Dance, as a sequence of human movement, may be
ceremonial,
social or one of the
performing arts. Partial or complete nudity is a feature of ceremonial dances in some tropical countries. However, some claim that modern practices may be used to promote "ethnic tourism" rather than to revive authentic traditions. In Western traditions, dance costumes have evolved towards providing more freedom of movement and revealing more of the body; complete nakedness being the culmination of this process. In the 1910s in Europe a number of solo female dancers performed in the nude. One was
Adorée Villany. Nudity became part of classical ballet in 1972 in the performance of
Flemming Flindt's
Triumph of Death by the
Royal Danish Ballet. While premiering in Denmark without comment regarding the nudity, the work's performance in the United States in 1976 was limited to four evening performances at the
Metropolitan Opera House in New York City. Some contemporary choreographers consider nudity as one of the possible "costumes" available for dance, some seeing nudity as expressing deeper human qualities through dance which works against the
sexual objectification of the body in commercial culture. Proponents of such nudity hold that there is a distinction between sexual and non-sexual or sensual nudity and that full nudity is used as an emotional expression and, often the only, means to fully accentuate body characteristics as a performer moves. While nudity in social dance is not common, events such as "Naked Tango" have been held in Germany. In a 2012 article, dance critic
Alastair Macaulay surveyed nudity on stage from its beginnings in the 1960s and finds it had been normalized in avant-garde modern dance, including erotic elements. Nudity is less often found in mainstream dance performances. == Performance art ==