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Encyclopedia > Fire dancing
A fire twirler with staff
A fire twirler with staff
A firedancer with poi
A firedancer with poi
A fire dancer juggling torches in a cascade pattern.
A fire dancer juggling torches in a cascade pattern.
A firedancer with a torch.
A firedancer with a torch.

Fire dancing (also known as, "fire twirling," "fire spinning," "fire performance," or "fire manipulation") is a group of performance arts or disciplines that involve manipulation of objects on fire. Typically these objects have one or more bundles of wicking, which are soaked in fuel and ignited. Image File history File links Question_book-3. ... ImageMetadata File history File links Download high resolution version (1256x1256, 342 KB) Picture of haloeffect, taken 16/04/05. ... ImageMetadata File history File links Download high resolution version (1256x1256, 342 KB) Picture of haloeffect, taken 16/04/05. ... Image File history File links Size of this preview: 800 × 533 pixelsFull resolution (1536 × 1024 pixel, file size: 487 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg) Uploading high res image of a long exposure image of fire poi: I am the author. ... Image File history File links Size of this preview: 800 × 533 pixelsFull resolution (1536 × 1024 pixel, file size: 487 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg) Uploading high res image of a long exposure image of fire poi: I am the author. ... Image File history File links Download high resolution version (1280x854, 219 KB)This is a picture that was taken of me juggling three torches File history Legend: (cur) = this is the current file, (del) = delete this old version, (rev) = revert to this old version. ... Image File history File links Download high resolution version (1280x854, 219 KB)This is a picture that was taken of me juggling three torches File history Legend: (cur) = this is the current file, (del) = delete this old version, (rev) = revert to this old version. ... Torch Juggling Torches are juggling props used in many toss juggling routines. ... An illustration of the 3_ball cascade. ... Torch Juggling Torches are juggling props used in many toss juggling routines. ... Performance art is art where the actions of an individual or a group at a particular place and in a particular time, constitute the work. ... For other uses, see Fire (disambiguation). ...


Some of these disciplines are related to juggling or baton twirling (both forms of Object Manipulation), and there is also an affinity between fire dancing and rhythmic gymnastics. Firedancing is often performed to music. Fire dancing has been a traditional part of cultures from around the world, and modern fire performance often includes visual and stylistic elements from many traditions. Juggling is a form of skillful, often artful, object manipulation. ... It has been suggested that this article or section be merged with Baton (twirling). ... Rhythmic gymnasts from Greece in the 2000 Sydney Olympics Rhythmic gymnastics is a sport in which single competitors or pairs, trios or even more manipulate one or two apparatuses: Ball, Clubs, Hoop, Ribbon, and Rope. ... For other uses, see Music (disambiguation). ...

Contents

Fire apparatus

The various tools used by the fire performance community borrow from a variety of sources. many have martial sources like swords, staves, poi, and whips, where some seem specifically designed for the fire community. The use of these tools are limited only by the imaginations of their users. Some tools lend themselves to rhythmic swinging and twirling, others to martial kata, and others to more subtle use. Some common tools are:

  • Poi - A pair of roughly arm-length chains with handles attached to one end, and bundle of wicking material on the other.
  • Staff - A rod of wood or metal, with wicking material applied to one, or both ends. Staves are generally used in pairs or individually, though many performers are now experimenting with three or more staves.
  • Fire hoop - hoop with spokes and wicking material attached.
  • Nunchaku - Nunchaku with wicking material, usually at either end.
  • Batons
  • Diabolo
  • Fire stick - Like a traditional devil stick, with wicks on both ends of the center stick.
  • Fire meteor - A long length of chain or rope with wicks, or small bowls of liquid fuel, attached to both ends.
  • Torch - A short club or torch, with a wick on one end, and swung like Indian clubs or tossed end-over-end like juggling clubs.
  • Fire Sword - either a real sword modified for fire, or one specifically built for the purpose of fire shows.
  • Fire-knives - Short staves with blades attached to the ends and wicking material applied to the blade. Fireknives are the traditional Polynesian fire implement and have been in use since the 1940s.
  • Fire Rope Dart - A wick, sometimes wrapped around a steel spike, at the end of a rope or chain ranging from 6-15 feet long, with a ring or other handle on the opposite end.
  • Chi ball - 2 rings or handles with a wick attached between them by a thin wire.
  • Fans - A large metal fan with one or more wicks attached to the edges.
  • Finger wands - Short torches attached to individual fingers.
  • Palm torches - Small torches with a flat base meant to be held upright in the palm of the hand.
  • Fire Whips - Lengths of braided aramid fiber tapered to make a bullwhip, usually with a metal handle about 12 inches long.

