scholarly journals The image of Solveig in the ballet “Peer Gynt” on H. Ibsen’s dramatic poem (staged by the Kharkiv National Academic Opera and Ballet Theatre)

Author(s):  
Ir.M. Polianska

Introduction. The given article is devoted to study of the Ukrainian ballet continuing to produce new ways of implementation of the ideas and artistic images in the beginning of the XXI century. The production of the ballet “Peer Gynt” on the music by E. Grieg, done by People’s artist of Ukraine V. Pisarev for the troupe of Donetsk ‘A. Solovianenko’ Academic State Theatre of Opera and Ballet is a remarkable example of this process. The production’s premiere was on, 1997, May 17, in the framework of the international theatre project “Ukraine – Norway”. Twenty years later, in 2017, the new variant of the ballet has been created for Kharkiv National Opera and Ballet Theatre named after M. V. Lysenko. This “Kharkiv variant” was staged regarding specifics of Kharkiv theatre’s troupe, while retaining the choreographic text of the original; it is marked by scenography and decorations being more spectacular and modern. The work by H. Ibsen received harsh critique from literary scholars who gave plenty of negative reviews of it, and it was E.Grieg’s music that led this poetic drama to wide recognition and popularity it has today. H. Ibsen’s piece became a base for more than the ten of films, directed from 1915 until 2006. As well as E Grieg’s music, which mostly accompanies the theatrical and cinematic interpretations of the drama poem, there are homonymous opera by Werner Egk (1938) and the ballet by John Neumeier, created in a collaboration with A. Schnittke (1987). As a ballet, the “Peer Gynt” is being staged since 1922 up to present day. The object of this research is musically-plastique image of Solveig. The aim of the study is to reveal specifics of musically-plastique, choreographic means, which are used to portray Solveig’s image in V. Pisarev’s production of ballet “Peer Gynt” regarding literary source. The article uses such methods as: 1) historical, allowing to place selected work into the perspective of development of ballet theatre in XXI century; 2) genre approach conditioned by specifics of means of expression used in choreographic art; 3) stylistic, used to regard given ballet in the context of choreographic art. The research results. H. Ibsen elevated the story to the level of philosophical parable about man’s freedom to choose his own path and about the price this freedom comes with. A psychological portrait of the protagonist, wanderer Peer Gynt, combines traits of both humanist and insane. The playwright creates opposition between him and Solveig, majestic in her spiritual martyrdom. According to H. Ibsen’s conception, it is Solveig, being an incarnation of the very best feminine traits, such as chastity, fidelity and kindness, who saves the prodigal soul of the protagonist. In the end of his earthly path, Peer Gynt finally finds what he has been looking for his entire life – self-sacrificial Love, saving him from the eternal suffering near his death. The libretto is written by Yu. Stanishevsky, historian of ballet. The author significantly abridges the text of the dramatic poem, reducing the number of acts from five to two. The First act consists of 4 tableaus, the Second has only two; Yu. Stanishevsky omits several situations in order to make the spectacle more dynamic. The libretto features the image of Solveig only six times: thrice in the First act and thrice in the Second. But despite sporadicity and brevity of Solveig’s presence on the stage, this image plays a leading role in the dramaturgy of the ballet, no less significant than Peer Gynt. Today the poem “Peer Gynt” by H. Ibsen is hardly imaginable without E. Grieg’s music. Its score (op. 23) consisted of 28 numbers , and it included dance intermedia and introduction to every Act; dance fragments, genre scenes, portraits, fantastic episodes and landscape sceneries. Later, the composer compiled the most interesting and self-sufficient numbers into two Suites. Conspicuous Romantic style of the score might be compared to the image of blonde-haired maiden Solveig, who betokens pure femininity. The ballet of V. Pisarev consists of 8 tableaus and 3 numbers. In order to create this ballet spectacle, its author used several types of choreographic art to reveal its idea more profoundly. V. Pisarev embodied the plot of H. Ibsen’s poem using a fusion of classical and neo-classical dance as well as a reconstruction of the folklore-scenic Norwegian dance. Ballet master draws attention to the inner world of a protagonist, who is facing a dilemma: either to remain for fix the situation, or to run away once again. Significance of Solveig’s image is emphasized by the choreographic text of the ballet, as her role becomes a plastique leit-motiv of the whole work. Choreographic lexicon of Solveig is founded upon traditional Classical dance and occasional movements of contemporary dance. Conclusions. The image of Solveig is a demanding one, both technically and psychologically as the ballerina must demonstrate advanced technique and high artistry. Solveig’s dance is plastique, sculpture-like, filled with profound psychologism and elaborated expressiveness. Solveig is one of the most powerful and iconic examples of femininity and self-sacrificial love in romantic art keeping its actuality until today.

