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Eugène Druet. Photograph of Nijinsky
in the Danse Siamoise in Les Orientales posed outside
in Paris, 1910. Roger Pryor Dodge Collection, Jerome Robbins
Dance Division, The New York Public Library for the Performing
Arts
In looking at Nijinsky
pictures, one is struck by the upright tautness about the hips.
His waist is broad and powerful. You can see it clearly in the
Harlequin pictures. If he is posing on one leg, there is no sense
of shifted weight, and as little if he seems to be bending to
the side or forward. The effort this means may be compared to
lifting a table by one leg and keeping the top horizontal. The
center of gravity in the table, and similarly that of his body,
has not been shifted. The delicacy with which he cantilevers the
weight actually displaced keeps the firmness from being rigidity.
I think it is in looking at his waist that one can see best the
technical aspect of his instinct for concentrating the origin
of movement so that all of it relates to a clear center which
is not altered. He keeps the multiplicity, the diffusion which
movement has, intelligible by not allowing any doubt as to where
the center is. When he moves he does not blur the center of weight
in his body, one feels it as clearly as if he were still standing
at rest, one can follow its course clearly as it floats about
the stage through the dance. And so the motion he makes looks
controlled and voluntary and reliable. I imagine it is this constant
sense of balance that gave his dancing the unbroken continuity
and flow through all the steps and leaps and rests from beginning
to end that critics marveled at.
Incidentally, their remarks of this kind also
point to an extraordinary accuracy in his musical timing. For
to make the continuity rhythmic as he did, he must have had an
unerring instinct at which moment to attack a movement, so that
the entire sequence of it would flow as continuously and transform
itself into the next motion as securely as did the accompanying
sound. To speak of him as unmusical, with no sense of rhythm,
as Stravinsky has, is therefore an impropriety that is due to
a confusion of meaning in the word “rhythm.” The choreography
of Faun proves that Nijinsky’s natural musical intelligence
was of the highest order. For this was the first ballet choreography
set clearly, not to the measures and periods, but to the expressive
flow of the music, to its musical sense. You need only compare
Faun’s assurance in this respect to the awkwardness musically
of Fokine’s second scene in Petrouchka, the score of which
invites the same sort of understanding. But this is not in the
photographs.