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BRIEF HISTORY OF MODERN DANCE

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Title: BRIEF HISTORY OF MODERN DANCE


1

BRIEF HISTORY OF MODERN DANCE By Wendy Oliver
Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Co..
2
Early Modern Dance
  • Modern dance in the US started about the turn of
    the 20th c. as a revolt against ballet and show
    dance, or vaudeville.
  • It is uniquely American, although a similar,
    parallel movement evolved in Germany.
  • Modern dance is based on the idea of free
    artistic expression for the individual

Isadora Duncan
3
Differences Between Ballet and Modern Dance
Movement
  • Ballet conceived on grand scale, with opera house
    in mind
  • Strives to defy gravity
  • Looks to European aristocracy for its traditions
  • All ballet movement starts and ends with the 5
    positions
  • Focus on arms and legs
  • Modern dance usually designed for smaller spaces
  • May give into gravity or defy it
  • Looks within the individual
  • Modern dance may use ballet positions but has as
    many additional positions as needed by
    choreographer
  • Focus on torso

4
More Differences
  • Subject matter of ballet typically draws on
    European fairy tales
  • Ballet tends to be about make believe
    situations
  • Ballet companies structured as hierarchy corps
    de ballet, coryphees, soloists, principals
  • Ballet companies tend to perform choreography by
    many different people, and are named after their
    location (ie. Boston Ballet)
  • Modern dance draws on non-European themes,
    sometimes American or Greek
  • Modern dance may deal with social concerns of
    time
  • Modern dance companies usually smaller usually
    all dancers serve as soloists
  • Modern companies often perform mainly work of the
    director, after whom the company is named
    (i.e.Trisha Brown Co.)

5
Forerunners of Modern Dance
  • In the early 1900s, modern dance was spearheaded
    by Isadora Duncan, Loie Fuller, Maude Allan, Ruth
    St. Denis, and Ted Shawn.
  • These artists all began performing in the popular
    theatres of the day, but were drawn to making
    more serious work.
  • They emphasized creative use of lights, costumes,
    and décor.

6
Isadora Duncan
  • The most famous of these was Isadora Duncan, who
    had a huge impact on dance and society
  • Was an early feminist believed marriage was too
    restrictive
  • Thought dance should be inspired by nature, and
    also looked to ancient Greece
  • Thought dance was an expression of the spirit
  • Danced barefoot in simple tunics without a
    corset, with bare legs
  • Felt ballet was artificial
  • Had a dramatic personal life

7
Loie Fuller was known for her lighting effects
she used colored lights on voluminous silk
costumes. She invented new lighting equipment
and traveled with many technicians. Her style,
with its natural forms, wavy lines, and
curlicues, influenced Art Nouveau,
Ruth St. Denis was inspired by the Orient. She
managed to be both spiritual and financially
successful, touring the US and the world.
Ted Shawn was St. Denis dance partner and
husband. Together, they created a famous school
in Los Angeles called Denishawn, where hundreds
of young dancers were trained.
8
The Founders
  • Just as the Forerunners revolted against ballet
    vaudeville, the Founders rebelled against the
    Forerunners in 1920s 30s.
  • Some of them studied at Denishawn, and found the
    dance too commercial.
  • They wanted to establish the freedom and
    independence of modern dance.
  • They called it modern dance to distinguish it
    from expressionist dance and ballet.
  • The dance was severe rather than pretty, and
    emphasized integrity over commercial success.

Martha Grahams Appalachian Spring
9
Martha Graham
  • Martha Graham studied at Denishawn 1916-1923
  • Founded her own school in NY in 1927
  • Created a technique based on contraction and
    release
  • Style stressed angularity extreme muscle
    tension to show passion
  • Known for creating works with psychological
    themes, exploring inner emotions
  • Many of her works based on Greek themes, such as
    Clytemnestra, and Errand into the Maze

10
Journey Into the Maze, based on Jason and the
Minotaur
11
Doris Humphrey
  • Went to Denishawn in 1915 left in 1928 to create
    her own company
  • Like Graham, felt Denishawn technique was
    artificial wanted a more serious dance form
  • Created a technique based on fall and recovery
  • Wrote the classic text on choreography, The Art
    of Making Dances, in 1959.

