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Costuming For Flamenco

August 17, 2010 by 4dancers

4dancers contributor Karen Stelling joins us today to talk about the costuming in flamenco dance…

Thinking about costuming for dance, especially flamenco, isn’t so easy!  There are as many thoughts and feelings about costumes as there are patterns of materials and fabrics out of which they are made!

The flamenco look was originally born of the traditional clothing of the gypsies. For women, the long brightly colored skirts with tiers and ruffles and scarves and shawls were “borrowed” when flamenco began being performed by professionals.  It is said that the popular use of polka dots on fabric or “lunares” as they are called in Spanish, represented the “little moons” of glass that gypsies would sew onto their clothing to ward off the evil eye!   The gypsies every day wear was all they needed to express themselves.

Karen Stelling

Flamenco, as it was danced fifty or more years ago, before the current emphasis on fast heelwork, focused on the arms, hands, torso and the “spirit” or “aire” of the upper body especially for women.  Sleeves and fancy ruffles at the cuffs or shoulders were not just to cover the body but to highlight the movements that emanated from there.   The materials used for costuming were much heavier than current materials as well.  Dancers moved more slowly but did so in a very measured way. It may have been less spectacular than much of the dance we see performed today, but there was a certain drama that could be built to an intense yet calm finish.  Footwork was minimal for early female dancers and if they did lift their skirt or dress hem, or wore the “bata de cola,” the long dress with a train, to show their feet, they did so subtly and with style.  The dancer, who wore the bata, represented an artist who was committed to total artistic expression, using legs and hips to demonstrate the movement in rhythm, making the costume and the dancer appear as one.  Dancing well with a bata de cola remains a challenge for most dancers but when it is done well, it is a sight to see!

Men’s costuming has remained virtually unchanged over the years.  There remains the basic look of trousers and shirt or shirt and vest.  Early male flamenco dancers adopted the look of the bull fighter with spectacularly decorated jackets which were very ornate but may have detracted from the dance.  They also were made of heavy velvets and brocades and could not possibly have felt cool and comfortable!  The high waisted pant showed off a long, lean and elegant line.  Current male dancers have certainly dressed down to more comfortable fabrics and fewer pieces because there is so much more athleticism in the dance and the focus is on what the dancer is doing and less on what they’re wearing.

As flamenco dance technique has evolved over the years, with faster and more rhythmically intricate footwork and women totally keeping pace with men regarding their own “chops,” costuming, although still attractive, now has to serve the dance in an economical way.  With a dress made of light blends of fabric, rather than a bata, female dancers can make many turns and generally just move more quickly across the floor.  There is still use of accessories such as shawls, which may be worn as part of the costume, but are more often used as part of the choreography and usually wind up being used briefly then put to the side.

For most dancers, it is a matter of personal style but all costumes for flamenco work to represent the total body in movement, to be a companion in the dancer’s expression, not just a beautiful body cover.  Flamenco costuming is very sensual with a mystery to the lines that are created and ever changing by virtue of how the fabric clings and then moves on, again and again.

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Filed Under: 4dancers, 4teachers, Dance Clothing & Shoes, Editorial, Flamenco & Spanish Dance Tagged With: costuming, flamenco, gypsies

Special Benefit Performance: Dance Chicago

August 11, 2010 by 4dancers

Dance Chicago is going to kick-off it’s 16th season with a special performance on September 25, 2010, at the Illinois Valley Community College (IVCC). This event will benefit victims of last June’s tornado which devastated Streator and parts of LaSalle County.

All monies from the ticket sales and private contributions will go to a special fund to help rebuild Engle Lane Theater in Streator, Illinois. If you live in the area–come out and support the community that day.

Here are the details:

Illinois Valley Community College

Cultural Center (Building F – Map)

815 N Orlando Smith Avenue

Oglesby, IL 61348

Parking Free in Parking Lot 7. This parking lot is directly east of Building F

September 25, 2010 at 7:30 p.m.

