The art of modern dance is based on the behavior and behavior of pioneers in that field as well as many other fields. These pioneers helped shape contemporary dance into today's dance. Isadora Duncan is one of the people who is partially responsible for this outcome. Duncan was often called "mother of modern dance" and influenced many other dancers. And, without much of her contribution, the art of dancing is different today. Isadora Duncan was born in San Francisco in the late 1870s and raised three brothers and sisters with his mother.
Isadora Duncan (1877-1927) is a pioneer of American dance, an important person in art and history. Isadora Duncan, known as "Mother of Modern Dance" is a self-made style revolutionary who influences Europe and Russia from the United States, causing sensation everywhere she plays. Her dance style avoids the rigidity of the ballet and insists on freedom and unlimited concepts, and ancient Greece's exalted ideals, beauty, philosophy, and humanity. She brings a new way of dancing and the Isadora Duncan Dance Foundation wants to preserve, present and protect Isadora Duncan's unique gift.
Isadora Duncan's first school student Anna, Lisa, Theresa, Irma inherited the aesthetic and educational principles of Isadora who works in New York and Paris. Dance director and dancer Julia Levien further promoted Duncan 's work through the establishment of the Duncan Dance Association in the 1950' s and the establishment of the Duncan Centennial Company in 1977. Another manifestation of Duncan 's dance technique is Isignora Duncan Heritage Society taught by Mignon Garland taught by Dignan' s two important students. Garland was a fan, who later lived in the same place and the building of Duncan's address, but there was a memorial shield near the entrance, but it still remained in 2016. The same block from Adelaide Square to Isadora Duncan Lane
Isadora Duncan was born in San Francisco, California on May 26, 1877. Her parents divorced in 1880 and her mother, Dora moved to Auckland with her children, where she worked hard to become a piano teacher. Mrs. Duncan voiced her "Cran Duncan", Shakespeare, Browning, Sherry, Keats, Dickens, Ingersoll, Whitman and spent the night at her youngest Isadora. I will sow seeds of artistic inspiration. In the early days, Isadora went to school but found that he dropped out of school at the age of ten and accepted self-study at the Oakland Public Library under the guidance of the poet Laurel Ina Cobris. Isadora and her older sister Elizabeth earned a lot of money by teaching local children lessons for dancing. After a series of nine years of ballet classes, Isadora ends with the declaration that the ballet is a school of "Affected blessings and walking toes" school