The variety of available tools took a sharp swing upwards in 2000, and as the numbers of dedicated fire tool makers increase, many makers add their own ingenuity to the art and expand the performance potential even more. Frequently, new tools appear from home tinkering and enter the public domain after a few performances. Poi dance, by Manutuke School at Hopuhopu, New Zealand, 2003 Poi is a form of juggling Impartial Art [1] (Finnigan, 1992) with balls on ropes, held in the hands and swung in various circular patterns, similar to club-twirling. ... For other uses of the word staff, see staff. ... This article is being considered for deletion in accordance with Wikipedias deletion policy. ... Learning the pendulum is easy for most children. ... Learning the pendulum is easy for most children. ... Fire meteors are an ancient chinese dance prop developed into a contempory fire dance prop in the same family as fire poi and fire staff. ... Torch Juggling Torches are juggling props used in many toss juggling routines. ... Indian Clubs are a category of exercise equipment popular in the late 19th and early 20th century in the United States. ... A set of juggling clubs Clubs (sometimes called juggling clubs) are a popular prop used by jugglers, either on their own—usually in sets of three or more—or in combination with other props such as balls or rings. ... Polynesian is an adjectival form which refers variously to: Polynesian pie Polynesian sauce, a food condiment available at Chick-fil-A the aboriginal inhabitants of Polynesia, and their: Polynesian culture Polynesian mythology Polynesian languages Category: ... The rope dart or rope javelin(Chinese: ; Pinyin: ), also known as Jouhyou in Japanese, is one of the flexible, also known as soft, weapons in Chinese martial arts. ... Fire fan. ... Aramid fiber (1961) is a fire-resistant and strong synthetic fiber. ... A bullwhip is a single-tailed whip, usually made of braided leather, which was originally used as a farmers tool for working with livestock. ...


Materials and construction

The typical construction of fire performance tools involves a metallic structure with wicking material made from fiberglass, cotton, or Kevlar blended with fiberglass, Nomex, and other poly-aramids. Kevlar-blend wicks are the most common, and are considered standard equipment in modern fire performance. Though most wick suppliers refer to their wick simply as Kevlar, almost no suppliers sell a 100% Kevlar wick, which is both expensive, and not particularly absorbent. Most serious contemporary performers avoid cotton and other natural materials because wicks made of such disintegrate after relatively few uses, and can come apart during use, showering the fire performer and audience with flaming debris. Bundle of fiberglass Fiberglass (also called fibreglass and glass fibre) is material made from extremely fine fibers of glass. ... For other uses, see Cotton (disambiguation). ... Kevlars molecular structure; BOLD: monomer unit; DASHED: hydrogen bonds. ... NOMEX® is the brand name of a flame retardant meta-aramid material marketed and first discovered by DuPont in the 1970s. ... Aramid fiber (1961) is a fire-resistant and strong synthetic fiber. ...


A typical poi construction would consist of a single or double-looped handle made of webbing, Kevlar fabric, or leather. This is connected to a swivel and a length of chain or cable. This chain or cable then connects to another swivel, and then to the wick, which is made out of tape wick (a wide, flat webbing made of wick material), or rope wick. The wick material is typically folded or tied to a central core in either a knot or lanyard-type fold. For other uses, see Leather (disambiguation). ...


