Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional stories - Sandaowan is the dance feature of which nation?

Sandaowan is the dance feature of which nation?

Sandaowan is a dance feature of Dai people.

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Sandaowan can be traced back to the Han Dynasty. Music and dance portraits in the Han Dynasty are rich in content and have a wide range of subjects, especially in depicting characters. Generally, maiko's waist is as thin as silk and as soft as branches.

It not only shows the graceful figure of the dancer, but also vividly depicts the "three bends" formed by the dances of "sticking sleeves and sticking hips" and "slender waist and long sleeves" in the Han Dynasty.

For example, Zhao, a famous dancer in the Western Han Dynasty, has a waist as thin as a swallow. She can change her shape at will within one square inch to create a beautiful "three bends" dance. In the development of China dance, dancers' bodies are all "three bends" with big breasts and thin waist, rushing, hips and crooked heads.

The basic feature of Dai dance posture is three bends: the first bend is from the sole of the standing foot to the bent knee, the second bend is from the knee to the crotch, and the third bend is from the crotch to the inclined upper body.

Dai dance is an ancient folk dance of Dai people, and it is also the favorite dance of Dai people. Popular in the whole Dai area, represented by peacock dance in Mengding, Ruili and Gengma counties, there are also many professional artists who make a living by dancing peacock dance. They imitate peacocks:

Fly down the mountain, walk in the forest, drink spring water, chase and play, drag wings, shake wings, spread wings, climb branches, rest branches, open screens, fly and so on. Jump out of colorful dance movements and sculptural dance styles.