12
The Post-War Generation

After WWII, in the late 1940s, modern dance came
into its own. Dancers were less concerned with
rebelling and more interested in building on
current trends. Modern dance became established
in higher education, and became more accepting of
ballet. Black artists began to be recognized.
Alvin Ailey Co.
13
Alvin Ailey
  • Ailey created an all-Black dance company in the
    late 1950s it became integrated in 1962.
  • He wanted to create opportunities for African-Am.
    to perform concert dance.
  • His style blends elements of modern, ballet,
    jazz, and African, and stresses Black themes.
  • Despite his death in 1989, his company and school
    are still going strong and his work is known
    around the world.
  • His signature work, Revelations, is based on
    spirituals and the African American experience

Revelations
14
Merce Cunningham
  • Unlike others of the postwar era, Cunningham was
    a rebel.
  • Although he performed with Graham in his youth,
    he formed his own company in the 1950s, where he
    invented a new choreographic style.
  • He believes that dance does not need a story the
    subject of dance should be the dance itself.
  • Contrary to Grahams approach, he does not use
    characters or emotion dance, music, and décor
    operate independently
  • Uses chance operations to determine order of
    movements.

15
Judson Dance Theatre
  • A group of artists who followed Cunninghams path
    to create a dance revolution in the 1960s
  • The Judson Church in NYC supported political
    causes the arts, and was the main performing
    venue for this group
  • The performance could happen anywhere in the
    churchsanctuary, choir loft, gymnasium, meeting
    room performances were free
  • Spirit of freedom and creativity what is art?
  • Non-traditional audiences
  • Dancers were sometimes untrained
  • performed pedestrian movements
  • Blended theatre, film, and dance

16
Yvonne Rainer
  • Rainer believed that any movement could be dance,
    and that anyone could be a dancer
  • Her famous Trio A is a series of quirky movements
    performed without emotional overtones. No
    dramatic accents are used all movements flowed
    from one to the next without pause.
  • Trio A has been performed as a solo, trio, or
    large group piece, by people of various shapes
    and sizes, in varying physical conditions.
  • This was the beginning of post-modern dance

17
Trisha Brown
  • A post-modern choreographer concerned with form
  • Very systematic and design-oriented
  • She invented the accumulation technique
  • One of her dances from the 1970s, Group Primary
    Accumulation, had 4 dancers lying on their backs,
    each on a separate raft on a lake. Each dancer
    accumulates 30 movements in 8 minutes, rotating
    45 degrees each on last 2 movements, until the
    dancer has rotated 360 degrees.
  • Her newer work
  • uses more traditional
  • theatre settings, but
  • still formalist

18
Modern Dance since the 1980s
  • Modern dance today offers a broad range of
    approaches, some narrative, some structural, some
    mainly athletic
  • Technical skills of varied types are back in
    demand
  • New kinds of dance include aerial dance,
    integrated dance (wheelchairs), and various
    hybrids of modern ballet, modern and hip hop,
    and other combinations
  • Still emphasizes individual expression

19
Elizabeth Streb/Ringside
  • Choreographer Streb has a ferocious desire to
    conquer gravity
  • Uses flying harnesses, trampolines, aerial
    platforms, walls, etc.
  • A bit like the circus or gymnastics, yet created
    with a different purpose in mind
  • Why spend all your time on the bottom of your
    feet? There are many parts of the body.

20
Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane
  • Often uses narrative or theme to relay a message
  • Creates full-length works such as Last Supper at
    Uncle Toms Cabin/The Promised Land, which
    examines race in the US.
  • Works with dancers of varied races, shapes,
    sizes, and backgrounds
  • Kept his partner Zanes name in the company name
    after Zane died of AIDS

21
Integrated Dance
  • "Who says you can dance only if you have two
    feet," she asks. "Dancing is an expression and an
    emotion, and you can show it in many different
    ways."
  • Ms. Verdi-Fletcher founded, and is co-artistic
    director of the Cleveland Ballet Dancing Wheels,
    a dance company that combines dancers in
    wheelchairs with dancers on foot. Since joining
    with the Cleveland Ballet in 1990, the
    eight-member company has given more than 1,000
    performances. They have danced before 125,000
    people a year in venues from Belgium to New York.
  • Ms. Verdi-Fletcher was born 41 years ago with
    spina bifida, which left her paralyzed from below
    the waist. Her parents feared she would not
    survive. She underwent 10 surgeries and tried to
    get around on crutches or with her legs in
    braces. But by age 12, she had to use a
    wheelchair. All the while, Ms. Verdi-Fletcher
    dreamed of dancing.

