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・ Dance of the Happy Shades
・ Dance of the Headless Bourgeoisie
・ Dance of the Hours
・ Dance of the Idiots
・ Dance of the Manatee
・ Dance of the Polar Bears
・ Dance of the Rainbow Serpent
・ Dance of the Seven Veils
・ Dance of the Tiger
・ Dance of the Vampires
・ Dance of the Wicked
・ Dance of the Wind
・ Dance of the Yao People
・ Dance of the Yellow-Breasted Luddites
・ Dance of the Yi People
Dance of Time (Clodion)
・ Dance of Wallis and Futuna
・ Dance of Zalongo
・ Dance on Broadway
・ Dance on My Grave
・ Dance on Sunset
・ Dance on television
・ Dance on the Volcano
・ Dance On!
・ Dance or Die
・ Dance or Die (band)
・ Dance or Die (EP)
・ Dance or Die (Family Force 5 album)
・ Dance or Die with a Vengeance
・ Dance organ


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Dance of Time (Clodion) : ウィキペディア英語版
Dance of Time (Clodion)

The Dance of Time: Three Nymphs Supporting a Clock is a work by the French sculptor Claude Michel (1738–1814), also known as Clodion. Executed in 1788, it includes three terracotta female figures, frequently described as nymphs, dancing around a column that supports a pendulum clock with rotating annular dial by Jean-Baptiste Lepaute (1727–1802), the younger brother of Jean-André Lepaute.〔Vogel, Carol. ("Inside Art: New Treasures at the Frick: Two Sculptures (One That Ticks)" ). New York Times. June 16, 2006.〕 It is the only eighteenth-century clock featuring a terracotta sculpture as a completed work of art known to scholars.〔Poulet, Anne L. 2006. "The Frick Collection acquires Clodion's Dance of time." Members' Magazine. New York: Frick Collection.〕
==Iconography==
Clodion may have been influenced by Poussin's painting, ''A Dance to the Music of Time'', which was executed between 1634 and 1636 for Giulio Rospigliosi, the future Clement IX, and features figures personifying the hours, the seasons, and the fortunes of mankind. According to the seventeenth-century art critic and biographer Gian Pietro Bellori, the patron was primarily responsible for formulating the iconography of this painting, which reflects on the cycles of life through the representation of the passage of time. Although the painting remained in the Rospigliosi family until 1713, the composition was well known through prints and painted copies. The painting eventually passed through the collection of Cardinal Fesch, uncle of Napoleon Bonaparte, sometime after 1713 and appears to have been in France until 1845.〔Steiner, Katie, 2014. “Enlightenment and Beauty: Sculptures by Houdon and Clodion through April 5, 2015.” Members' Magazine. New York: Frick Collection.〕 Another source for Clodion's sculpture may have been a Roman copy of a Hellenistic marble group known as the ''Three Nymphs'', which is presently in the collection of the Louvre. Thus, the three graceful figures could represent nymphs, the Three Graces, or the Horae–female deities personifying the passage of time. It is also possible that the dancing maidens were meant to evoke all of these associations while, as one specialist in eighteenth-century sculpture has noted, playing on the theme of the caryatid.〔Poulet, Anne L. 2006.〕

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