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Isadora Duncan was sometimes called a bacchante in her solos.
The base she holds below features a dancing bacchante, and on the mantle is a lamp decorated with Pompeian ladies.
But she is also a Hellenistic bacchante scintillating over the surface of a chunky silver vase, now owned by the Louvre.
André Lhote's 'Bacchante' of 1910 is particularly memorable.
Satyr and bacchante, James Pradier, painted plaster (c 1833)
Ms. Körbes, very much a driven bacchante, enters hand-in-hand with Mr. Marcovici.
'Dancing Bacchante' is MacMonnies' second best-known sculpture.
Breathless from the dance, her hair as disheveled as a genuine bacchante, Messalina screamed with delight and shook the ivy-twined staff of Bacchus.
Joseph Bernard produced a different kind of bacchante: columnar, self-contained, her feet twisted in a kind of pigeon-toed Diaghilev pose.
On 4 November 1858 Cabel created the leading soprano role in Eugène Gautier's La bacchante.
But Gainsborough had already picked up on her amorous restlessness: the figurine of a dancing bacchante he places beside her in the painting subtly echoes her pose.
Dead with Zagreus, she is now born again with him; that is to say, she has become a bacchante and is no more a woman but a divine human being.
In 1979, 'Bacchante' rejoined the STANAVFORLANT.
The revelation was her sophisticated sense of humor as the bacchante in Mr. Robbins's "Four Seasons" and Balanchine's "Slaughter on 10th Avenue."
Eurydice sneaks in disguised as a bacchante ("J'ai vu le dieu Bacchus"), but Jupiter's plan to sneak her out is interrupted by calls for a dance.
Several Fokine Ballet dancers posed for the figure of a nude bacchante who, the label redundantly says, is "shown stretching upward and outward in imitation of a living vine."
In imagination she saw herself as a devotee of Bacchus, in the golden world of the Greeks, as these extracts from her poem 'The Lost Bacchante' reveal.
Moreover, she might now have been taken for a bacchante, a dancer, or any other unsexed example of womanhood inasmuch as with her golden mantle she had thrown off all disguise of modesty.
Clémentine Deluy makes a fierce Amazon, or bacchante, in a scary fight with Ms. Colusi, and later the two enjoy a sensuous bath together, joined playfully by Michal Mualem.
Reviewing a Limón concert for Dance magazine in 1955, the critic Doris Hering wrote that "Pauline Koner was like some fiery bacchante as she tore through leaps and sharp shifts in direction."
He also painted thirteen reclining nudes, with his Les Repos (1860) strikingly similar in pose to Ingres famous Le Grande Odalisque (1814), but Corot's female is instead a rustic bacchante.
Dalton wrote an account of their journey entitled 'The Cruise of HMS Bacchante'.Sinclair, p. 55 Between Melbourne and Sydney, Dalton records a sighting of the Flying Dutchman, a mythical ghost ship.
Everybody was in top form here with Kyra Nichols dancing in vernal bloom with a brilliant Philip Neal in the "Spring" section and Darci Kistler an ecstatic bacchante leading the revels with Damian Woetzel in the "Fall" segment.
Prettimaid tints may try their taunts: apple, bacchante, custard, dove, eskimo, feldgrau, hematite, isingglass, jet, kipper, lucile, mimosa, nut, oysterette, prune, quasimodo, royal, sago, tango, umber, vanilla, wisteria, xray, yesplease, zaza, philomel, theerose.