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Explain any dance form with the following three elements: Space, time and energy
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Elements of Dance
Look at a building. Is it a good building? How would you know? Architects tend to define their art in terms of basic compositional elements like line, shape, space, and form. Painters and sculptors also utilize these compositional elements, and musicians have compositional elements of their own.
But what about dancers? Dance is an art form focused on creating a performance that's impermanent and fluid. It's unique
but it's still very much a form of art and, thus, dancers and choreographers have their own compositional elements to work with. Understanding these elements and how to use them is the key to a great work of art. There are four fundamental compositional elements of dance: space, time, force, and shape.
Space
Let's start with one of the most important: space, or the way the dancer occupies the physical world. Art forms like architecture and sculpture take up physical space in three dimensions, but this concept is a little different in dance because the dancer is in motion. So for us, the compositional element, space, refers to the way the dancer moves through and interacts with the physical world.
Humans can't fly or levitate, so how many ways can someone really move through physical space? Quite a few, actually. Within this compositional element, we must consider several aspects: the actual direction of the movement (sideways, forwards, backwards, diagonally), as well as implied movement in gestures or placement. We must consider facing, how the front of the body is positioned in relation to the audience. We have to envision the pattern the dancer moves in as he or she travels through space. Because this is a three-dimensional art form, we must also consider levels, the relationship of the body to the floor. Do dancers always stay with two feet on the floor? Can they lie on the floor, or leap high above it? All of these movements define the use of space in dance.
Look at a building. Is it a good building? How would you know? Architects tend to define their art in terms of basic compositional elements like line, shape, space, and form. Painters and sculptors also utilize these compositional elements, and musicians have compositional elements of their own.
But what about dancers? Dance is an art form focused on creating a performance that's impermanent and fluid. It's unique
but it's still very much a form of art and, thus, dancers and choreographers have their own compositional elements to work with. Understanding these elements and how to use them is the key to a great work of art. There are four fundamental compositional elements of dance: space, time, force, and shape.
Space
Let's start with one of the most important: space, or the way the dancer occupies the physical world. Art forms like architecture and sculpture take up physical space in three dimensions, but this concept is a little different in dance because the dancer is in motion. So for us, the compositional element, space, refers to the way the dancer moves through and interacts with the physical world.
Humans can't fly or levitate, so how many ways can someone really move through physical space? Quite a few, actually. Within this compositional element, we must consider several aspects: the actual direction of the movement (sideways, forwards, backwards, diagonally), as well as implied movement in gestures or placement. We must consider facing, how the front of the body is positioned in relation to the audience. We have to envision the pattern the dancer moves in as he or she travels through space. Because this is a three-dimensional art form, we must also consider levels, the relationship of the body to the floor. Do dancers always stay with two feet on the floor? Can they lie on the floor, or leap high above it? All of these movements define the use of space in dance.
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