Author(s):  
Graham Watts

This chapter examines the development of Akram Khan’s choreographic pathway as an aggregate of diverse influences, primarily experienced through issues of identity, otherness, and interculturalism. Beginning with the early confusion of juxtaposing classical dance training in kathak and a fascination with Michael Jackson, Khan’s career has progressed, largely through an instinctive opportunism—absorbed from the “formless hunch” philosophy of early mentor, Peter Brook—and an ongoing fascination with the exploratory possibilities of collaboration through the hybrid mixing of dance disciplines to create his own style of mood movement. This process has taken Khan from the classical world of kathak, through contemporary dance, and back into another classical discipline, ballet, with detours along the way into flamenco, the Olympics, and text-based physical theater. The chapter describes the impact of all these experiences on Khan’s contribution to modern ballet, particularly in his association with English National Ballet.


2018 ◽  
Vol 50 (2) ◽  
pp. 31-44
Author(s):  
Ketu H. Katrak

This essay examines Jay Pather's site-specific workCityscapes(2002) within a theoretical discussion of the conjuncture and disjuncture of space and race in South Africa. Jay Pather, a South African of Indian ancestry, an innovative choreographer and curator of site-specific works, creatively uses space to inspire social change by providing access and challenging exclusions—social, cultural, political—of black and colored South Africans during apartheid (1948–1994) and after. A progressive vision underlies his avant-garde work expressed via a hybrid choreographic palette of South African classical and popular dance styles, Indian classical dance, modern and contemporary dance. His choreography is performed across South Africa and the African continent as well as in Denmark, Mumbai, and New York City.


Experiment ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 17 (1) ◽  
pp. 214-230
Author(s):  
Linda Nochlin

Abstract “The Ballets Russes and the Parisian Avant-Garde” deals with the complex relationship between Diaghalev and the members of the Parisian avant-garde he commissioned to design sets and costumes for his productions after World War I. Despite their previous aesthetic radicalism, such artists as Gris and Derain were obliged to rein in their vanguard originality and produce work of surprising conservatism, at the urging of the impresario. Matisse attempted greater originality, but in an unsuccessful ballet. The only really avant-garde production sponsored by Diaghalev after the war was Parade, in which such luminaries as Picasso, Satie and Cocteau played a leading role. Yet ultimately, it was not Diaghalev but Rolf de Mare’s Ballet Suedois that created the most experimental productions involving dance: Relache and Entr’acte. Yet, in experimenting with new forms, de Mare, in effect, abandoned ballet for different forms of expression relying on cinematic techniques rather than classical dance.


Author(s):  
Liudmyla Vyshotravka

The purpose of the article is to study artistic processes among ballet performers in the 1950s – 1970s on the example of the creative activity of Nikolai Apukhtin, Anatoly Belov, and Gennady Baukin. The methodology of the work includes the use of the following research methods: general historical, comparative, analytical, dialectical, systemic, etc. The scientific novelty of the publication lies in the fact that it first explored the professional culture in the field of male classical performance of the first half of the twentieth century on the example of the stage achievements of N. Apukhtin, A. Belov, and G. Baukin. Conclusions. The artistic contribution of the ballet premieres of the 1950s – 1970s. in the development of Ukrainian classical choreography on the example of the creativity of dancers N. Apukhtin, A. Belov, and G. Baukin, consists in the following: 1) a significant increase in the professional culture of performers due to the complication of the technical component and improvement of the actors' acting skills; 2) the creation of highly artistic images in ballets of the Soviet classics (B. Asafiev, R. Glier, A. Kerin, S. Prokofiev, A. Khachaturian, M. Chulaki, V. Yurovsky, etc.) and choreographic performances on national themes (V. Homolyak, K. Dankevich, G. Zhukovsky, V. Kireiko, N. Lysenko, A. Svechnikov, M. Skorulsky, B. Tishchenko, etc.); 3) transfer of professional experience in the process of pedagogical work to subsequent generations of Ukrainian dancers. Key words: N. Apukhtin, A. Belov, G. Baukin, male classical dance, Ukrainian ballet theater.


