador, Bahia, Brazil, gathering scholars and artists from across the globe.
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