The MFA in Dance: Interdisciplinary Research at New York University provides a laboratory for established artists, makers, and practitioners to reimagine and enact dance through a range of collaborative and self-directed research, from the speculative to the practical.
The program's unique intimacy and flexibility are designed to empower each student. It allows them to deepen and expand their personal areas of interest through individualized focused mentorship, interdisciplinary collaboration, and the production of bold, new creative work. The curriculum also includes exciting opportunities to study in other Tisch departments, such as Performance Studies, Art & Public Policy, and Interactive Telecommunications Program, and to teach within an advanced research institution in one of the most artistically diverse cities in the world.
The 2-year, 60-credit, full-time residential program will accept four students. Full tuition remission is provided.
Prospective students should note that the Dance Interdisciplinary Research program has specific admission requirements. Applicants are expected to have at least seven years of professional experience prior to applying to the MFA program. Those applying straight from an undergraduate program or who do not have the required experience will not be considered for admission.
We are now accepting applications for Fall 2025!
More information on our graduate programs, admissions requirements, and application deadlines can be found on the Tisch Graduate Admissions website. For admissions questions or help with the online application, please contact us at tisch.gradadmissions@nyu.edu.
Our next Virtual Q&A Session will be held in January 2025, date TBA. Register at the link below.
Authoritative curriculum information can be found exclusively in the University Bulletin. All other content, including this web-page is for informational purposes only. You can find the curriculum for this program on this page of the Bulletin
Culminating Final Project
The Culminating Final Project is a creative endeavor supported by a body of work generated within two years of investigative and mentored research. The project can take into account a broader range of political, cultural and historical context. This is an opportunity to create a significant contribution and potentially advance the field by implementing the research process through one of many possible presentational formats:
- An evening length performance (30-45 minutes):
a. Self-produced within the department or a venue in the NYC area, for example Dancespace Project, PSNY, MoMa PS1, Gibney and Movement Research
b. Site-specific dance within the appropriate time range
- Scholarly paper/article: Adhering to the requirements and standards a recognized industry publication
- Film/Multimedia Project (of comparable scale): choose to work in a variety of media based formats that include dance-film, video art, virtual gallery, vr, xr, ar, and interactive installation projects that are all housed within an online or online formats including a website, social media platforms, aps for devices and blogs.
- Curatorial Project: organizing panel or conference
- Scientific study/experiment
- Pedagogical Contribution- Online learning module, presentation of technique or embodied practice