VALERIE WILLIAMS
CHOREOGRAPHER    DANCER    MOVEMENT SPECIALIST
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                                 Esthetics

Excerpted from: A Practical Guide to the State of Iowa's Dance Curriculum

Codification of Esthetics--A guideline for young choreographers

The aim of this guide is to help young choreographers create movement that is meaningfully put together, not just a series of tricks. Consideration should be given not only to the form and style of the music but also to the text of a song. Given a step by step guide for choreographing competition/exhibition dances, the choreographer should be able to please not only s/himself and the judges, but also the muse of dance, thus adding to the art form.


ESTHETICS

Intent of the choreography--what do you want the audience to see/feel/understand.
Choice of music should reflect this.
Costumes and setting should also reflect this.

Pedestrian vs abstract--which should be used to best communicate an idea to the audience--easily recognized movement such as rock and roll dance steps or more unique movement? Is it important to you that the dance reflect you and your experiences? Or would common experiences better do that?

Authentic movement vs steps--Dancing, not doing movement that looks like what others think dance is.

Avoid meaningless repetition.
Repetition makes a point and can be a powerful focus of the audience's eyes and minds.

Avoid symmetry.
Think about the complexity of a shape.
Keeping the audiences eyes busy keeps them paying attention.

Emote in a real manner: expressive movement comes from an inside impulse, it is not acted.
Analyze dances that you like in concrete terms (see Aspects of Dance and Design)


VOCABULARY

Abstract
to make movement less literal by changing its speed, the size, level, direction, shape; adding form, complexity.

Back
the area behind the body

Backward
moving in the direction of the back of the body

Beat
a regular, underlying division of time.

Canon or round
the same movement beginning at different times; a round repeats back to the beginning of the sequence

Clockwise
turning in the direction a clock hand moves; turning with the right shoulder to the back
Collapse
release of the muscles

Compositional Balance
full use of space, entrances and exits, floor pattern, shape of entire dance, unity and harmony.

Counterclockwise
turning opposite the direction of the clock; turning with the left shoulder to the back

Direction
forward, backward, diagonal, side, clockwise, counterclockwise

Dynamics
the use of all the aspects of dance and design in such a way that the audience's eyes stay busy, and thus interested.

Effort
strength of gesture; i.e. weak, strong.

Facing
that part of the movement or shape the audience can see

Floor pattern
the design made on the floor by the dancer's movement

Focus
directing the audience's attention through stage picture, dancer's eye focus, individual and group shape

Force
amount of energy used for movement

Form
unison, canon, rondo, random, ribbon, sequence, manipulation of sequence (repetition, abstraction/exaggeration, reversing, retrograde, condensation, expansion, embellishment, transferring movement to different body parts, addition, mirroring, inversion).

Forward
moving in the direction of the front of the body

Framing
emphasizing an individual or moment or movement. Foreground vs background.

Front
the area directly in front of the body

Harmony
movement or music that pleases the eyes and ears; is related in a way to form a connected whole

Hop
going into the air from one foot and landing on the same foot

Jop
going into the air from one foot and landing on two feet

Jump
going into the air landing on two feet

Leap
changing weight from one foot to the other in the air

Level
the height of a shape; high, middle, low, off the floor, on the floor

Line
the lines the body draws in the space, on the floor and in the body shape; the way movement directs the audiences eyes

Locomotor patterns
methods of changing place; combinations of step, hop, leap, jump, jop

Movement Qualities
sustained, percussive, collapse, suspension, swing, vibratory

Percussive
moving in a sharp and quick manner; movement that has a definite beginning and ending

Personal space
the area within arm's reach

Random
different people doing different movements at the the same time; that which looks unexpected and without form to the audience

Repetition
performing a movement, shape or anything more than once

Retrograde
performing a movement sequence backwards

Reversing
commonly refers to doing a movement or sequence on the other side, i.e. right then left

Rhythm
the changing amounts of time given to each movement.

Ribbon
a movement sequence that does not repeat or stop

Rondo
a chorus verse chorus form, i.e. A B A C A D A F A

Round
different people doing the same movement but beginning at different times; a round repeats back to the beginning of the sequence

Sequence
an order of movements

Shape
the positive taking of space

Shape
symmetry, flow (one focus point), contrast (many focus points); positive and negative space; foreground and background; self, partner and group.

