Modern Drama

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    Tiller Girls In The 1900s

    Among the most successful and popular dance act during the 1900’s were known as the Tiller Girls formally remembered for their prestigious high-kick routines. Touring their act throughout the United States and Europe the girls begun a new social era. Culture critic Siegfried Kracaver mentions the girls are no longer individuals, but a lasting unit whose movements are mathematical demonstrations. (1975 p.67) He earlier believed the intense uniformed routines had no given meaning, describing the girls

    Words: 364 - Pages: 2

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    How Did Martha Graham Contribute To Dance

    The world of concert dance is full of great pioneers who gave us inspiring techniques and histories to study and pass on to others through performances and through teaching. For me, the most fascinating style of modern dance today is the Graham Technique. This technique was discovered by Martha Graham when she began teaching and saw that she had many people wanting to learn this new and unique technique. Martha then established the Martha Graham Center of Contemporary Dance in New York City in 1926

    Words: 426 - Pages: 2

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    Martha Graham Reshaped American Dance

    Martha Graham was an American dancer and choreographer. Her style, the Graham technique, reshaped American dance and is still taught worldwide. She was the first dancer to perform at the White House, travel abroad essential Medal of Freedom as a cultural ambassador. She receive the highest civilian award of the US. Martha Graham was recognized as one of the greatest artists of the 20th century. She created a movement language based upon the expressive capacity of the human body. It all began in

    Words: 649 - Pages: 3

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    Abstract Expressionism: Figurative Painting Of The 1930s

    Abstract Expressionism that the roots of the movement lie in the figurative painting of the 1930s. Almost all the artists who would later become abstract painters in New York in the 1940s and 1950s were stamped by the experience of the Great Depression. they came to maturity whilst painting in styles influenced by social realism and the Regionalist movement. By the late 1940s most had left those styles behind, but they learned much from their early work. It encouraged them in their commitment

    Words: 282 - Pages: 2

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    Icons Of The 1980s

    The 1980s was a period of innovation and modernization in every field, like technology or fashion, but also for art which in this decade saw a big growth. Later to Pop Art, that saw Andy Warhol (famous for his Campbell’s Soup Cans and his Marilyn Diptych) as its maximum exponent from the 50s to the late 80s until his death, was the Neo Pop, which is the cultural movement that created all the artistic currents, that are listed below, in this decade. Icons of this kind of art are Jeff Koons, whose

    Words: 589 - Pages: 3

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    Oscar Aguilar Olea Paint Analysis

    City. In the mid-1970s these individuals took to the streets and began using “the fences of Mexico City as [their] canvas” under the name SUMA (Olea). With growing fame and popularity, this group of informal artists participated in the development of modern Mexican art before separating to concentrate on their individual careers. Oscar spent several years studying different techniques, in which time he developed his process for the use of egg tempera, as well as watercolors, oils, etchings, drawings

    Words: 743 - Pages: 3

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    San David Dentzel Carousel Horse

    Many museums around the world display beautiful pieces of art. The Mingei International Museum of art in San Diego’s Balboa Park carries many types of art with a vast category of sculpture. One of the best pieces there is Carousel Horse by the Gustav A. Dentzel Carousel Company (1867-1928). Gustav Dentzel was a cabinetmaker, but decided to make carousel animals. His animals are the most anatomically correct than the work of other carvers. This horse in particular is a fine work because of the attention

    Words: 539 - Pages: 3

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    20th Century American Dance

    differing conventional values to what they are today; both in society and through the means of dance. Isadora Duncan challenged these conventional values to become one of the greatest pioneers of movement, and is still labelled today as the ‘Mother of Modern Dance’. Not only did her personal life show an alternative to what society considered to be normal, her style and philosophy of dance was completely different to what was assumed in the early 1900s. As stated in Duncan’s autobiography, her mother

    Words: 752 - Pages: 4

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    Jean Leon Gerome Research Paper

    Throughout Paris and Europe the art world was consisting changing and in the years of 1889 and 1889 the threshold of debate was between the traditional artist and a new wave of modern artist. Traditional artist believed in the ideology of traditional and aesthetic art as the foundation of art and should not be changed. However, modern artist such as impressionist believed that the old art world was becoming boring and that there needed to be a change. For my inquiry class I was given the opportunity to

    Words: 1342 - Pages: 6

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    Mariah Copeland Research Paper

    Misty Copeland is a California raised American ballet dancer for the American Ballet Theatre, which is one of the three top ballet companies. Born the fourth out of six siblings, life was not easy. Her mother had several marriages and boyfriends causing the family to pack up and move under harried conditions at times. Her tumultuous home life led her to develop a love for movement, she began her studies in ballet at the age of 13, which is considered a late age to begin learning ballet. She studied

    Words: 454 - Pages: 2

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