The chain or cable can be anything from stainless steel wire rope (preferred by some for its low cost, light weight, high strength, and almost invisible profile, but not by others because it tangles easily) to dog chain (preferred by some for its heft and low cost) to industrial ball chain, which is the most common chain for fire performance equipment. Made out of nickel-plated steel, stainless steel, or black-oxide brass, ball chain in the #13 to #20 size ranges provides excellent strength, a fluid feel, and great tangle prevention. Since every link on the chain swivels, one can eliminate dedicated swivels from a design, and body wrapping and chain wrapping moves become much easier. Extra cost and a higher weight to durability ratio are the biggest downsides to ball chain. The 630 foot (192 m) high, stainless-clad (type 304) Gateway Arch defines St. ... For other uses, see Nickel (disambiguation). ... Brazen redirects here. ...


A fire staff typically consists of a long cylindrical section of either aluminium tube (lighter, more suitable for fast-spinning tricks) or wood (heavier, more suited to 'contact' moves in which the staff retains contact with the performer throughout the trick; see contact juggling) with a length of wick secured at either end, usually with screws. Wooden-cored staves often have thin sheet metal wrapped around the ends to prevent charring of the wood from the heat - this will have holes drilled through it to allow the wick to be screwed securely into the core. Metal staves generally have a length of wooden dowel inserted into each end; holes are drilled through the metal to allow the wicks' screws to gain firm purchase on the wooden core. A grip of some sort is usually fashioned in the centre of the staff to provide a comfortable hand-hold - most commonly leather, or a soft, self-adhesive grip of a type designed for hockey sticks or tennis rackets. Contact Juggling Contact juggling is the art of juggling without letting the balls leave contact with ones body. ...


Important Factors in Equipment Construction

Building high quality fire performance equipment involves the balancing of a number of factors to achieve performance suited for the specific intended use by the performer. Even if you are planning on buying prefabricated equipment, understanding the following factors and how they interrelate will allow you to best purchase the right implement.

  • BALANCE - Balance is how the weight is distributed in the implement. It is critical when making staffs, torches, hula hoops, clubs and swords, as balance will determine the axis around which the implement rotates. This consideration is irrelevant with poi, and ropedarts as all the weight is naturally concentrated at one end.
  • WEIGHT - Making implements heavier will, up to a certain point, allow you to spin them faster. However weight will also make the implement increasingly unwieldy. Also, heavy implements are more likely to lead to repetitive stress disorder, and cause injuries if you make mistakes. Heavier implements make certain types of contact juggling much easier, and certain high speed manipulation more difficult.
  • DRAG - Generally, the more exposed surface area of wick you have the bigger flame you will have. The more total wick [as in thicker rolls] the more fuel your implement will hold and the longer it will burn, and the heavier, and more expensive it will be. The more fuel your tool holds the more the apparent drag based on the added weight of the fuel after dipping.
  • COST - The unofficial fourth factor is cost. Frequently new prop development, and sometimes even building standard designs, require extra materials and tools that are not readily available. Even dedicated home tinkerers find themselves weighing the cost of purchasing versus the cost and time of build at home.

Contact Juggling Contact juggling is the art of juggling without letting the balls leave contact with ones body. ...

Fuels

Nearly all modern fire dancing apparatus rely on a liquid fuel held in the wick. There are many choices for fuels, each differing in properties. Individuals select a fuel or a blend of fuels based on safety, cost, availability, and the desirability of various characteristics like color of flame, heat of flame, and solubility. There are also geographic variances in fuels used, based on local availability, pricing and community perception, for example American firespinners commonly use coleman gas or 50/50 mixes whilst British firespinners almost exclusively use paraffin oil (which the Americans call kerosene or jet fuel). Frequently, particularly in areas not fully industrialized, the fuel available is the residue from productions of more refined fuels. Traveling performers can find themselves spinning highly toxic, smokey, or carcinogenic fuels.

