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From training to artisanal practice: rethinking choreographic relationships in modern dance
13
Citations
9
References
2011
Year
Social PracticeModern Dance CreationCultural Studies18Th Century DanceArtisanal PracticeDance MedicineDance For HealthModern DanceParticipatory ArtDanceCultural PracticeContemporary DanceRethinking Choreographic RelationshipsEarly Modern DanceGroup Social OrganisationTraditional DanceDance HistoryChoreographic ProcessPerforming ArtsArtsArts-based Research
In the first part of the twentieth century early modern dancers created both a new art form and the forms of group social organisation that were its condition of possibility. This paper critically examines the balletic and disciplinary ‘training’ model of dancer formation and proposes that the assumption of training in dance can obscure other ways of understanding dance-making relationships and other values in early modern dance. An ‘artisanal’ mode of production and knowledge transmission based on a non-binary relationship between ‘master’ and apprentice and occurring in a quasi-domestic and personalised space of some intimacy is proposed as a more pertinent way to think the enabling conditions of modern dance creation.
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