Grant Recipients Grants to Artists Dance 2026

Benjamin Akio Kimitch

Headshot of Benjamin Akio Kimitch. Looking at the camera, he smiles to his right side.  Kimitch is wearing a white shirt and is in front of a black backdrop.
Photo by Da Ping Luo.
  • 2026 Grants to Artists
  • Dance
  • Director and Choreographer
  • Born 1986, Minneapolis, MN
  • Lives in Brooklyn, NY
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  • Additional Information
  • benjaminakio.com

Artist Statement

My work embraces contradiction. I lean into the disorientation and tension of my mixed identity and the layered dance lineages that shape me. I don’t try to resolve these tensions; instead, these dances surface questions of heritage, power, and creative form, activating my perspectives on contemporary dance while, on a personal level, nurturing grief and loss within my Japanese lineage.

I direct, choreograph, and design my projects in collaboration with other artists and culture bearers. By creating work collaboratively and making it accessible through live performance, the work builds connections within a field that can often feel dispersed and isolated.

- December 2025

Biography

Benjamin Akio Kimitch is an artist and producer based in Brooklyn, NY. His projects begin slowly, rooted in personal relationships with traditional dance forms and many years of research. The resulting work unfolds with thoughtful intention and a distinctive aesthetic, often holding tension between preservation and transformation.

Kimitch creates performances that draw from his biracial Japanese American heritage, foundational training in Chinese folk and classical dance, and an ongoing relationship with New York City’s experimental dance community. His work Tiger Hands (2022) emerged from his study of Peking opera in Shanghai and contextualized its formal syntax within a personal, contemporary ensemble piece. Premiered at The Shed, New York, NY as part of Open Call 2022, the work reflected Kimitch’s approach to engaging cultural forms through present-day relationships and realities.

In 2026, Kimitch will present work that examines the global cultural forces that shaped Japanese American identity in the aftermath of World War II. By juxtaposing postwar pressures toward conformity in the United States with the expressive freedoms of postwar art movements in U.S.-occupied Japan, the work reflects his lived experience as an artist whose grandparents belonged to the Internment Generation.

Since 2022, Kimitch has collaborated with Yasuko Yokoshi in an ongoing research project, entitled dojojiproject, in New York City and Kyoto, Japan. Kimitch’s selected dance works include Tiger Hands, The Shed, New York, NY (2022); Ko-bu, Danspace Project, New York, NY (2017), later reprised at The Noguchi Museum, Queens, NY; untitled work, The Kitchen as part of Dance and Process, New York, NY (2015); and discontinuous sounds, Danspace Project, New York, NY (2013). 

Kimitch has received a Creative Capital Award (2026), a NEFA National Dance Project Production Grant (2025), an Asian Cultural Council Artist Fellowship (2024), a Bessie Award for Outstanding Choreographer/Creator (2023), and a Foundation for Contemporary Arts Emergency Grant (2022).

In addition to his artistic practice, Kimitch has worked for over 15 years as a full-time producer at institutions including Performance Space 122, Park Avenue Armory, and currently Perelman Performing Arts Center. He also worked at Dance Theater Workshop and through its merger with Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Company.

Benjamin Akio Kimitch and Yasuko Yokoshi dancing in Kyoto, Japan. Kimitch  is seen mirroring Yokoshi’s movement, and each has one foot ahead of the  other and their lefts arm out to the side. Kimitch and Yokoshi eachwear  kimonos, obi belts, and tabi socks and are holding a sensu fan in their right hand.

Performance still from dojojiproject in Kyoto, Japan, 2023. Performed by Benjamin Akio Kimitch and Yasuko Yokoshi. Photo by Song-Gi Kim.

Julie McMillan Castellano dancing at The Noguchi Museum in a white  long sleeve wrapped shirt. They are looking down towards the ground  as one hand is by their shoulder and the other is in front of their stomach. Both of their hands are formed in the shape of “C”. The stage lighting basks  Julie in a golden glow, while the image itself has a green fog.

Performance still from Ko-bu at The Noguchi Museum, Queens, NY, 2017. Pictured: Julie McMillan Castellano. Photo by Monika Kratochvil.

Julie McMillan Castellano dancing in the indoor/outdoor gallery of  The Noguchi Museum. In a white long sleeve shirt and white pants,  Julie’s knees are bent and their arms are interlacing one another. To  Julie’s side is a Noguchi sculpture. In the upper right hand corner, the  sun is shining onto the concrete block wall, two paper birches, and  the pavement.

Performance still from Ko-bu at The Noguchi Museum, Queens, NY, 2017. Pictured: Julie McMillan Castellano. Photo by Monika Kratochvil.

Lai Yi Ohlsen is wearing a light purple costume inspired by Eastern Asian  performance traditions. Their hands are to their sides and they are making  fists with their hands. Behind Lai is a white curtain, glowing with yellow  lighting. Matching their dress, the floor is also light purple.

Performance still from Tiger Hands at The Shed, New York, NY, 2022. Pictured: Lai Yi Ohlsen. Photo by Erin Baiano.

Lai Yi Ohlsen and Pareena Lim performing, moving in a circle.  They are both wearing costumes inspired by Eastern Asian performance  traditions. Lai Yi Ohlsen is facing the audience is in light purple dress, while  Pareena Lim, facing back stage, is in light yellow. Both of their hands are in  the air to their sides, and they each have one foot in front of the other.  Behind the duo is a white curtain that is just a bit short of reaching the  ground, the pitch-black of back stage is visible from below.  The floor is light purple, matching Lai’s dress.

Performance still from Tiger Hands at The Shed, New York, NY, 2022. Pictured: Lai Yi Ohlsen and Pareena Lim. Photo by Erin Baiano.