  • Iso-paraffin oil, also known as 'pegasol 3440 special', or 'shellsol T' is an iso-paraffin. Its MSDS lists it as Naphtha (petroleum), heavy alkylate. This is the Australian version of White Gas.
  • White gas, also known as Coleman fuel, naphtha, or petroleum ether - This hot, volatile fuel is popular because it is easy to ignite, burns brightly, evaporates cleanly, and does not leave smoke or residues on wicks and bodies. However, it burns hot and quick, limiting the burn time, and potentially increasing the risk of burns. This is the preferred fuel for most indoor venues and thus a must for performers who do indoor shows. Becoming increasingly more difficult to obtain in the US due to its alternate use in Meth-amphetamine production.
  • Kerosene/paraffin oil - This is a popular fuel due to its low cost and long burn times. Kerosene is an extremely generic term that covers a broad range of fuels ranging from gasoline to diesel fuel. Almost every maker of Kerosene has a wildly different purity standard with flash points varying from bottle to bottle. Some home fuel oils are nearly pure paraffins (alkanes and iso-alkanes) whereas others are almost completely benzenes, and refinery residue.
  • Lamp oil - Lamp oil is an oily, non-volatile fuel. Typically sporting the highest flash point of all the petrol distillates in liquid form, lamp oils are the most difficult to light and longest burning fuels. Many products sold as lamp oil contain a limited amount of non-alkane petrol distillates (benzene, et al), and many have colorings and scent additives that have some toxic potential. Even the purest grades of lamp oil burn quite smoky (though less irritating and toxic), and thus make it preferred for outdoor use. The soot from burned lamp oil can be difficult to wash out of clothing.
  • Alcohol fuels are usually ethanol, methanol, or isopropyl. Industrial or lab alcohol is usually ethanol with methanol, acetone or other denaturing agents added. Denatured alcohols can be up to 95% ethanol, or as little as 50%. An MSDS sheet of the mixture will indicate the exact contents.
Note: The flame is blue to orange, depending on methanol content, and fairly dim. However, when mixed with chemicals such as lithium chloride, copper chloride and boric acid, various colors of flame can be created. Lithium compounds produce pinks, copper compounds produce greens and blues, and boric acid produces green. Other chemicals may produce other colors, and performers often experiment with various choices. Use of chemicals like these may produce some toxic vapors, and have a tendency to destroy wicks. Due to the weak flame, price and toxicity of methanol, it is usually only used for coloured flame production and in mixes.
  • Biodiesel - Biodiesel is a fuel produced by refinement or transesterification of vegetable oil (used or virgin) using methoxide composed of methanol and lye. Both KOH, potassium hydroxide and NaOH, sodium hydroxide can be used in the process but only one or the other, never both in the same batch. This produces glycerin and methyl esters, aka Biodiesel. The fuel is designed for use in diesel vehicles, but is a fairly safe and practical fuel for fire performance. Like kerosene, it is difficult to ignite by itself, and produces a dim, long-lasting flame that may smell a bit like french fries, depending on the source. It is often mixed with white gas to produce an easy-to-ignite, long-burning fuel.

Naphtha is a group of various volatile flammable liquid hydrocarbon mixtures used chiefly as solvents. ... Coleman Company, Inc. ... Naphtha (CAS No. ... For other uses, see Kerosene (disambiguation). ... For other uses, see Paraffin (disambiguation). ... This article does not cite any references or sources. ... Grain alcohol redirects here. ... Methanol, also known as methyl alcohol, carbinol, wood alcohol, wood naphtha or wood spirits, is a chemical compound with chemical formula CH3OH (often abbreviated MeOH). ... Isopropyl alcohol (also isopropanol or rubbing alcohol) is a common name for propan-2-ol, a colorless, flammable chemical compound with a strong odor. ... For other uses, see Acetone (disambiguation). ... Denatured alcohol is ethanol with added adulterants that make it useless for consumption as an intoxicating beverage by rendering it toxic or extremely distasteful to drink, but still useful for industrial processes or as a household chemical. ... This page meets Wikipedias criteria for speedy deletion. ... Lithium chloride behaves as a fairly typical ionic compound, although the Li+ ion is very small. ... Copper forms two stable chlorides: Copper(I) chloride (cuprous chloride), CuCl, mineral name nantokite. ... Flash point Non-flammable. ... This article is about transesterified lipids. ... In organic chemistry, transesterification is the process of exchanging the alkoxy group of an ester compound by another alcohol. ... It has been suggested that this article or section be merged with cooking oil. ... Methoxide is an organic salt, and the smallest alkoxide. ... Methanol, also known as methyl alcohol, carbinol, wood alcohol, wood naphtha or wood spirits, is a chemical compound with chemical formula CH3OH (often abbreviated MeOH). ... Lye is a caustic solution used for glass and soap making. ... The chemical compound potassium hydroxide, (KOH) sometimes known as caustic potash, potassa, potash lye, and potassium hydrate, is a metallic base. ... Sodium hydroxide (NaOH), also known as lye, caustic soda and (incorrectly, according to IUPAC nomenclature)[1] sodium hydrate, is a caustic metallic base. ... Glycerin, also well known as glycerine and glycerol, and less commonly as 1,2,3-propanetriol, 1,2,3-trihydroxypropane, glyceritol, and glycyl alcohol is a colorless, odorless, hygroscopic, and sweet-tasting viscous liquid. ... In chemistry a methyl-group is a hydrophobic Alkyl functional group which is derived from methane (CH4). ... For the Biblical Ester, see Esther. ... This article is about transesterified lipids. ... For other meanings of the word chip see CHIPS (disambiguation) French fries, chips, or pommes frites are potatoes that have been cut and deep-fried (i. ...

