Ogemdi Ude
Artist Statement
I am a performance and interdisciplinary artist embodying and honoring the experiences we are conditioned to expel—grief, confusion, failure. I take a corporeal approach to Black femme futures, mourning, and memory, refuting white hegemonic distancing from death and Western expectations of how to historicize Black stories. I integrate the disparate histories etched into my body: Afrobeat Nigerian parties in childhood; Atlanta pep rallies and football games in adolescence; postmodern dance training in college. I bring this physicality, alongside writing and visuals, into processes of reckoning with and rebuilding from loss.
- December 2025
Biography
Ogemdi Ude is a choreographer and director whose performances center Black femme grief, legacies, and futures. Her work engages the fleshiness of the Black femme body in motion as a site for enlivening lost peoples and histories. Across her practice, Ude investigates the necessity of losing, and how—in the midst of it—we attempt to make meaning from memory and show evidence of our relationship to the lost subject. "Black femmes are given to grief," as Ude writes, and her work emerges as an expression of gratitude for that inheritance.
Ude’s reckoning with grief, nostalgia, and impossibility within her practice sparked her study and performance of Black Southern majorette dance. Her work MAJOR, which premiered at Kampnagel’s International Summer Festival in Hamburg, Germany (2025) and had its U.S. premiere at New York Live Arts in New York, NY (2026), reclaims majorette dance—a form she trained in as a child but lost touch with after years of predominantly white dance training. MAJOR asks how one might reorganize the body to dance in the ways one was born into, inviting audiences to reckon with the pleasure of re-membering: stitching together memories of home and returning to a body that has come undone.
More broadly, Ude’s work foregrounds witnessing as an intimate and vulnerable practice. She asks that we trust in the navigation of gaps in one’s history and knowledge of a form, culture, or story, proposing that such navigation—rather than mastery—produces performances of value, tenderness, and risk.
Her other works include what wanting wanted with what wanting was, which premiered at The Kitchen, New York, NY (2024); Cameo, which premiered at Gibney, New York, NY (2023); I know exactly what you mean, which premiered at Danspace Project, New York, NY (2022); and Dig/Hear/Sing/--, which premiered at Abrons Arts Center, New York, NY (2022). Ude is also a contributing author to Watch Me in Dance History(s): Imagination as a Form of Study, edited by Thomas F. DeFrantz and Annie-B Parson, published by Dancing Foxes Press and Wesleyan University Press (2024).
Ude has been recognized by the Princess Grace Honoraria in Choreography from the Princess Grace Foundation (2025), an Artist Fellowship in Choreography from NYSCA/NYFA (2025), the Jerome Hill Artist Fellowship from Jerome Foundation (2025), a Creative Research Grant from Foundation for Contemporary Arts (FCA) (2025), and an Artist Fellowship from the Leslie-Lohman Museum of Art (2024). Ude also received two Emergency Grants from FCA (2023, 2019).
Ude holds a B.A. from Princeton University (2016).