Dance HistoryContemporary DanceRelease Technique

Release Technique

Also known as: Release-based technique

OriginUnited States / Europe
Era1970Present
RhythmSet by accompaniment (varies)
TempoVaries
CharacterEfficient, fluid, grounded

History & Cultural Context

Release technique names a group of approaches that developed from the 1960s–1970s postmodern dance milieu, emphasizing the release of unnecessary tension and the use of breath, gravity, momentum, and anatomical alignment to move with efficiency and ease. It is frequently taught alongside contact improvisation and floorwork and underlies much of today's contemporary movement vocabulary.

Cultural Significance

Release-based training reflects the postmodern shift toward everyday movement, weight-sharing, and individual movement signature.

Characteristic Movement & Technique

Minimal effort, breath and imagery cues, momentum and weight through the skeleton, fluid floorwork; weight-sharing in contact improvisation.

Dance Lineage

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Sources & Further Reading

Cultural & Historical Context

Release Technique emerged from United States / Europe during the 1970s—present day. Understanding the cultural roots, musical traditions, and social circumstances of this era enriches appreciation for the dance's characteristics and significance.

Primary Source Documents

The Library of Dance contains public-domain primary sources for dance history. Copyrighted modern syllabi are indexed with purchase links to their respective copyright owners. Search by dance name or codifier to discover primary source documents.

Last reviewed: June 2026 — This dance profile synthesizes historical research, cultural documentation, and contemporary practice knowledge to provide authoritative context.