Ballroom Dance: a sport or an art?
- Рубрика: Презентации по английскому языку
- Просмотров: 286
Презентация "Ballroom Dance: a sport or an art?" онлайн бесплатно на портале электронных презентаций school-present.com
What are the two points of view on defining ballroom dance as a sport? What are the athletic and artistic aspects of ballroom dance? How does its history help to answer these questions? ABOUT MY PROJECT Aims Answer raised questions. Learn the history of ballroom dancing and its becoming a dancesport. Spread the knowledge of ballroom dance.
Ballroom dance refers to a set of partner dances, which are danced in special shoes on special flooring and has two main features which separate them from other dances: All ballroom dances are danced in couples, which consist of a man and a woman. Couples dance in physical contact.
Let us read and let us dance – two amusements that will never do any harm to the world. © Voltaire
A LITTLE BIT OF HISTORY… In times past, ballroom dancing was social dancing for the privileged, leaving folk dancing for the lower classes. However, it should be noted even in times long gone, many ballroom dances were really elevated folk dances. At that time ballroom dance was just leisure, one of the ways to spend spare time, something which is now considered to be social dancing. It was also an art, exhibition dancing, like, for example, ballet.
In 1920th ballroom dance competitions were started to develop. They were unofficial and not very strict, because there weren’t specific criteria how to evaluate dancers. That’s why in England in 1924 Imperial Society of Teachers of Dancing (ISTD) started to create standards in music, steps and technique of dancing.
The 8-day Blackpool Dance Festival is the most famous annual ballroom dance competition of international significance, held in May in the Empress Ballroom at the Winter Gardens, Blackpool, England since 1920. It is also the largest ballroom competition: in 2003, 1539 couples from 54 countries took part in the festival. BLACKPOOL
Dancers are judged by different criteria, such as: Posture Musicality Frame Togetherness Foot and leg action Led and follow Floor craft Presentation (emotions) Couple’s style (costumes, behavior on the floor etc.) WHAT ARE COMPETITIONS LIKE?
The trained dancer must not only have grace and elegance, but also the leap of an Olympic hurdler, the balance of a tight-rope walker and panther-like strength and agility. © Camilla Jessel
Dancesport is competitive ballroom dancing, in contrast to social or exhibition dancing. The name was invented to help competitive ballroom dancing gain Olympic recognition. On September 5, 1997 the International DanceSport Federation (IDSF) was recognized by the International Olympic Committee (IOC) as the sole representative body for dancesport. THE BIRTH OF DANCESPORT
Physical strength. Flexibility and coordination. Endurance. Discipline and team spirit. Ballroom dance demands from dancers qualities which are demanded in real sports:
Today we consider ballroom dance as “an artistic sport”. Why sport? Because it demands from dancers qualities, which are demanded in real sports. But in contrast of other sports, it has special features which allow considering it not only as a sport, but as an art also. CONCLUSION Dancers are athletes of God. ©Albert Einstein
Dance is the mother of the arts. Music and poetry exist in time; painting and architecture in space. But the dance lives at once in time and space. © Curt Sachs
Sources of information: Modern Ballroom Dancing (Victor Silvester, 1993. London) The history of English ballroom dancing (Richardson P.J S. 1948. London) http://www.idsf.net/ http://www.idsf.net/documents/dancesport_a_sport.pdf http://www.danceplaza.com/ http://www.blackpooldancefestival.com/history.htm http://www.dancesport.ru/ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ballroom_dance Quotes: http://www.dance-quotes.net/ Photos used in presentation: http://www.gsn.com.pl