Abstract :
Fifty-eight figure skating trainers from fifteen different countries
acted as volunteers in this study on choreography styles.
The styles were based on reports of artistic-creative strategies
in composing music, drawing, writing poems or novels, and in
making dances. The prevalence of the Mozartian (at the onset
the choreographer already has a more or less complete plan
in mind), Beethovenian (the choreographer does not start with
a complete plan, but instead focuses on a succession of single
and detailed elements) and Avant-garde Style (instead of starting
from the music, as the impulse for creating movements,
trainers choreograph straight from movement ideas) is 77.2%,
56.4%, and 16.1% respectively. The results from a CATPCA
reveal that the features, associated with the three choreography
styles have loadings on two dimensions, one representing
features predominantly belonging to primary process thinking
(Mozartian), the other representing features predominantly
related to secondary process thinking (Beethovenian and
Avant-Garde). In the discussion attention is paid to 1) why the
Mozartian and Beethovenian are more popular than the Avant-
Garde Style, to 2) the universal quality of artistic-creative styles
in a wide range of artistic endeavors, and to 3) the differences
between elite, runner-up, and novice trainers on experience,
on using the assistance of a professional choreographer, and
on using the Avant-Garde Style.