"il Classico è uguale al Moderno?" 😅 la differenza tra gli STILI di DANZA
In today's video tutorial, I'll briefly describe the major dance styles. Starting with classical dance, which is the foundation of all dance. It was initially introduced by the French King Louis XIV and then developed over the centuries. It is the most rigid, precise, and academic. Obviously, point shoes and the white tutu are its symbols. Neoclassical dance is a style of classical dance, or academic dance, that emerged at the turn of the twentieth century in the United States, thanks in part to the Russian-American choreographer George Balanchine. During the same period, Serge Lifar, another Russian exile who, like Balanchine, had worked with Sergei Diaghilev at the Ballets Russes, was conducting independent research in France. Unlike new dance forms, it draws on the traditional technical baggage of academic choreographic language, but utilizes it to achieve greater freedom of composition and introduce new steps and figures. It uses parallel positions in addition to en dehors, advocating greater freedom of movement of the upper body, especially the arms, and often having the dancer work off-axis. Neoclassical dance continues to use point shoes and finds in them a new and varied expressive function. The term modern dance generally refers to the developments in dance that, beginning in the late 19th century, led to a new conception of stage dance, in contrast to classical-academic ballet. Born as a rebellion against academic dance, deemed too rigid and schematic, modern dance sought to advance the search for a free dance. Initially, it was often practiced through the provocative form of the solo, often performed in spaces other than theaters, to create a stark contrast to the pomp of the great ballets. It wasn't initially a deliberate revolt, but the result of a series of shifts in thinking. Loïe Fuller, Isadora Duncan, and Ruth St. Denis, followed by Martha Graham and Doris Humphrey, established themselves on the world stage by developing distinctive styles of free dance that later gave rise to a modern dance characterized by its own aesthetics and expressive and educational frameworks. In Europe, Émile Jaques-Dalcroze and Rudolf von Laban paved the way for change, through practical and theoretical developments that gradually led to the emergence of modern dance, and expressionist dance in particular. The movement was labeled "modern" because it presented characteristics quite at odds with classical ballet. Modern dance embraces the unnatural use of the body but greatly favors linear movements. Gesture and movement that express the dancer's personality, starting from naturalness, are valued. Contemporary dance was born in Europe and the United States after the Second World War. The revolution brought about by modern dance continues, favoring new bodily expressions, sometimes including acting. The role of the dancer has changed in contemporary dance: the dancer is often the author of himself, to whom the choreographer leaves more creative space than in the past. The contemporary choreographer often delegates the creation of choreographic phrases to the dancer, who then assembles them and inserts them into a context and space. To do this, improvisation becomes an indispensable tool for choreographic creation, a technique for listening to one's body and the environment, a true expression of natural movement. Through improvisation, each dancer can explore their own movement qualities and seek their own visual language. The possibility for the dancer to become his own author has also stimulated the emergence of a space where the dancer can stage a creation entirely his own. Improvisation is not used solely for compositional purposes. A modern form of contemporary dance evolution is Contact, an ever-evolving form that involves the full use of one's body in relation to space, time, and others. It is a practical dance technique in which points of physical contact, between at least two dancers, become the starting point for an exploration of improvised movements. #ballerina #dance #leaballerina Pink stretching roller: https://amzn.to/2Ts2I3M Book for ballerinas: https://amzn.to/2XgAb2h Lea

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