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Mid-Atlantic Popular &
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How the Cancan Preserves the Past through Objects and Performance Art

Presenter: 
Rihab Kassatly Bagnole ((SCAD) Savannah College of Art and Design)
Presentation type: 
Paper
Abstract: 

Rihab Kassatly Bagnole, Ph.D. Savannah College of Art and Design (SCAD) Title: How the Cancan Preserves the Past through Objects and Performance Art

Rooted in nineteenth-century Montparnasse dancehall culture, where it evolved from a working-class couples’ dance noted for high kicking into a scandalous choreographed form of dance entertainment that spread to Western cities, the cancan remains a popular tourist attraction in France even today. Its ribald fame has become memorialized through collectible objects: the canvas paintings and posters of Toulouse-Lautrec, CD sales of Offenbach’s famous Orpheus in the Underworld score (and others by Léhar, Cole Porter), sales of numerous cancan film DVDs, cancan-related opera recordings (Massine, Ponchielli), the wall paintings of Lautrec extant at the Moulin-Rouge in Paris, and tourist souvenirs, including figurines of the dancers in their poses. Modern visitors to Paris purchase and collect the program booklets as souvenirs, and some of them even wear fashion items associated with this spectacular dance. The cancan, popularized in the Belle Époque, was immortalized by painters, such as Seurat, Rouault, Picasso, and most notably Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, whose prints of dancers La Goulue and Jane Avril, with their elaborate underwear and sensual moves designed to shock, remain highly collectible while patrons admire wall copies of his paintings at the cabaret shows today. I argue that the popularity of the Moulin Rouge is based on fascination with the past and its icons and its ability to fulfill the ‘naughty’ desire of spectators’ fantasies. I analyze how objects and performance have kept alive this historic dance for the contemporary dance aficionado while, at the same time, dispelling false notions that have become mythologized about it.

Scheduled on: 
Thursday, November 5, 9:30 am to 10:45 am

About the presenter

Rihab Kassatly Bagnole

Professor of Art History at Savannah College of Art and Design(SCAD).

She writes on dance, women issues, and entertainment.

“The Deliriously Tempting Complementarity of Syrian Maza and Music” A Symphony of Flavours, Music & Food in Concert, ed. Murray, 2015.

“Reclaiming the Power: An Interpretation of Isis in the Era of Globalism” Emerging Perspectives on Nawal El Saadawi, ed. Emenyonu & Eke,229-237. 2010.

“Introduction to Isis”The Dramatic Literature of Nawal El Saadawi,21-27 and 119-120. 2009.

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