The association of skates and figure skating with winter holidays is not a casual one, but a complex cultural construct formed in the 19th–20th centuries. It unites physical practice, visual aesthetics, and symbolic meanings, transforming frozen water into a special festive space — the "ice chronotope," where the ideas of freedom, renewal, joy, and nostalgia are realized. A scientific analysis of this phenomenon requires reference to the history of sports, cultural anthropology, semiotics, and media studies.
Initially, skates (made of bone and then metal) were a purely utilitarian means of transportation over frozen rivers and canals in Northern Europe. Their transformation into a festive attribute began in the small Dutch cities of the 17th century, where skating on frozen canals became a popular winter pastime, captured in the paintings of Pieter Bruegel the Younger and Hendrik Avercamp. However, it was in Victorian England that a key transformation occurred: with the spread of artificial rinks (the first was "Glasis" in London, 1842), skating became a regulated, social, and fashionable secular pastime. It was associated with secular Christmas balls and parties, transferring dance culture to the ice.
Interesting fact: American choreographer Jackson Haines in the 1860s, while performing in Europe, combined dance steps with ice skating, creating a prototype of figure skating. His performances at the Viennese court during the Christmas season contributed to the perception of this activity as refined art rather than mere entertainment.
Figure skating carries several archetypal meanings that perfectly fit the semantics of winter holidays:
Overcoming chaos and gaining control: Ice is initially a dangerous and slippery element. The figure skater, drawing perfect geometric figures (and then complex programs) on it, symbolizes the triumph of the human spirit, order, and beauty over the wild, "savage" winter. This is a direct parallel to the Christmas myth of the victory of light over darkness and chaos.
Lightness and flight as a symbol of hope and renewal: Jumps and spins in figure skating create an illusion of overcoming the force of gravity. In the context of New Year, this becomes a visual metaphor for shedding the burden of the old year, hoping for takeoff, lightness, and new opportunities.
The circle as a basic element: Obligatory figures ("school") historically were built on circles, loops, and eights. The circle is a universal symbol of cyclicity, the completion of the year, and eternal return, which directly relates to the calendar magic of New Year.
Light and brilliance: The sparkle of blades, sequins on costumes, and rink lighting all work on the aesthetics of light, central to Christmas (candles, garlands, the Star of Bethlehem). An outdoor rink with evening lighting becomes one of the main public festive spaces in modern cities.
The final consolidation of ice skating as an essential Christmas attribute was achieved thanks to Hollywood. Musicals of the 1930-50s featuring the star of figure skating ballet Sonia Henie ("Sun Valley Serenade," 1941) and, especially, fairy-tale films like "Snow White and the Three Bears" (1960) created a stable visual canon: the ideal, sparkling rink as a place for romantic dates, family leisure, and festive joy in the frame, accompanied by orchestral music.
In the USSR and post-Soviet Russia, the annual "Blue Candle" — a New Year's television show for military personnel, always including a figure skating performance in front of a Christmas tree — performed a similar function, embedding skating in the canon of the official Soviet holiday.
Cultural example: The ballet "The Nutcracker" by P.I. Tchaikovsky, an integral part of the Western and Russian Christmas code, in many choreographers' stagings (e.g., Maurice Béjart) includes scenes of figure skating or stylizes dances to it, further linking the two arts in a single festive narrative.
Visiting the rink during the holiday season has become a mass social ritual. This space performs several functions:
Inclusivity: Unlike skiing, which requires special infrastructure and skills, the rink is accessible in the urban environment to people of different ages and wealth.
Generator of collective joy: Joint, often awkward, skating creates an atmosphere of carnival equality and general joy, removing social barriers.
Place for a ritual date: The romantic image of a couple skating hand in hand to Christmas music has become a cliché, reproducible in reality.
The second half of the 20th century strengthened this connection through television broadcasts. Performances by star figure skaters (such as Oksana Domnina and Maxim Shabalin with their famous "Easter" routine or routines on New Year's themes in shows) became an integral part of the New Year's broadcast. The competitions themselves, especially the European and World Championships, often fall in January-February, starting the sports season in a festive atmosphere and supporting the associative series.
Today, the symbolism of the rink is facing new challenges. On the one hand, the construction of temporary rinks on main squares in cities (from Red Square to Rockefeller Center) has become a global practice, a sign of "real" winter and a holiday. On the other hand, there is growing awareness of the environmental costs of maintaining artificial ice in the face of climate warming. This gives rise to new forms: "dry" rinks made of synthetic materials, light installations imitating ice — which speaks to the sustainability of the symbol itself, even if its material basis changes.
Thus, skates and figure skating have become a symbol of Christmas and New Year thanks to a unique combination of factors:
The historical transition from utility to elite leisure and then to mass culture.
Internal symbolism, where ice is a metaphor for the transforming element, the circle is a symbol of cyclicity, and flight is a symbol of hope.
Media mythologization through cinema and television.
Social practice, transforming the rink into a platform for collective festive experience.
This is a symbol that works at several levels: from personal (the feeling of freedom and joy of movement) to collective (participation in the common city festival) and metaphysical (the visualization of renewal and order). Ice skating is a dance on the edge between the natural (ice) and cultural (figures, music), between the past year and the future. It embodies the essence of the holiday: temporarily overcome the weight of existence, to describe a light arc on the ice, and meet the new cycle with elegance and hope. It is in this rotation and gliding that is encoded the ancient, as ancient as the winter solstice, and ever-new dream of a holiday.
© elib.ng
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