Modern Developments in Fire Performance

During the period from the mid 1990s to the early 2000s Fire Dancing grew from a relatively obscure and marginalized native tradition and circus art to a widespread and almost commonplace occurrence at venues and events as diverse as raves, rock concerts, night clubs, beach parties, camping festivals, cabarets and hotel shows. Many attribute the rapid growth in popularity to the Burning Man festival, where many thousands were exposed to fire dancing who had never seen nor heard of it before. Also a powerful force was the rise of internet chat and bulletin board cultures, which allowed aspiring dancers in isolated areas to tap into the then limited pool of skilled performers far outside of their geographic confines. Circus skills are a group of pursuits that were traditionally used as a form of entertainment in circus, sideshow, busking or variety/vaudeville/music hall shows. ... Raves can refer to: Rave party Raves, a commune in the Vosges département, in France This is a disambiguation page — a navigational aid which lists other pages that might otherwise share the same title. ... The event is named after its Saturday night ritual, the burning of a wooden effigy. ...


As the number of fire dancers multiplied exponentially, individual performers and troupes began to experiment with new equipment concepts [i.e. beyond just the traditional staff, fireknives and poi], and also with hybrid performance art concepts. The following is by no means an exclusive list of such show varieties. The categories are general, and tend to overlap on the fringes, and the quality of these shows have little to do with the type, but rather is directly related the skills of the individual performers.

  • Traditional Fire Shows -- Traditional shows often incorporate Polynesian costuming and other cultural elements. Many conform to the guidelines or are inspired by the annual World Fireknife Competition and Samoa Festival.
  • Standard Modern -- These usually include performers in tight and perhaps even risqué costumes with elaborate face paint, performing with Poi, Staffs and other standard implements. Such shows often include fire breathing techniques as well. Most people think of this type of performance when they think of fire dancing.
  • Fire Theatre -- Such shows are theatrical shows which include fire and fire performance as elements of staged dramatic presentations. Often the fire performance is a small element of the larger show. These shows tend to use more elaborate props and costuming and focus less on technical skill.
  • Fire Fetish Shows -- Such shows are recognizable by more overt sexuality in the performance and often extremely risque costuming, nudity and implied or actual sexual contact between performers, and are often seen as a fusion between exotic dancing or burlesque with fire dancing. Thus, fire fetish refers to a particular style of performance, and not a sexual fetish on the part of the performer, as would pyrophilia.
  • Erotic Fire Show - Such shows may be seen as simply a normal improvised fire dance but with emphasis on sexually arousing body gyrations, seductive facial expressions, an eroticised musical selection (such as R&B or Downtempo music), and minimal clothing of the performer, thus promoting sexual arousal or desire in addition to the expected visual entertainment for an audience. Unlike a Fire Fetish show, this performance is generally more low-key, slower in tempo, and is often performed by a solo dancer in front of a small and select audience, typically a spouse or romantic partner. This performance is considered to be an active and visually exciting form of ritual foreplay.
  • Ritual Fire Show -- Such shows are usually a fusion of Pagan or Occult ceremony with fire and fire performance. They focus less on technical skill, and more on the use of the fire dancer to highlight the ritual.
  • Fire & Belly Dance -- Such shows are a fusion of Middle Eastern belly dancing [raqs sharqi] and combine elements of fire dancing and belly dancing. Often the dancers use palm torches and fire swords made to resemble scimitars.

