TSV

Ballet Styles - TSV

Throughout its history and development, ballet has diversified into various styles including classical ballet, romantic ballet, modern ballet, and contemporary dance. Each style possesses unique techniques, expressive methods, and historical backgrounds, and continues to evolve today. This classification systematically organizes the major ballet styles to help understand their characteristics and differences.

ballet classical ballet modern ballet contemporary dance dance performing arts
code	slug	name	description	keyFeatures	origin	period
01	classical-ballet	Classical Ballet	Traditional ballet style established in the 19th century, characterized by strict techniques and formal beauty.	["Strict technique","Pointe work","Turnout","Narrative quality","Elaborate costumes"]	Russia, France	19th century - Present
02	romantic-ballet	Romantic Ballet	Ballet style that emerged in the early 19th century, characterized by female dancers' use of pointe and fantastical worldviews.	["Birth of pointe work","White tutus","Fantastical worldview","Rise of female dancers","Lyrical expression"]	France	1830s - 1850s
03	modern-ballet	Modern Ballet	Style born in the early 20th century in reaction to the rigidity of classical ballet, pursuing free expression.	["Free expression","Floor work","Use of gravity","Barefoot dancing","Emphasis on emotion"]	United States, Germany	Early 20th century - Present
04	neoclassical-ballet	Neoclassical Ballet	Style advocated by George Balanchine and others in the 1920s, pursuing pure movement without decoration.	["Elimination of decoration","Pure movement","Speed and precision","Athletic expression","Fusion with music"]	United States, Russia	1920s - Present
05	contemporary-ballet	Contemporary Ballet	Contemporary style that fuses classical ballet technique with modern dance and various genres.	["Fusion of diverse genres","Experimental expression","Improvisation","Collaboration with other arts","Boundary-crossing expression"]	France, Belgium	1980s - Present
06	contemporary-dance	Contemporary Dance	General term for free and creative modern dance not bound by form or tradition.	["Freedom of form","Emphasis on individual sensibility","Improvisation","Fusion of diverse techniques","Connection with contemporary art"]	Europe, United States	1980s - Present