Cleveland Ballet Dancing Wheels
22
Cleveland Dancing Wheels
  • As she grew up, Ms. Verdi-Fletcher found
    teachers and dance partners who showed her how to
    perform in her wheelchair. She learned to spin
    gracefully and perform elegant moves.
  • In 1978, Ms. Verdi-Fletcher and partner David
    Brewster decided to enter a dance competition in
    Cleveland, but they did not tell the organizers
    she was in a wheelchair. She remembers the
    hushed audience that watched, spellbound, as they
    began to dance. "They didn't know what to make
    of somebody in a wheelchair, and I remember one
    of the judges had his mouth open," she said.
    "At the end of the dance, my partner did an
    acrobatic stunt on my chair while I was sitting
    on it, and the audience went wild. We had a
    standing ovation." Buoyed by that reaction,
    Ms. Verdi-Fletcher formed Dancing Wheels in 1980,
    with Mr. Brewster as her partner

23
Integrated Dance
The National Integrated Dance Company of South
Africa
There are currently many integrated dance
companies around the world. Dancers using
crutches wheelchairs team up with able-bodied
dancers to perform many different kinds of modern
dance. The term integrated refers to dancers of
differing physical abilities working together.
24
Rennie Harris
Rennie Harris fuses modern dance with hip-hop he
brought his show Rome and Jewels, loosely based
on Romeo and Juliet, to RI College in 2004, and
also performed at Veterans Memorial Auditorium
in 2005.
Founded in 1992 by North Philadelphia native
Rennie Harris , Rennie Harris Puremovement (RHPM)
was conceived with the vision for sharing an
appreciation for diversity and is dedicated to
preserving and disseminating hip-hop culture
through workshops, classes, lecture-demonstrations
, dance residencies, mentoring programs and
public performances. RHPM's work encompasses rich
and diverse African-American traditions of the
past while simultaneously presenting the voice of
a new generation.
25
Liz Lerman
Liz Lerman works with dancers of mixed ages,
including people in their 70s. In 1975 Liz
Lerman created Woman of the Clear Vision,,a
dance about her mother's death featuring
professional dancers and adults from a
Washington, DC senior center. Combining the
creative and community aspects of this project
with the dance classes she was teaching
throughout DC, Lerman established the Dance
Exchange, incorporated in 1976, which has
explored issues such as violence, education,
aging, healthcare, and community history. In
2002, Lerman was awarded a MacArthur genius
grant.
Modern Dance continues to evolve
26
Modern Dance Images References
  • http//www.cmnw.org/images/Bill T
    Jones_dancersandorion.jpg
  • www.upenn.edu/pennnews/current/2000/102600/calenda
    r.html
  • http//www.streetswing.com/histmai2/gif/9loie2.jpg
  • www.dancewritig.org/library/duncan/prelude/prelude
    04.jpg
  • http//www.fusionanamoly.net/loiefuller.jpg
  • http//www.streetswing.com/histomai2gif/1ruth1.gif
  • http//www.streetswing.com/histmai2/gif/1shwn1.gif
  • http//www.loc.gov/loc/lcib/9806/images/g-appset.g
    if
  • http//www.cameraobscuragallery.com/morgan_1.jpg
  • http//www.duke.edu/saundra/graham.jpg
  • www.criticaldance.com/images/mgraham-medea.jpg
  • http//www.windhover.org/images/danceco/Doris_Hump
    hrey.jpg
  • http//www.calperfs.berkeley.edu/presents/events/i
    mages/alvin_ailey.jpg
  • www.fordfound.org/about/images/2000_education1.jpg
  • http//www.ballet.co.uk/images/merce_c/av_loose_ti
    me_494.jpg
  • www.joyce.org/images/merce.jpg
  • http//www.israeldance.co.il/the_Judson_Dance_Thea
    tre_rauch.jpg
  • http//www.israeldance.co.il/Trisha_Brown.jpg
  • http//exchange.state.gov/pac/images/5_part.jpg
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