Author(s):  
Admink Admink

Указано на вихідні положення танцю модерн: опозиційність класичному танцю як втілення ідеї модернізму про розрив із традицією; увага до внутрішнього життя особистості, її психоемоційних станів; природність та свобода зовнішніх пластично-хореографічних проявів; вплив ритмопластичних теорій (провідна роль ритму, переважно внутрішнього). На основі історико-хронологічного та філогенетичного підходів прослідковано основний шлях ґенези та розвитку танцю модерн від індивідуальних виконавських стилів (Л. Фуллер, А. Дункан) через перші спроби створення системи (Т. Шоун, Р. Сен-Деніс) до формування та усталення технік та шкіл (М. Грем, Д. Хамфрі, Ч. Вейдман, Р. Лабан). Пластична мобільність та імпровізаційність танцю модерн зумовлює залежність хореографічної лексики, пластичних нюансів, ритму, настрою від фізичних можливостей,темпераменту, рівня танцювальної підготовки конкретних танцівників.Ключові слова: танець модерн, виконавські стилі, техніки танцю модерн, хореографія. The article points out the starting points of the modern dance: opposition to classical dance as the embodiment of the idea of modernism about breaking with tradition; attention to the inner life of the personality, its psycho-emotional states; naturalness and freedom of external plastic-choreographic manifestations; the influence of rhythmoplastic theories (the leading role of rhythm, mainly internal). Based on historical-chronological and phylogenetic approaches, the mainpath of the genesis and development of modern dance from individual performing styles (L. Fuller, I. Duncan) through the first attempts to create a system (T. Shawn, R. Saint-Denis) to the formation and strengthening of techniques is traced. and schools (M. Graham, D. Humphrey, C. Weidman, R. Laban). Plastic mobility and improvisation of modern dance determines the dependence of choreographic vocabulary, plastic nuances, rhythm, mood on the possibilities,temperament, level of dance training of specific dancers.Key words: modern dance, performing styles, modern dance techniques, choreography.


2020 ◽  
Vol 35 (1) ◽  
pp. 10-18
Author(s):  
Yanan Dang ◽  
Yiannis Koutedakis ◽  
Matthew Wyon

The Fit to Dance survey has been conducted using primarily Western participants and has provided foundation data for other studies. The purpose of the current study was to replicate the Fit to Dance 2 survey focusing on features of health and injuries in pre-professional and professional Chinese dancers of different genres. The survey was translated into Chinese with several new and modified questions. The survey was posted online for a 3-month period. A total of 1,040 individuals (82.8% female) completed the questionnaire, including 871 dance students (83.7%) and 169 professional dancers (16.3%), with focus in Chinese folk dance (44.4%), Chinese classical dance (25.6%), ballet (10.2%), and contemporary dance (9.8%). Compared to the Fit to Dance 2 survey, alcohol consumption (29% vs 82%; p<0.01) and smoking (13% vs 21%; p<0.05) were significantly less in Chinese dancers, but a higher percentage reported using weight-reducing eating plans (57% vs 23%; p<0.01) or having psychological issues with food (27% vs 24%; p<0.05). Reported injuries in a 12-month period prior to data collection were significantly lower in Chinese dancers (49% vs 80%; p<0.01). The type of injury (muscle and joint/ligament) and perceived cause of injury (fatigue, overwork, and reoccurrence of an old injury) were the same in both the current and previous survey. Mean injury rate ranged from 4.9 injuries/dancer (contemporary) to 3.4 injuries/dancer (Chinese folk dance), which is comparable to previously reported data on Western dance populations. This report provides the first comprehensive data on the health and injury incidence of Chinese dancers.


Author(s):  
Ketu H. Katrak

Dancer-choreographer Ramli Ibrahim has a unique heritage as a Muslim who grew up in Malaysia, training in ballet, contemporary dance, and two Indian classical dance styles—Bharatanatyam under Adyar K. Lakshman and Odissi under the late Guru Deba Prasad Das. An engineering scholarship took young Ibrahim to Australia, where he studied ballet. He later performed with the Sydney Dance Company and the Australia Dance Company. Ibrahim remarks, "I use a variety of genres as my tools. I refuse to be the slave of definitions" (Puranam 2012). However, his abiding passion is with Odissi from which he innovates. Ibrahim’s work, remarks Leela Venkataraman, "defies categorisation … His creativity is an integrated experience transcending national, religious and racial boundaries" (Venkataraman 2004). Ibrahim is the recipient of the Fulbright Distinguished Artist Award, 1999, and two Lifetime Achievement Awards from Boh Cameronian (2003) and from Angarag (2006), and the Indian government’s Sangeet Natak Akademi Award (2011). He was also recognized as a "Living Heritage" individual by the government of Malaysia (2012).


