To create space. To build community. To use movement as a voice.

A trio performing handstands and inversions against a plain white wall, with their shadows cast on the wall behind them.

About Us

FLIGHT Dance Collective was founded in 2018 with a simple but powerful intention:
to create space.

Space for dancers beyond traditional settings.
Space for art that speaks.
Space for collaboration, curiosity, and community.

We came together because we love to create — and because we believe movement is more than choreography. It’s language. It’s resistance. It’s storytelling. It’s connection.

At FLIGHT, we use dance to engage with the world around us. We respond to current events. We ask questions. We use our bodies and our voices to say something meaningful. Art, for us, is not separate from life — it lives inside it.

We are a team first.
We build together. We challenge each other. We push ourselves to stay curious, to evolve, and to take creative risks. Growth isn’t optional here — it’s part of who we are.

A group of performers in orange and black costumes performing a dance or theatrical act on the floor of a church with an altar and religious artwork in the background.

Driven by passion

FLIGHT is inclusive and welcoming to those who want to express themselves authentically.

Community is at the heart of everything we do. We don’t just want to exist in a community — we want to contribute to it, collaborate with it, and grow alongside it. Every project we create is another opportunity to connect, uplift, and expand what dance can be.

And we’re just getting started.

We’re excited to continue building, creating, and expanding our projects — to do more, reach further, and deepen our impact.

Thank you for being here.
Welcome to FLIGHT.

Group of dancers performing in a church, with some audience members seated and others standing, during a dance performance.

We create powerful, collaborative dance that challenges, responds, and connects — expanding opportunity and using movement as a catalyst for expression and change.

—Joce Satterberg