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Bert. Photograph of Nijinsky in Le Spectre
de la Rose, Paris, 1911.Roger Pryor Dodge Collection,
Jerome Robbins Dance Division, The New York Public Library
for the Performing Arts
Looking
in these photographs farther along the figure, at the arms in
particular, one is struck by their lightness, by the way in which
they seem to be suspended in space. Especially in the pictures
from Pavillon and from Spectre, they are not so much placed correctly,
or advantageously, or illustratively; rather they seem to flow
out unconsciously from the moving trunk, a part of the fullness
of its intention. They are pivoted, not lifted, from the shoulder
or shoulder blade; their force – like the neck’s –
comes from the full strength of the back. And so they lead the
eye more strongly back to the trunk than out beyond their reach
into space. Even when they point, one is conscious of the force
pointing quite as much as the object pointed at. To make a grammatical
metaphor, the relation of subject to object is kept clear. This
is not so simple in movement as a layman might think. A similar
clarification of subject and object struck me in the bull fighting
of Belmonte. His own body was constantly the subject of his motions,
the bull the object. With other fighters, one often had the impression
that not they personally, but their cloth was the subject that
determined a fight. As a cloth is a dead thing, it can only be
decorative, and the bull edged into the position of the subject;
and the distinctness of the torero’s drama was blurred.
Nijinsky gives an effect in his arm gesture of himself remaining
at the center of space, a strength of voluntary limitation related,
in a way, to that of Spanish dance gesture. (This is what makes
a dancer’s arms look like a man’s instead of a boy’s.)
An actual “object” to a dancer’s
“subject” is his partner. In dancing with a partner
there is a difference between self-effacement and courtesy. Nijinsky
in his pictures is a model of courtesy. The firmness of support
he gives his partner is complete. He stands straight enough for
two. His expression toward her is intense – in Giselle it
expresses a supernatural relation, in Pavillon one of admiration,
in Faun one of desire, in Spectre one of tenderness – and
what a supporting arm that is in Spectre, as long and as strong
as two. But he observes as well as an exact personal remoteness,
he shows clearly the fact they are separate bodies. He makes a
drama of their nearness in space. And in his own choreography
– in Faun – the space between the figures becomes
a firm body of air, a lucid statement of relationship, in the
way intervening space does in the modern academy of Cézanne,
Seurat, and Picasso.
No photographer credited. Photogrpah
of Nijinsky in Le Spectre de la Rose, Budapest, undated.
Jerome Robbins Dance Division, The New York Public Library
for the Performing Arts
One is struck by the massiveness of his arms.
This quality also leads the eye back to the trunk, as in a Michelangelo
figure. But it further gives to their graceful poses amplitude
of strength that keeps them from looking innocuous or decorative.
In particular in the Narcissus pose the savage force of the arms
and legs makes credible that the hero’s narcissism was not
vanity, but an instinct that killed him, like an act of God. In
the case of Spectre, the power of the arms makes their tendril-like
bendings as natural as curvings are in a powerful world of young
desire, while weaker and more charming arms might suggest an effeminate
or saccharine coyness. There is indeed nothing effeminate in these
gestures; there is far too much force in them.
It is interesting to try oneself to assume the
poses on the pictures, beginning with arms, shoulders, neck, and
head. The flowing line they have is deceptive. It is an unbelievable
strain to hold them. The plastic relationships turn out to be
extremely complex. As the painter de Kooning, who knows the photographs
well and many of whose ideas I am using in these notes, remarked:
Nijinsky does just the opposite of what the body would naturally
do. The plastic sense is similar to that of Michelangelo and Raphael.
One might say that the grace of them is not derived from avoiding
strain, as a layman might think, but from the heightened intelligibility
of the plastic relationships. It is an instinct for countermovement
so rich and so fully expressed, it is unique, though the plastic
theory of countermovement is inherent in ballet technique.