Modern Meanings.WE MUST BEGIN with a definition. We're focusing on modern dance in this issue and we might reasonably ask the question: What is it? That was certainly an easier question to answer thirty years ago than it is today, because there seems to have been a surge of change in dance since then, and there are many questions being asked about the direction in which dance has been heading. Sister Wendy Beckett Sister Wendy Beckett (born February 25 1930) is a South African-born British art expert, consecrated virgin and contemplative hermit who became an unlikely celebrity during the 1990s, presenting a series of acclaimed art history documentaries for the BBC. , the Carmelite nun with a passionately pro-art presence on TV and in numerous books, says that wherever you find art, you are dealing with humans. Art changes, and it may change beyond recognition. But just because art changes doesn't mean that it has gotten better, or, as we like to say, that it has somehow evolved. It just is, there before us. Here's a story that illustrates a decisive moment in the evolution of dance. We all called her Martha, plain Martha, even those of us who quaked and stepped backwards in her presence, convinced as we were that we might get burn blisters or worse if we allowed ourselves to be drawn too close. This particular gathering in the early 1970s was, I think, the first that Martha Graham attended following a long illness from which she had not been expected to recover. In characteristically dulcet dul·cet adj. 1. a. Pleasing to the ear; melodious. b. Having a soothing, agreeable quality. 2. Archaic Sweet to the taste. , reasoned tones she announced that the so-called "war" between modern dance and ballet was over! She told us that her modern dance works--among the epic masterpieces of the twentieth century--should now be called ballets, a term previously reserved for the classic form of theater dance that had its origins in the Renaissance courts of Europe. Modern dance, too, had European origins, if you went back to Delsarte at the beginning of the nineteenth century, and understood that the modernism was a revolt against Victorian culture. But it was American modern American Modern was a distinct American design aesthetic formed in the period between 1925 and World War II. American Modern was created by a pioneering group of designers, architects and artists, among them were Norman Bel Geddes, Donald Deskey, Henry Dreyfuss, Paul Frankl, dance, with its emphasis on weight and gravity and the earth, that would bear the message back to the rest of the world In the first half of the twentieth century. And as with many suppressed minorities, the modern dancers fought long and hard to define and defend themselves. They needed a clearly identifiable enemy, and ballet was it. Thus, the war, which drew passionate and opinionated o·pin·ion·at·ed adj. Holding stubbornly and often unreasonably to one's own opinions. [Probably from obsolete opinionate : opinion + -ate1. disciples. Perhaps Graham had already made this pronouncement somewhere else, and perhaps many times before, and perhaps others had said it as well. But her intuitive sense of theater and her ability to grab hold of the moment made her declaration stick like glue. Only a few among us dared to question this pivotal goddess of modern dance with any real persistence. Anna Kisselgoff was the most courageous, I thought at the time: What, exactly, do you mean? she asked. Nobody knew for sure. The dance war stories were legendary, like famous battles of the American Revolution American Revolution, 1775–83, struggle by which the Thirteen Colonies on the Atlantic seaboard of North America won independence from Great Britain and became the United States. It is also called the American War of Independence. . Graham, in fact, had played her own role in making herself one of the frontline fire-throwing renegades. But what worded people thirty years ago was the question: Did Graham's new declaration mean that modern dance would overrun the unsteady stages of theatrical dance, that ballet would recede re·cede 1 intr.v. re·ced·ed, re·ced·ing, re·cedes 1. To move back or away from a limit, point, or mark: waited for the floodwaters to recede. 2. , despised de·spise tr.v. de·spised, de·spis·ing, de·spis·es 1. To regard with contempt or scorn: despised all cowards and flatterers. 2. and discredited, into the dust of dance history? Was Graham, we speculated, perhaps announcing her own demise, the end of her technique and the disappearance of her extraordinary repertory? Looking back, I'm not at all sure that she knew, either. There was quite a bit of the old blarney Blarney, village, Co. Cork, SE Republic of Ireland. Those who kiss the Blarney Stone, placed in an almost inaccessible position near the top of the thick stone wall of the 15th-century castle, are supposed to gain marvelous powers of persuasion and cajolery. left in this extremely complicated New Englandy-Irish lady yet, and she was struggling to redefine her life, as well as her art. Ballet was now an acceptable addition to modern dance training. It would take a generation of dancers to prove her assertion. WHAT DOES THE term modern mean today? Contemporary dancers and choreographers This is a list of choreographers A
Tharp said it was a hard question but she thought that what we call modern dance must refer to certain dance forms and techniques prior to the 1950s. This is, I believe, the period we now call historical modern dance. Other follow-up forms are usually defined by their decades and the reigning aesthetic philosophies of the moment. I asked Paul Taylor
v. cho·re·o·graphed, cho·re·o·graph·ing, cho·re·o·graphs v.tr. 1. To create the choreography of: choreograph a ballet. 2. today. He said with sly avoidance that he had no idea what modern dance was any longer. He just makes dances, some good ones, some bad ones, and it's damn difficult work, low-paying, unappreciated, never-ending. He doesn't call his dances anything in particular--oh, they could be called modern, yes, because of his debt to Martha, among others, for those early years. But that was then and this is now and he didn't know any longer. Nope. And so I turned elsewhere. I asked two of the most talented and widely recognized fast-rising young choreographers of their generation, Stanton Welch and Christopher Wheeldon Christopher Wheeldon (born March 22, 1973)[1] is among the most sought-after and critically acclaimed contemporary ballet choreographers in the world.[2] Born in Somerset, England, Wheeldon began training to be a ballet dancer at the age of 8. . Both are extremely articulate, both speak with knowledge and wisdom, which is also evident in their ballets, which are now being seen around the world. Chris said that many young talents today are afraid to use ballet vocabulary; nobody dares use pure ballet to create new works; and that the work of most so-called contemporary choreographers today is based on ballet technique Ballet technique is the method by which ballet steps are performed or taught. The core technique of ballet is the same throughout the World, with some minor regional variations, and various training methods have been devised, which produce a different physicality of performance and with some modern dance influences to varying degrees. This results in a form he called generic. Generic dances use the eclectic training and possibilities of range embodied in today's professional dancers, who are better trained than those of any previous generation. Okay. Stanton was even more vehement. He hates all categorization of dance because it divides rather than unites. Definitions of people, cultures, and dance forms create stereotypes that are unacceptable. It's time It's Time was a successful political campaign run by the Australian Labor Party (ALP) under Gough Whitlam at the 1972 election in Australia. Campaigning on the perceived need for change after 23 years of conservative (Liberal Party of Australia) government, Labor put forward a this practice stopped. Stanton said he did not want to be known as a ballet choreographer, despite his work appearing on major ballet companies Noun 1. ballet company - a company that produces ballets troupe, company - organization of performers and associated personnel (especially theatrical); "the traveling company all stayed at the same hotel" . He is, he said, a modern choreographer because he lives in the present time, and like so many people today he uses whatever seems appropriate to him from that inexhaustible pool of available artistic resources. And then he gave me a definition which, if you want one, seems pretty fair. There is such a category as classic modern dance in the manner of Graham, yes, but there is also post-modern, contemporary, performance, hip-hop, folk, jazz, Broadway--all the other forms that are part of the fusion taking place today. But these are subcategories under one enormous heading: modern dance. And that means everything going on today. We can be sure of one thing: The final word still isn't in. |
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