"We have watched with admiration as Elise Long has built the Spoke the Hub Dancing program.  Our paths first crossed in 1986. They were usually the stars of the show, bringing terrific energy and goodwill to the makeshift stages…They also brought a rare balance of professionalism and community participation…”

-Thomas D. Potter
Former CEO
The Brooklyn Brewery, Inc.


"For years, dance in
Brooklyn was mostly a matter of the large companies presented at the Brooklyn Academy of Music.  In 1985, smaller-scale and more informal modern dance began to become established in less august theater spaces in the borough, principally at BACA Downtown, and Spoke the Hub Dancing's Gowanus Arts Exchange…”

-Jennifer Dunning
Dance Critic
New York Times



Based in Brooklyn since 1979, Elise Long and Spoke the Hub Dancing have been hailed by the local press and public as "neighborhood treasures" and "cultural pioneers" creating the Living Room Performance Space on 9th Street (1980 - 84); the Gowanus Arts Exchange on Douglass Street (founded in 1985, relocated and renamed the Brooklyn Arts Exchange/BAX, now active as a separate organization); and the Spoke the Hub Re:Creation Center on Union Street (1995- present).

 

The Gowanus Arts Building, a derelict soap factory bought and renovated in 1985 by Long with partners David Wolfe, Marc Eichen, Mary Ann Banerji and Jonathan Stewart, was the original home of Gowanus Arts Exchange. Still a 15,000 square foot multi-dimensional artists "habitat", the Gowanus Arts Building offers affordable workspace to over a dozen performance, visual, musical, architectural, and multi-media artists, including Spoke the Hub.

In addition to spawning Park Slope's most vibrant community art centers, Spoke the Hub has also presented over 100 of Long's original small, medium and extra large dance/ theater works in the States, Canada and abroad. These "folk dances" involving performers, newborn through octogenarian, have appeared in wildly diverse settings including pizza joints, beer halls, protest marches, and weddings as well as on ferries, across bridges and at the World Trade Centers, and at more upscale settings such as the Brooklyn Academy of Music, and
Lincoln Center. Over the last two decades, Spoke the Hub has concurrently produced the work of thousands of fellow artists through their first Choreographers' Showcase Series, the Outback Performance Series, the Kids Outback Performance Series, Mentors Outback, the Groundhog Performance Series for Family Audiences, the Small Potatoes Performance Showcase, and currently, through the Local Produce For All Seasons Productions and the Gowanus Wildlife Preserve Concert Series.

Spoke the Hub's mission is to nurture both individual and community health and happiness through providing the general public with affordable creative arts study, contemplation and practice opportunities of the highest caliber.