An aerial move is one where a dancer’s both two feet leave the floor with the assistance
of another dancer (i.e. for more than a single unassisted jump/leap). Doesn’t need to be a
spinning top with feet flaying everyone in a 4 foot radius. It includes adults lifting a
young/small dancer off the floor, as well as adult acrobatics.
In our style of folk dancing (contra dancing), in general every dancer has at least one
foot is on the floor at any given moment except for occasional solitary leaps due to
enthusiasm for the music. Our group considers it unsafe and does not permit one dancer to
lift another off the floor. Dips, where one dancer “levers” another dancer off the floor
but still solidly connected, are a different problem due to the much higher likelihood of
injury to innocent bystanders just because of the extra lateral space required to raise
feet in the air and not kick someone.
A sensible and observant dancer will avoid participating in such moves if:
- the partner has not given permission in advance
- the partner is not known to be experienced in performing the move
- the conditions (spacing, timing, other nearby bodies) contraindicate
High kicks on a balance are not “aerial” and are not “lifts” nor “dips” but are also
potentially dangerous and should be forbidden in a crowded hall, if not in general.
Making a dancer late for the next move because you have delayed him/her in a dip or other
flourish marks you as an unskilled dancer. Making an uninvolved dancer late because they
had to dodge your foot in the air also marks you and/or your partner as an unskilled
dancer. Please encourage your dancers to avoid demonstrating that unskilled dance
behavior. Newcomers may be watching, and might mistakenly think that it is something to
be copied.
No matter what rules your organization might have (or not) against aerials, lifts, dips,
etc., there will be instances of such now and then. We’ve found it most effective to take
the offender aside and talk about it, and not spend time lecturing the group or posting
lots of printed rules. No one listens to announcements, no one reads posters. But if
someone does something that violates a group policy, especially an issue of safety, take
that person aside and talk individually about the incident, the reason for the rule, and
ask for their help in setting a good example for the mutual enjoyment and safety of all
the other dancers.
</soapbox>
-Eric
On Apr 4, 2016, at 8:32 PM, Walker Sloan via Organizers
<organizers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
Thursday Night Dance at Scout House in Concord MA
prohibit aerials.
Dips seem pretty universal.
What's an aerial? Practically, anything that makes the organizer nervous. You
absolutely do NOT want to rigorously define it or you will get into endless arguments
about it. Between us organizers, I call it when a woman's navel gets up to a man's
solar plexus. These are approximately the woman's and man's centers of gravity.
But as I say, do NOT give dancers limits to "game" on.
Mac Sloan
Thursday Night Dance Committee
Concord Scout House, Concord MA
On 4/4/16 23:00, Orin Nisenson via Organizers wrote:
> At a recent Friends of Greenfield Dance board meeting the topic of
> dipping and aerials came up.
>
> Have other organizers had problems with these dance moves and how have
> you handled them?
>
> Thanks,
>
> Orin
>
Eric Black
eric(a)mirador.com