Beautiful Chinese Classical Dance [17] "Qing Ping Diao" by Wang Jiaxin (1080p)

Beautiful Chinese Classical Dance [17] "Qing Ping Diao" by Wang Jiaxin (1080p)

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Beautiful Chinese Dance Playlist === • Beautiful Chinese Dance

Excerpt from the dance drama "Qing Ping Diao" by the China National Opera and Dance Drama Theater
Chinese Classical Dance and Classical Music = Dancer: Wang Jiaxin

===Some ancient Chinese dance postures and poses are preserved in Chinese grotto murals, sculptures, portrait stones, portrait bricks, pottery figurines, and various unearthed cultural relics, as well as in the paintings and decorative patterns depicting dance figures. Chinese historical and cultural materials also contain numerous detailed descriptions of past dance figures. Since the 1950s, Chinese dancers have made significant achievements in the research, organization, reproduction, and development of Chinese classical dance. They have established a set of Chinese classical dance textbooks and created a large number of dance and dance drama works with a Chinese classical dance style, forming an aesthetic characteristic of delicacy and smoothness, a balance of strength and gentleness, a fusion of emotion and scenery, a combination of skill and martial arts, and a perfect harmony and high unity of essence, energy, spirit, and the movements of hand, eye, body, method, and step. Chinese classical dance has an extremely long history. Its origins can be traced back to ancient Chinese court dances or even more distant folk dances. Beginning in the Zhou Dynasty, and continuing through the Han, Jin, and even Tang and Five Dynasties periods, specialized music and dance institutions were established in the imperial courts. These institutions concentrated and trained professional musicians and dancers, and organized, studied, refined, and developed folk dances, religious dances, and even dances from foreign lands, thus forming court dances. Among these, the Zhou Dynasty's "Six Dynasties Dance" (comprising "Yunmen," "Xianchi," "Dashao," "Daxia," "Dabo," and "Dawu") and the Tang Dynasty's "Nine Parts of Music," "Ten Parts of Music," "Sitting Music," "Music Music," and "Grand Music," among others, were diverse and vibrant, each with its own unique style. Chinese court dance was an important tool for rulers throughout history to enjoy themselves and express their praise, primarily performed by female musicians. Because court dances were created according to the aesthetic tastes of the rulers, some works inevitably exhibited a decadent style and negative content; however, most were created by artists based on Chinese folk dances, thus possessing many exquisite aspects of traditional Chinese art.