Modern Vs Contemporary
Modern Vs Contemporary
Modern Vs Contemporary
Contemporary Dance –
What’s the Difference?
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Modern vs. Contemporary Dance – What’s the Difference?
The beautiful thing about art is that it’s always changing. Aesthetic preferences shift from
generation to generation, and new ideas are constantly surfacing, reshaping what already exists.
Ever since the Western dance aesthetic branched out from ballet in the early 20th Century, words
like “modern,” “post-modern,” and “contemporary” have been thrown around to describe these
new forms of dance.
The problem is that no one quite agrees on what name to use. You’ll see a dance studio offering
“modern” classes, but they’ll really be teaching what most people would call contemporary. So
You Think You Can Dance calls just about anything that’s barefoot “contemporary.”
Contemporary seems to have become a term to use when you don’t know what else to call it. But
there must be more to the story than that.
Let’s get this out of the way. I think a lot of people come into the dance world without realizing
that there are two very distinct camps here. This could be a whole post in itself so I’ll keep it
brief, but it’s an important thing to understand for this topic.
Commercial Dance – Think dance competitions, So You Think You Can Dance, music videos,
cruise ships, Disney World parades, etc. The general attitude behind commercial dance is,
“Look, we’re dancing! Isn’t this cool?” It’s purely for entertainment.
Concert Dance – Think The Nutcracker, modern dance companies like Paul Taylor, site-specific
work, dance theatre, experimental stuff. It’s a huge category that encompasses all dance that is
made in order to communicate artistic intent. Whether that’s telling a story, provoking thought
about a social justice issue, defying stereotypes, or whatever, concert dance goes deeper than
pretty kicks to fun music.
To draw a parallel with movies, commercial dance is like the lighthearted comedies and family-
friendly stuff that’s supposed to make you feel good, or the action movie that has very little plot
but lots of cool explosions. (Cough cough Transformers.) Concert dance is like a drama movie,
something with plot and depth that makes you think.
This article from Millennium Dance Center describes the difference very well, if you want
further reading.
History is Everything
You really need a whole dance history course to put modern dance in its proper context, but I
will try to give you the essential information. You can Google any of the names I mention here
for more details.
Notice something about the words we’re trying to define. The
words Modern and Contemporarymean basically the same thing: now. Of course, what was
happening “now” back in 1950 is not what’s happening now in the 21st Century.
So we started calling this new dance form Modern, then something came along that was more
modern than modern, and we called it Post-Modern. Finally, something even more modern came
along and we called it Contemporary.
A Simple Timeline
1920s-1940s
folks said, “We can make a technique out of this modern dance
Though very different visually from what came before, this is still
1940s-1950s
about the process. Cunningham was known for using dice and
people still had their own codified techniques, which is why they
1960s-1970s
That covers modern and post-modern, which fall into relatively clean historical eras and
philosophies. But contemporary is not so clean-cut. Let’s see what some experts have to say
about it.
Contemporary is more a term you would use for something current, but it has
a more integrated aspect, so you’d use a mixture of things—ballet and
modern. – Jean Freebury, Reconstructor and Former Member, Merce Cunningham
Dance Company
If you have a classical piece on pointe, the moment they lean off pointe and
take their weight off balance, it would be considered contemporary classical.
Somewhere along the line these words got to be nouns rather than a
description of the movement. – Glenn Edgerton, Artistic Director, Hubbard Street
Dance Chicago
That last quote helped me the most in understanding what “contemporary” means. Take a pre-
established dance technique, be it ballet, modern, jazz, or otherwise, and put a new twist on it.
Fuse two styles together, put it to non-traditional music, do something that the founders of that
technique would not have done. That’s what makes something contemporary.
I think that’s why it’s so hard to put your finger on what exactly contemporary dance looks like.
Every choreographer’s contemporary is going to be different from the rest, and it really can be a
name for anything that doesn’t fit cleanly into a category.
How would you define contemporary dance? Let’s discuss in the comments!
Further reading:
https://themindfuldancer.blogspot.com/2011/08/contemporarily-confused.html
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