"Two Greek Sirtaki Dancers" Metal Sculpture - Handmade Bronze on Marble Base, Male & Female
Item Code: A9-C16
Days to Ship: 3 - 8 Days
Specifications
Color: | Gold, Black |
Material: | Marble, Bronze |
Dimensions: | Length: 12cm, Width: 4.5cm, Height: 11cm(4.8x1.7x4.3"), Weight 0.3kg (0.7lbs) |
96.00€ VAT included |
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(Valid only for credit cards issued by Greek Banks)
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Modern table sculpture, "2 sirtaki dancers" design on marble base. (male - female dancers)
The True Expression of Dance. Powerful Explosion of Unity !
This modern & Stylish handmade Greek 'sirtaki' dancers metal sculpture ornament will stand out in your decoration.
Greek sirtaki dancers sculpture ornament consists of two cast bronze metal figures(male & female) (*) on a marble base.
(*) You can change the figure genders (male or female). Please state this at Checkout in the 'Comments' box or alternatively send us an email once you have placed your order.
This modern Greek sirtaki dancers metal art decor is a unique sculpture and a collectors item.
- Also available in 3 sirtaki dancers version
- Handmade Quality Item
- Original Artwork Sculpture
- Engraving Service Available
- Comes with a stylish free fabric bag
- Made in Greece - Ships from Greece
Length: 12cm
Sirtaki dance information:
The Greek dance is a very old tradition.
There are different styles and interpretations from all of the Greek islands and surrounding mainland areas. These include the sirtaki, syrtos, kalamatianos, pyrrhichios and hasapiko.
Traditional Greek dancing has a primarily social function. It brings the community together at key points of the year, such as Easter, weddings and festivals.
Sirtaki or syrtaki (Greek: συρτάκι) is a popular dance of Greek origin, choreographed by Giorgos Provias for the 1964 film Zorba the Greek. It is a recent Greek folkdance, and a mixture of the slow and fast rhythms of the hasapiko and hasaposerviko dance respectively. The dance and the accompanying music by Míkis Theodorakis are also called Zorbá's dance, Zorbas, or "the dance of Zorba".
The name sirtáki comes from the Greek word syrtos - from σύρω (τον χορό), which means "drag (the dance)" -, a common name for a group of traditional Cretan dances of so-called "dragging" style, as opposed to pidikhtos (πηδηχτός), a hopping or leaping style. Despite that, sirtaki incorporates both syrtos (in its slower part) and pidikhtós (in its faster part) elements.
On August 31, 2012, the Sirtaki Dance Guinness World Record was broken by 5,614 people dancing sirtaki for five minutes by the sea, starting from the port of the city of Volos in Greece. The Association for Social Impact and Culture to the Municipality of Magnisia organized the event on the main beach of the town of Volos under the light of the second full moon of the month. Some 5,614 people, aged from 14 to 89, danced to the music of Mikis Theodorakis' Zorba the Greek, filling the town square and making it into the Guinness World Records.
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