Isadora Duncan
Isadora Duncan
Isadora Duncan
1877 - 1927
Origins
• born in 1877 in San Francisco,
the youngest of four children
• abandoned by her father when
he swindled a bank
• grew up in a childhood filled
with imagination and art
• was introduced to classical at three
music, as well as Shakespeare,
poetry, literature and art by her
mother
• spent many hours playing and
dancing upon the beach, and
even taught dance classes to
younger children as a way to
earn a little extra money for the
struggling family
at fifteen
Teenage Years
• traveled to Chicago and
New York with some of
her family members
• performed in various
productions such as
Mme. Pygmalion,
Midsummer's Night
Dream or vaudeville
shows with limited
success
• gave dancing classes to
the rich in New York and
Newport
Isadora Duncan
My Life, 1928
Dance Philosophy
“Imagine then a dancer who, after long study, prayer
and inspiration, has attained such a degree of
understanding that his body is simply the luminous
manifestation of his soul; whose body dances in
accordance with a music heard inwardly, in an
expression of something out of another, profounder
world. This is the truly creative dancer; natural but
not imitative, speaking in movement out of himself
and out of something greater than all selves."
Isadora Duncan
The Philosopher's Stone of Dancing, 1920
Tumultuous Life
Gordon Craig
• lived with Paris
Singer, the sewing
machine heir, who
bankrolled her school
in Bellevue and
fathered her son
Patrick
• Isadora restored
dance to a high place
among the arts.
• Breaking with
convention, Isadora
traced the art of
dance back to its
roots as a sacred art.
• To the free and natural
movements inspired by
the classical Greek arts,
she incorporated folk
and social dancing as
well as American
athleticism which
included skipping,
running, jumping,
leaping, tossing.
• With free-flowing
costumes, bare feet and
loose hair, Duncan
restored dancing to a
new vitality using the
solar plexus and the
torso as the generating
force for all movements
to follow.
• Isadora is credited with
inventing what later
came to be known as
Modern Dance.
The Isadorabels