Carlos "Retro" Rasmussen
"I'm a self-taught freestyle animation dancer," says Carlos Rasmussen,
who performs in various venues and teaches dance in local studios and
as an artist-in-residence in Lane County schools. "Every move is
created in the moment." When Rasmussen was five, he and his
three-year-old sister Kyahna were rescued from the foster home in
Portland where they had been verbally and physically abused. They were
adopted by Lahna and Don Rasmussen of Eugene, who had previously
adopted their older siblings Sophia, Izaiah, and Rozy, and later
adopted a younger sibling, Markus. "That's when I met my crazy crazy
family," he says. "Overall, there are 16 brothers and 19 sisters. They
had two kids of their own and others adopted from around the world."
Growing up, Rasmussen was into sports: basketball, soccer, track and
field, and football. "And I was always into music," he adds. "I was
introduced to marimba and piano in elementary school. I learned by ear
and I still play." At Roosevelt Middle School, he was strolling the
hallway when a friend asked, "Have you thought about dancing?" He
hadn't, but after a performance in the 8th grade talent show, he began
to take it seriously. "In high school at South, I met this kid Joseph,
in special ed, who was dancing in the courtyard," he relates, "so I
asked if he would dance with me in the student assembly. It was
life-changing for both of us. He became more outgoing, and I saw that I
could make positive change through dance." Rasmussen completed a GED
partway through his junior year and "hopped over" to Lane Community
College to study dance and psychology. He began teaching dance at
Amazon Community Center and currently teaches at Flex Studio and
Denbaya Drum and Dance, in addition to his day job at Pastini
Retaurant.
happening people
photograph and story by Paul Neevel
Eugene Weekly / 16 January 2020
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