
Qizlarhon Dustmuhamedova
Central Asian Dance Camp
Qizlarhon began her dance training while still in childhood and
started her professional career in 1965. Noted for her traditional styling and
versatility, Qizlarhon's impressive repertoire includes all three of the Uzbek
regional styles in addition to Tadjik, Afghan, Persian and Japanese
choreographies. An accomplished actress, Qizlarhon expresses the emotions and
thoughts behind her gestures, as well as sheer technical brilliance.
As a featured soloist with various Uzbek performance groups, Qizlarhon has
toured extensively including concerts in England, Japan, France, Germany,
Switzerland and many Arab nations. She first visited the United States in 1979
with artists from the Bakhor Ensemble, a trip which included a performance in
Seattle -- Tashkent's sister city. Qizlarhon's artistry earned her an
invitation from the Seattle Tashkent Sister City Association to return to the
United States in 1982 to perform and teach, providing a rare opportunity for
American dancers to study with an Uzbek artist.
The Uzbek Dance and Culture Society arranged the 1989 Artists of Uzbekistan tour
which included concerts in California, Texas, New York, Minnesota, and
Washington D.C. The latter performance was sponsored through the Smithsonian in
conjunction with an exhibition on Timurid arts. Alexandra Tomalonis, Washington
Post dance critic, characterized Qizlarhon as "a vivacious woman whose
dancing changed from demure to robust, mournful to happy, in the blink of an
eye."
Qizlarhon returned to American shores again in 1990 as a soloist with the
Uzbekistan Folklore Ensemble. The West coast tour of the company, organized by
the Uzbek Dance and Culture Society and the Seattle Soviet Theatre Arts
Exchange, won standing ovations from capacity crowd audiences. Dance critic
Carole Beers, writing for the Seattle Times, found Qizlarhon's
"refined, ultra-feminine dancing" to be "particularly
memorable."
Qizlarhon is the Artisitic Director of Ensemble Munojot which was
founded in April 1999 under the auspices of the "Oltin Meros" (Golden
Heritage) International Charity Fund of the Republic of Uzbekistan. The ensemble
seeks to preserve, restore, and promulgate the 3,000 years of Uzbek dance
culture. These dances preserve a spirituality and world-view which can be traced
back to the Avesta, a collection of sacred Zoroastrian teachings. Munojot
takes great care in bringing traditional dances and costumes to the stage. Some
of the clothing and jewelry are antique; other garments have been constructed
along traditional lines. The result is a sumptuous picture of ethnographic
splendor.
Since 1998, Qizlarhon has visited the United States annually as the featured
guest teacher of the Central Asian Dance Camp. Her gifts as a performer and
instructor her have won appreciative new enthusiasts for her elegant,
traditional dances.