2017 ◽  
Vol 35 (1) ◽  
pp. 61-74 ◽  
Author(s):  
Patrick Germain-Thomas

In France, an academic view of dance held sway until the 1960s. However, the growing recognition of contemporary dance by the French ministry of culture and by local authorities since the 1970s culminated in the constitution of an artistic world distinct from that of classical dance. A mixed economic system has been set up, with contemporary dance companies depending not only on subsidies but also on funding from theatres and festivals, which either purchase or coproduce performances. This “subsidised market” combines the allocations of subsidies by public bodies and the relatively-free decisions of venue managers. In spite of substantial increases in scheduling and attendance figures, this market is characterized by a structural imbalance linked to a gap between the number of performances produced annually and the outlets offered by the distribution networks. The enlarging of the audience is therefore essential to the future of this artistic movement in France.


Retos ◽  
2015 ◽  
pp. 79-85
Author(s):  
Veronica Parent Mathias ◽  
Jerónimo García Romero ◽  
Maria José Campoy Sanchez ◽  
José Ramón Alvero Cruz

El acceso a los estudios oficiales de Danza, se realizan mediante pruebas de aptitud en los Conservatorios Profesionales de Danza de España y realizadas por profesores de Danza que evalúan aptitudes rítmicas, expresivas y psicomotrices y por otra parte, médicos que realizan una evaluación de las características físicas. La selección de los alumnos se realiza en función de los resultados de estas pruebas. Se analiza en este documento cuales son las características principales que rigen las calificaciones. El tribunal evaluador está formado por profesionales de danza, y se quiere averiguar si existen diferencias entre las diferentes especialidades a la hora de calificar. No han sido encontrados estudios acerca de pruebas específicas para realizar dicha evaluación. Se analizan los ítems de la prueba de aptitud según el profesorado de Enseñanzas de Régimen Especial de Danza, y según las diferentes especialidades que posean con respecto al elemento de la evaluación. Para cumplimentar los objetivos del estudio, datos cuantitativos y cualitativos fueron recogidos con la aplicación de una encuesta ad hoc (n= 27). Los resultados indican que, mientras el profesorado de danza clásica priorizó calificaciones en el ítem peso/talla, morfología del pie y extensión de piernas, los docentes de danza española y flamenco concedieron mayor importancia a la evaluación de la morfología de las piernas y aspectos de ritmo y expresión, mientras que los de la especialidad de contemporáneo destacaron con más importancia la calificación de la morfología de la columna y la pelvis. Los  resultados muestran diferencias estadísticamente significativas en la distribución de las calificaciones de determinados ítems de evaluación. Abstrac. Access to official studies in dance  is granted following dance aptitude tests in Spanish Professional Conservatories of Dance, performed by dance teachers who evaluate rhythmic, expressive and psychomotor skills and doctors physicians who perform an assessment of the physical characteristics. The selection of students is based on the results of these tests. The aim is to know if there are differences among teachers who evaluate according to their specialty in dance (Ballet, Flamenco, Contemporary or Spanish dance) and the main features determining their ratings. No studies have been found on tests to conduct such evaluations. To complete the objectives of the study, quantitative and qualitative data were collected through the administration of a test (n=27). The results indicate that, while the classical dance teacher prioritized weight/height, foot morphology and leg flexibility, teachers of Spanish dance and flamenco granted greater importance to the evaluation of the morphology of the legs and aspects of rhythm and expression. Teachers of contemporary dance emphasized ratings of spine and pelvis morphology.


2006 ◽  
Vol 38 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 163-179
Author(s):  
Azardokht Ameri

Some readers may find the style and organization of Ms. Ameri's article different from those that they are used to finding in Dance Research Journal. One must keep in mind that in Iran the performance of dance, with the exception of male folk dancing in front of all-male audiences, has been banned for over twenty-five years. Even the performance of solo improvised dance in private parties, such as weddings, can result in severe punishment. Prior to the 1978/79 revolution only one serious, but deeply flawed, article (Zoka' 1979) in Persian had appeared in print. Ms. Ameri's article is a pioneering effort, the first serious scholarly article to appear in print in Iran by an Iranian in a quarter of a century, and one that the reader can more readily appreciate when he or she realizes that the research materials available to dance researchers in the West, Japan, and other parts of the world do not exist in Iran. Thus, the work Ms. Ameri undertook was burdened by a lack of knowledge of trends in contemporary dance research that many of us take as commonplace; the article took great personal courage to write.


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