Dancing Indian Schools.
Just as music can enhance the mood of a dance and
influence the way in which the spectator interprets its dramatic content, so
visual elements such as costume, makeup, masks, props, lighting, and stage sets
may also amplify certain qualities of dance movement.
Because set and design are vital elements of
theatre, they are most important in those types of theatre dance, whether
dramatic or abstract, in which dancers perform before nonparticipating
spectators.
Therefore, most discussion of the use of visual
elements in dance centers on theatre dance.
Such visual elements as costume and makeup do play a
role in participatory social and ritual dances, however.
In most war and hunting dances the participants not
only imitate the movements of warriors or prey but also use weapons, masks,
makeup, and animal skins to heighten the realism of the dance.
The wearing of animal skins is a common means in
many such dances to magically acquire the animals' strength or agility--hence
the eagle feathers worn in the headdresses of many North American Indians or
the deerskin shoes traditionally worn by the Scots. In other ritual dances the
dancers' clothes may well possess magical or religious significance.
The Sufi dancer begins his ritual by divesting
himself of a black cloak that is symbolic of the tomb.
Body painting in symbolic colors is characteristic
of many tribal dances as a means of keeping away evil spirits, while the
embroidery on a number of European national costumes is often a relic from the
days when it functioned as a magic charm.
Most important of all, the wearing of special
clothes in ritual dances, as in rituals not involving dance, is a way of
signaling and preserving the sacred quality of the occasion and removing it
from ordinary life.
In festive dances, too, clothes and ornamentation
play an important role in embellishing the movement and heightening the
atmosphere of gaiety, pomp, or excitement.
Social dances frequently have special clothes
associated with them, such as the evening suits and voluminous sequined dresses
of ballroom dancing or the tight, black clothes of rock and roll.
Such clothes are not only the fashion of the era but
also the uniform that identifies the dancer more strongly with the dance and
the other dancers. Like music, clothes can help dancers surrender their
everyday selves to the dance.
In theatre dances everywhere, the use of visual
effects is crucial to the power of the dance. In the Indian kathakali, facial
makeup is central to the portrayal of character.
Differently colored beards are used to represent
good or bad characters, while the color of the makeup is even more revealing: a
green and red painted face represents an evil and ferocious character, a green
and white face is for heroes and noblemen, a pinkish-yellow face is for women
characters and sages, and black and red makeup is used for female demons.
The bharata natya dancer relies more purely on the
mudras for character portrayal, but makeup and costume are still highly
important.
The graceful, sinuous lines of the dancer's
movements are emphasized by the bare torso and flowing skirt or trousers, while
the intricate detail of the mudras is reflected in the rich jewels, flowers,
and decoration of the costume.
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