Side
the area to the side of the body

Sideways
moving in the direction of a side of the body

Space
any area available for moving

Speed
how much movement is put in a given period of time; amount of time used for movement

Step
changing weight from one foot to the other with one foot always on the floor

Suspension
an illusion of low gravity; being held up as if by a string

Sustained
moving in a smooth manner, always the same speed

Swing
movement that uses suspension and collapse in a natural way

Unison
different people doing the same movement at the same time

Vibratory
many sharp and quick movements in a row

Weight
light, heavy; overcoming or giving in to gravity


DEFINITION BY TOPIC

ENERGY or EFFORT

Effort
strength of gesture; i.e. weak, strong.
Movement Qualities
sustained (smooth), percussive (sharp and quick), collapse (letting the muscles go), suspension (being held up as if by a string; an illusion of low gravity), swing (just like the playground swingset, a combination of collapse and suspension), vibratory (many sharp and quick movements in a row).

Weight
light, heavy; overcoming or giving in to gravity


SHAPE       The space the body occupies

Background
activity that takes place behind other activity

Contrast
a shape with many focus points

Flow
a shape with only one focus point

Foreground
activity that takes place closer to the audience

Group
a shape made by three or more people; most commonly using the same space

Negative space
the space that is shaped by the body

Partner
a shape made by two people; most commonly using the same space but can also be related shapes

Positive space
the space the body takes up

Self
a shape made by one person

Symmetry
a shape that mirrors its sides


SPACE       

Direction
forward, backward, diagonal, side, clockwise, counterclockwise

Focus
directing the audience's attention through stage picture, dancer's eye focus, individual and group shape.

Framing
emphasizing an individual or moment or movement

Level
high, middle, low, off the floor, on the floor

Locomotor patterns
methods of changing place; combinations of step, hop, leap, jump, jop


TIME

Speed
how much movement is put in a given period of time

Beat
a regular, underlying division of time.

Rhythm
the changing amounts of time given to each movement.


FORM

Unison
the same movement at the same time

Canon or round
the same movement beginning at different times

Rondo
a chorus verse chorus form, i.e. A B A C A D A F A

Random
different movements at the the same time; that which looks unexpected and without form to the audience

Ribbon
a movement sequence that does not repeat or stop

Sequence
an order of movements

Manipulation of sequence
repetition, abstraction/exaggeration, reversing, retrograde, condensation, expansion, embellishment, transferring movement to different body parts, addition, mirroring, inversion


STAGE DIRECTIONS

Backstage
the area the audience can't see

Downstage
toward the audience

Legs
the curtains hanging on the sides of the stage to block the audience's view of backstage

Proscenium
the front edges of the stage; the area closest to the audience

Stage Right
the right side of the stage (while facing the audience)

Stage Left
the left side of the stage (while facing the audience)

Upstage
away from the audience; the back of the stage

Wings
the space between legs


AUDITIONING
Does and Don'ts:

Present yourself the way you would like to be perceived
    Dress like a competent individual
    Be enthusiastic. Acting enthusiastic is just as good as being enthusiastic.

Look at the people auditioning you
    Show the people who may give you a part what they will see from you on stage.
    Perform for everyone in the room, even if they aren't looking at you.

Presence
    Project your energy to the walls

Looking competent in dance auditions
    Keep your elbows away from your sides, keep some space under your armpits
    Weight on both feet and slightly forward of center
    Listen to all comments and criticisms from the choreographer and apply them to yourself if appropriate.
    Keep moving, even if you make a mistake. Presence and general movement ability count also.

Creativity frequently gets you brownie points or at least a second look from the judges

Never be defensive
    You may want to say you can do better, but to say that as an unsolicited comment is the kiss of death.
    Be honest if the judge asks how you felt about your audition. Do you have a cold, did you perform well, are you in good voice, is your body sore?

If you don't understand a movement sequence, ask the choreographer or rehearsal assistant. If you dont 'get' the sequence, stand behind someone who looks good and confident and watch their feet; copy them exactly.

Learn as quickly as you can.
    Practice learning (copying, remembering and exhibiting) quickly. Get your friends to make shapes and movements and then copy them. Quiz yourself frequently.

Ask questions if you have them.
If the judge asks if their are any questions of s/him, ask how you can be better.

Practice auditioning.
    Tell your choir/homeroom/family/local nursing home that you are going to audition for a part and ask them to watch you critically.