The antique Greek dance, after sculptured and painted figures . Fig. 366. Fig. 367. painter and the sculptor who are the authors of these two repre-sentations of the dance: each has superposed one moment of thedance upon another. Compare with the preceding series of photo-graphs : the moment of the arms of Fig. 333 and the moment of the DESCRIPTION OF SOME OF THE TEMPOS AND STEPS 14-7 legs of Fig. 340, really widely separated from each other, are com-bined in the Figs. 366, 367 and 368; this impossible combination is, r- 7 of course, wholly conventional. / 271. The charming little ?!:>£ dan
The antique Greek dance, after sculptured and painted figures . Fig. 366. Fig. 367. painter and the sculptor who are the authors of these two repre-sentations of the dance: each has superposed one moment of thedance upon another. Compare with the preceding series of photo-graphs : the moment of the arms of Fig. 333 and the moment of the DESCRIPTION OF SOME OF THE TEMPOS AND STEPS 14-7 legs of Fig. 340, really widely separated from each other, are com-bined in the Figs. 366, 367 and 368; this impossible combination is, r- 7 of course, wholly conventional. / 271. The charming little ?!:>£ dancer in Fig. 369 who executes a Pirouette outward on the in-step (259, 262) is posed on thetoe, and, if one may judge from. 368.
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookpublisherl, booksubjectdance