This website is part of The New York Public Library's Online Exhibition Archive. For current classes, programs, and exhibitions, please visit nypl.org.
Uncredited photographer. Nijinsky photographed
at Krasnoe Selo, summer 1907. Jerome Robbins Dance Division,
The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts
BIOGRAPHY
Vaslav Nijinsky was born in
Kiev, probably in 1889. His parents were Polish dancers who traveled
around the Polish and Russian empires. He, and later his sister
Bronislava, entered the Imperial Theatrical School in St. Petersburg
for training in ballet. His ability was recognized quickly and
he joined the Imperial Ballet at the Maryinsky Theatre on graduation.
Serge Pavlovich Diaghilev was a prominent member
of St. Petersburg’s intellectual and artistic life, dedicated
to presenting Russian creativity to Western Europe. He had curated
a successful exhibition of Russian art in 1906 and presented concert
music and opera in 1907 and 1908 seasons in Paris. In 1909, he
brought a company from the Imperial Ballets to Paris, led by Nijinsky
with Anna Pavlova. Their dancing, designs by Russian artists,
and the new repertory won enormous acclaim and established Diaghilev
and Nijinsky, an openly gay couple, as the centers of the Western
Europe’s artistic elite. Pavlova left to pursue her own
touring career, but the creative core of the Ballets Russes remained
with Diaghilev in Paris.
Pages from Vaslav Nijinsky's
Diary, Switzerland, 1919. Jerome Robbins Dance Division, The
New York Public Library for the Performing Arts
After the tour, Nijinsky performed with the
Ballets Russes in Europe and South America. He ended his professional
ballet career in Uruguay at twenty-eight. He and his family moved
to Switzerland, where he created the art works and diary that
are on display here. He was diagnosed with schizophrenia and spent
much of his remaining 30 years in treatment.