Nadia Chilkovsky Nahumck

[1][2] She also became known for her advocacy work, urging parents and policymakers to place as much value on the arts in education as they did on mathematics and science.

The way people move can tell us if they like to live in a large or small space, whether they are impatient, whether they are aggressive, whether they have initiative, drive, enthusiasm.

A native of Spring Valley, New York, and son of Nicholas and Anastasia Nahumck, he served in the United States Navy during World War II, graduated from the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts in Philadelphia in 1949, and then worked as a book artist and illustrator.

In 1929, she moved to New York City, where she studied with Hanya Holm, Mary Wigman, Martha Graham, Louis Horst, and at Anna Duncan's studio.

[11] Nadia Chilkovsky Nahumck died in 2006, aged 98, at the Sunrise Senior Living Center in Blue Bell, Pennsylvania.