Other variants and hybrid models continue to emerge as fire dancing becomes more widespread and commonplace. Fire breathing is the act of creating a large flame by spraying, with ones breath, a flammable liquid upon an open flame. ... For the book or movie Striptease see Striptease (book) and Striptease (movie) A striptease is a performance, usually a dance, in which the performer gradually removes their clothing for the purposes of sexually arousing the audience, usually performed in nightclubs. ... For other uses, see Burlesque (disambiguation). ... Sexual fetishism, first described as such by Sigmund Freud though the concept and certainly the activity is quite ancient, is a form of paraphilia where the object of affection is a specific inanimate object or part of a persons body. ... This article needs to be wikified. ... Rhythm and blues (or R & B) is a musical marketing term introduced in the United States in the late 1940s by Billboard magazine. ... Downtempo (or Downbeat) is a laid-back electronic music style similar to Ambient music, but usually with a beat or groove unlike the beatless forms of Ambient music. ... This article does not cite any references or sources. ... Pagan may refer to: A believer in Paganism or Neopaganism Bagan, a city in Myanmar also known as Pagan Pagan (album), the 6th album by Celtic metal band Cruachan Pagan Island, of the Northern Mariana Islands Pagan Lorn, a metal band from Luxembourg, Europe (1994-1998) Pagans Mind, is... For other uses, see Occult (disambiguation). ... Belly dancers Belly dance is a Western name coined for a style of female dance developed in the Middle East and other Arabic_influenced areas. ... Belly dancers Belly dance is a Western name coined for a style of female dance developed in the Middle East and other Arabic_influenced areas. ... Talwar, 17th Century, from India. ...


See also

For other uses, see Circus (disambiguation). ... Clowning redirects here. ... Learning the pendulum is easy for most children. ... This article does not cite any references or sources. ... The fire triangle. ... Juggling is a form of skillful, often artful, object manipulation. ... Poi dance, by Manutuke School at Hopuhopu, New Zealand, 2003 Poi is a form of juggling Impartial Art [1] (Finnigan, 1992) with balls on ropes, held in the hands and swung in various circular patterns, similar to club-twirling. ... Categories: Stub | Circus skills | Sideshow attractions ... Fire breathing is the act of creating a large flame by spraying, with ones breath, a flammable liquid upon an open flame. ... A fire twirler with staff A firedancer with poi A fire dancer juggling torches in a cascade pattern. ...

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to:
Fire dancing
  • North American Fire Arts Associationg International fire performance safety organization, with informational articles and local fire codes.
  • Fire Dancing World-wide resources for trainers & performers
  • HomeofPoi Largest online fire dancing community. Includes forum and shops

  Results from FactBites:
 
Baining dances and bark cloth masks (Art-Pacific.com: New Guinea tribal art and Indonesian folk art) (2057 words)
Baining "fire dances" and bark cloth masks are famous throughout Papua New Guinea.
A day dance may be followed by a night dance or a night dance may be performed by itself.
Detail of day dance masks stored in rafters, some of the feathers and other dance decorations are still tied on to the left mask which is in the position it would be in when danced (akurikuruk, churukchruk).
Fire Folk Dances of Rajasthan, Indian Folk Dances,Folk Dances of India (441 words)
An authentic fire dance is performed by the 'jasnathis' of Bikaner and Churu districts.
The accompanying music rises in tempo as the dance progresses, ending with the performer dancing on brightly glowing embers, which is a breathtaking and deeply impressive sight.
A very big ground is necessary for this form of dance where live wood and charcoal are piled and the Jasnathi men and boys jump on to the fire to the accompaniment of drum beats.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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