Structures and Purposes of Art Forms (Dance)
Across
- 2. Every movement takes a certain amount of ____ .
- 4. Associated with the Roaring ’20s, this highly syncopated dance has its roots in the African-American South.
- 6. Celebrating life events, religious rituals, and other occasions reflecting world cultures and traditions.
- 10. A choreographic structure that follows a specific story line to convey specific information through a dance.
- 11. When the music stops, and the tap dancer has a solo with only the sound of the tap shoes making a percussion solo—like a drum solo in a jazz composition.
- 12. Movements such as walking,running, leaping, hopping, jumping, skipping, galloping, and sliding.
- 13. Has its roots in ceremonial dance from West Africa, traditional Irish step dancing, and English clogging.
- 15. stretching and bending, pushing and pulling,rising and falling, twisting, turning and spinning, and swinging and swaying.
- 18. A person who creates dances from movements.
- 21. the area that the human body occupies.
Down
- 1. A means of social interaction as with folk or ballroom dance.
- 3. This kind of dance was first performed by Isodora Duncan in 1903 at the Parthenon in Athens,
- 5. Performed on a stage for an audience as in a ballet, modern jazz, or tap dance.
- 7. a three-part dance compositional form in which the third section is a restatement of the first section and can be in a condensed, abbreviated, or expanded form.
- 8. dance is a method of _____.
- 9. A theatrical dance style that is built on a strict set of movements that were standardized in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.
- 14. This refers to the amount of energy it takes to execute a movement.
- 16. as a rebellion from the stiff ballet style of dance.
- 17. (Abbreviation) A structure often associated with African music and dance forms,although it is also used elsewhere, including classical, folk, traditional, and other primal forms.
- 19. A dance structure with three or more themes where one theme is repeated.
- 20. A dance compositional form made up of two contrasting sections,each of which may or may not be repeated.