David Zambrano— history

While still in college Zambrano made his first solo, Para Carmen, in homage to his mother. After missing her funeral in Venezuela, Zambrano went directly from the airport to the studio of a neighboring college and danced for hours. The result was Para Carmen. Para Carmen has since been performed in 10 countries around the world.

Once he arrived in New York he began working with Pooh Kaye in 1985. Next he joined Simone Forti’s ensemble in 1986 and joined into a collaboration that Zambrano would consider to be one of his most influential. He has frequently referred to Simone Forti as his mentor.

Jump to Decade:

1980s

1986

Zambrano continued performing with Simone Forti, but also began to establish his own name in performance and choreography. He made No Basta Rezar, Tap the Feet, Volando Voy, and Apretaditos....

1988

Zambrano made two new pieces: Hecho en Venezuela (Made in Venezuela) and Rifle which both premiered on the same evening of work at PS 122. Rifle was choreographed in collaboration...

1989

Zambrano collaborated with Donald Fleming and Jill Becker with the tour of Undertow. Undertow was an improvisational collaboration of four pieces. Zambrano performed his solo Para Carmen, a duet with...

1990s

1991

Zambrano created Bolinga, an improvisation for five male dancers and two drummers. Bolinga premiered at the Judson Church in New York but then toured Germany and Holland in 1992. In...

1993

Zambrano made Agua Fuerte (Strong Water or Waterfall) at his festival in Venezuela. A waterfall nearby inspired Agua Fuerte. Created in collaboration with the dancers Jeremy Nelson, Bo Madvig and...

1995

Zambrano began a long process to move out of New York. He traveled all over the world for years, performing in various venues and making pieces upon his arrival. He...

1996

with Ballroom, Zambrano returned to his life experience of salsa dancing. He remembered the beauty in the conversations of hands, the exchanging of rhythmical steps, big band music and the...

1997

Zambrano was invited to create Aux.muted (No Sound) as a set piece for the German dancers Stina K. Bollmann, Birgit Feitag, Helge Loschmann, Eckard Muller, and Andrea Warzner. He worked...

2000s

2000

the photographer Anja Hitzenberger collaborated with musician Edward Ratliff to do a 48-hour photo shoot of Zambrano and Voorter as they traveled into and out of Barcelona. Hitzenberger, a longtime...

2003

Zambrano created the Rabbit Project. He invited 17 dancers from 13 different countries to Amsterdam for 6 weeks. The dancers were collected from years of teaching. Zambrano’s philosophy with the...

2010s

2010

2010 David celebrated his 50th birthday with project 250 days of walking in new shoes. For this project, David Zambrano choreographed the whole year 2010–11 in events that involved the...

2017

Zambrano and Voorter embarked on a bold journey to realize a long-held dream: take a break for 10 years from travelling, which led him to start creating an artistic home...

2018

Vision of a space like home to invite people to bloomed into life. On August 12, Tictac Art Centre opened its doors on Rue Émile Carpentier in Anderlecht. For one bustling...

2020s

2023

Tictac celebrated its fifth anniversary week—an explosion of improvisational vitality. Dance-enthusiast Wendy Perron described it as a “hotspot for improvisation”, complete with hammocks in the mezzanine, vibrant murals by Rimon Guimarães,...

2025

Zambrano continued teaching multi-week intensives in Flying Low, Improvisation on Stage, and Soul Project. In April 2025 he led Improvisation on Stage (14–18 April), followed by Flying Low (5–9 May), and in...

“The one outstanding piece was David Zambrano’s 1987 solo Fetiche, based on Venezuelan folklore. Zambrano conveyed the imagery of his native culture, it’s people and it’s flora and fauna with refreshing modernity and orginality. He invested his dancing with a precision and dynamic vitality that were quite breathtaking.”
Rose Anne Thom, Dance Magazine