General admission tickets are $25 and can be purchased online at http://www.dancechicago.com/tour_performances.html, or after August 23 at Centrue Bank locations in Streator, Ottawa, Peru, and Princeton http://www.centrue.com/. Contributions can be made to The Show Must Go On – Engle Lane Tornado Relief, PO Box 883, Streator, IL 61364. Victims of the tornado can attend at no cost by contacting the City of Streator at 815-672-2517.

http://www.dancechicago.com/tour_performances.html

 

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Filed Under: 4dancers, 4teachers, Editorial, Organizations Tagged With: benefit, dance chicago, performance

Introducing… “Post Curtain Chat” With Matthew Powell

August 7, 2010 by 4dancers

4dancers is about to launch a new feature on the site–“Post Curtain Chat”, with Matthew Powell. Matthew has signed on to provide us with an untailored glimpse into the everyday lives of the dancers, teachers, directors, and choreographers who comprise the dance community of today. From hobbies, to food, to love life, to nightlife, see how these incredible talents like to spend their time once the curtain has closed.

Joshua Grant of Les Ballets Trockadero de Monte Carlo will be the first person to share some thoughts with us here. Be sure and look for this great new feature on Friday, August 13th.

In case you missed his interview on 4dancers, here’s a little bit about our new contributor:

Photo by Jordan Matter

As a teacher, Matthew was a faculty member with the Kansas City Ballet School, and has taught classes at institutions such as the Universities of Iowa and Alabama, The Rock School, Marymount Manhattan, and Ballet Academy East. He has taught company class for Kansas City Ballet and Alvin Ailey American Dance Theatre while on tour. Additionally, Matthew served as the company ballet teacher for the West Side Story International Tour.

Matthew’s choreography received a fellowship from the New York Choreographic Institute in 2006. He has choreographed for Kansas City Ballet and worked as Assistant Director to Dorothy Danner for the Lyric Opera of Kansas City’s production of Pirates of Penzance. Most recently, Matthew has been working with Morphoses as Ballet Master, teaching at Broadway Dance Center, and freelancing as a teacher and choreographer. http://www.matthewpowell.net/Site/Home.html

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Filed Under: 4dancers, 4teachers, Editorial, Studios Tagged With: Joshua Grant, Les Ballets Trockadero de Monte Carlo, matthew powell, post curtain chat

University Dance Programs: Evaluating Students

August 3, 2010 by 4dancers

If you are new to the college or university environment, it can be difficult to know how to evaluate the students in your classroom. When I first started teaching at the university level, I had to put in a lot of extra time making sure that I was able to do this within the requirements of academia.

It was a little intimidating.

I wrote an article for Dance Teacher that passed on some great advice from people such as Mary Fitzgerald, assistant professor at Arizona State University’s Herberger College of Fine Arts and Larry Lavender, head of the dance department at the University of North Carolina, Greensboro.

If you are going to be working in this type of environment anytime soon, it can really pay off to listen to some tips from those who have gone before you. And if you have anything to share with 4dancers readers, feel free to chime in here…

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Filed Under: 4teachers, Editorial, JOBS, Teaching Tips Tagged With: dance teacher, larry lavender, mary fitzgerald, university dance programs

Antony Tudor

July 29, 2010 by 4dancers

When I think of Antony Tudor, his ballet, The Leaves are Fading immediately springs to mind. Tudor had an enormous impact on the ballet world when I was growing up, and is still well-known throughout the dance world for his choreography. I always felt that Tudor’s work was informed by our collective human psyche. It impacts you.

One of the most famous quotes about Tudor’s work comes from none other than Mikhail Baryshnikov who said, “We do Tudor’s ballets because we must. Tudor’s work is our conscience.”

For more information on Tudor, and a list of all the ballets he choreographed, visit The Antony Tudor Ballet Trust.

Those interested in reading about him in more detail may want to pick up the book, Undimmed Lustre: The Life of Antony Tudor for a closer look at his life–and his art.

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Filed Under: 4dancers, 4teachers, Books & Magazines, Dance History, Editorial, Online Dance Resources, Organizations Tagged With: antony tudor, antony tudor ballet trust, mikhail baryshnikov, the leaves are fading

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