Ruth St. Dennis lived in a small farm in New Jersey in 1879, born from Ruth Dennis. She is the daughter of Ruth Emma Dennis. Her mother is a well-trained doctor. At a very young age, St Dennis was encouraged to learn to dance. Her training includes ballroom dance forms and skirts, Maria Bonfante's course, and Delsarte's technique. Saint Denis started his career in 1892. In New York City, she served as a skirt dancer at the Dim Art Museum and the Cabaret House.
Ruth St. Dennis is a pioneer of modern dance and understands the relationship between dance and spirituality. "Revelation of spiritual beauty in sports is a natural and inevitable progress of life and art." When I read it in "Vision of Modern Dance" it resonated with me. Ruth St. Denis believes that dancing should be a mental experience rather than "simple entertainment and technical skills". When you see my spiritual and material paths, including dancers as well as performance artists, everything is completed. As a dancer, I will communicate with the universe using my body. What I'm talking about is language that communicates with all creations, and everything that represents the most pure form of love. At those moments of exercise, I feel connected to God, it will be an unexplainable space experience.
Ruth St. Dennis is a pioneer of American contemporary dance. Her initial personal dance performance was a sensation. By choosing characters from different cultures, Ruth St. Dennis showed a silence match in front of the audience of thousands of her life. In her unpublished book, The Divine Dance (1933), Ruth St. Denis wrote her thoughts about future life and peace dance. It happens to be modern dance. She eventually changed her view to reality by using the content that inspired her life and expanded it to create contemporary contemporary dance.