Contemporary Dance as Modernist Art

Keywords: modernism, art, dance, Clement Greenberg, George Balanchine, Vaclav Nijinsky, August Bournonville; Martha Graham, Trisha Brown

Abstract

Dance has a very broad spectrum of styles and uses. In this paper, I consider dance as a kind of art performance, which uses the body as its distinctive medium. My focus is on which dance genres best realize the ambition of treating the body as its central medium.

My central claim is that contemporary dance radically breaks away from the other forms of dance and makes ordinary movements visible. In this respect, I also argue, only contemporary dance is fully modernist, in something like Clement Greenberg’s sense: it makes explicit the medium-specific essence of dance as an artform, doing what only dance can do—revealing the body in movement. To be sure, other forms of dance, from classical to modern, also use the body in their performances; however, I argue that only contemporary dance draws self-consciously on the embodied nature of the dancer in a modernist sense. If the artistic medium of dance – the body in movement—has inherent aesthetic qualities, then the job of dance aesthetics is to provide a framework for clarifying the medium-specific elements and limits of dance.

My overall argument has two steps. I first clarify the notion of modernism. Second, I argue that for dance to be a modernist art, it must consider the moving body as an art in itself. To support this idea, I offer a reading of the history of dance, which shows that its developments and revolutions successively refine the appreciation of bodily movement alone as the focus of its practice. As I will show, this development culminates with contemporary dance.

References

Acocella, Joan. 2001. “The Lost Nijinsky: Is it possible to reconstruct a forgotten ballet?” The New Yorker, May 7.

Balanchine, George (choreography), Stravinsky, Igor (music). Agon, Part I and Part II. 1981.

Coton, A.V. 1975. Writings on Dance, 1939-68. London: Dance Books.

Gottlieb, Robert S. 2008. Reading Dance: A Gathering of Memoirs, Reportage, Criticism, Profiles, Interviews, and Some Uncategorizable Extras. New York: Pantheon Books.

Greenberg, Clement. 1961. Art and Culture: Critical Essays. Boston: Beacon Press.

Homans, Jennifer. 2010. Apollo’s Angels: A History of Ballet. New York: Random House.

Kozel, Suzan. 2007. Closer: Performance, Technology, Phenomenology. Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press.

Macaulay, Alastair. 2009.“When an Earthbound Lad Meets His Winged Sylph.” New York Times, June 16.

Macaulay, Alastair. 2007. “50 Years Ago, Modernism was given a name ‘Agon’.” New York Times, November 25.

Published
2021-03-30
Section
Articles