Contemporary dance
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Contemporary dance is the name given to a group of 20th century concert dance forms.
Rather than a specific dance technique contemporary dance is a collection of systems and methods developed from Modern and Postmodern dance. The development of contemporary dance was parallel but separate to the development of New dance in Britain. Distinctions can be made between European, Canadian and American contemporary dance.
note: this sketch is provided for illustrative purposes only
Contents |
[edit] History
[edit] Seminal Artists
Notable artists in the field of contemporary dance include:
- Martha Graham
- Trisha Brown
- David Gordon (dance)
- Lucinda Childs
- Yvonne Rainer
- Deborah Hay (movement studies, dance scripts, communal dance forms);
- Merce Cunningham (chance procedures and engagement with new technologies);
- Anna Halprin (working with site-specific/environmental ritual/therapeutic communal forms).
- American postmodern "pioneers" and others in the early 1960s-70s who were busily deconstructing/reconstructing dance conventions, developing radical new approaches to movement and choreography, and questioning what it is to dance and who can be a dancer.
[edit] Form
Contemporary dance, due to its postmodern lineage, takes on many forms including:
- contemporary dance
- dance fusion
- emergent dance
- revisionism
[edit] Technique
Rather than emphasising technique per se, which is seen more as a tool for the dancer and a means by which to strengthen the body, increase flexibility, and through a deliberate exposure of the contemporary dancer to a wide range of techniques to ensure versatility, contemporary dance as a field is more concerned with examining the choreographic and performing process: as a result there has been limited development of dance techniques by seminal dance artists. Instead, contemporary dance draws on modern dance techniques (developed in the first sixty years of the 20th century) and an array of still developing philosophies of movement based on study of the human body and body/mind inter-relationships, including:
- Alexander Technique
- Bartenieff Fundamentals
- Body-Mind Centering
- Cunningham technique
- Graham technique
- Contact Improvisation
- Feldenkrais
- Gyrotonic and Gyrokinesis
- Hawkins technique
- Humphrey/Limón technique
- Kinesiology
- Laban Movement Analysis
- Lester Horton Technique
- Movement ecology
- Pilates
- Release Technique
- Skinner Releasing Technique
- Somatic Movement Studies
- Yoga