20th Century And Dance Research Paper

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¶ … Rite of Spring - Vaslav Nijinsky & Igov Stravinsky In what ways has The Rite of Spring laid the foundations for postmodernism in art, music, and dance?

The Rite of Spring by Igor Stravinsky, choreographed by Vaslav Nijinsky, laid the foundations of postmodernism in art, music and dance by promoting the ideas rooted in Kant and Nietzsche -- namely that truth exists not as an objective reality but rather as a construct of the mind -- a subjective, internalization of externalities (Knight 89). Postmodernism in the 20th century was essentially a reaction to the modernism of the 19th century and modernism's elevated belief in Reason, based on Enlightenment ideology which came about as a result of the Scientific Revolution and Protestant Reformation in Europe. The postmodernist reaction to the inheritors of the Enlightenment was to elevate irrationality and absurdity -- the idea that human beings, far from using Reason, very often acted emotionally, selfishly, self-destructively and savagely. Ideas of self-destruction, irrationality and unpredictability are evident in Stravinsky's Rite of Spring and in the choreography of Nijinsky -- and coming as it did at a pivotal juncture in world history -- just before the outbreak of WW1 -- Rite of Spring served as a turning point in the way the societies of the world view themselves: crumbling institutions, changing principles, a technologically-dependent world, a divorce between the past and the present, and a dislocation within the soul. All of this would impact the direction and course of art, music and dance over the course of the 20th century, and Nijinsky and Stravinsky share in the credit of establishing that course.

At twenty years of age, Vaslav Nijinsky had joined the Ballets Russes in 1909, which had been newly formed by Sergei Diaghilev, focusing on innovative and...

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Nijinsky, who had attended the Imperial Ballet School in St. Petersburg as a child but whose big break came through his meeting with Diaghilev, embraced the itinerant nature of the production company -- sensing in it the embodiment of all that was changing in the world: nothing was fixed, permanent; ideals, principles, and forms were transforming; the boundaries of art itself were being pushed in directions that were more and more abstract, inward looking, and highly controversial because of their break with the past (Buckle 27). When Igor Stravinsky signed on with Diaghilev, the character of the Ballets Russes was complete: it would be to the dance world what Picasso would be to the art world -- a revolution.
While the Ballets Russes performed rich and lavish productions abroad, its big concern was in producing spectacles. Through his innate talent as a dancer, Nijinsky quickly became the star of the shows and by 1912, Nijinsky was doing his own choreography, relishing the opportunity to give Diaghilev and audiences something new, exciting and fresh. The Rite of Spring, written by Igor Stravinsky and choreographed by Nijinsky, premiered in Paris in 1913 -- to controversial reception: a riot literally broke out in the audience, with contentious patrons attacking one another and the orchestra, which nonetheless continued on with Stravinsky's score (Kelly 293). Ironically, the ballet -- about a young woman's self-sacrifice in a pagan Russian rite by dancing herself to death -- foreshadowed the tragic end of Nijinsky, who just six years later would be committed to an asylum as a schizophrenic; having devoted himself to dance and struggled to find work following his break with the Ballet Russes (in the post-Spring period), his mental health sharply deteriorated. Following his stint in the asylum, he would never dance again.

Rite of Spring was a controversial work for a number of reasons -- but indeed that was the point, as Ivan Hewett, Classical Music Critic for the UK's Telegraph notes: "Diaghilev, the great entrepreneur behind the Ballet Russes, was hoping for something more than an emergence. He wanted a scandal." The Rite of Spring by Stravinsky, choreographed by the up-and-coming new sensation Najinsky (both of whose previous works had caused a sensation), was to be just that -- a scandalous affair for Parisian audiences. Modernism was just coming into vogue: Picasso's Cubism was sweeping the art world and Dada would appear in Switzerland in 1916, led by sound poet Hugo Ball and a host of other disenfranchised, disillusioned, and disaffected poets and artists (Hans 153). The future looked bleak; the past impossibly irrevocable. For Stravinsky, the stage needed something new, jolting. Najinsky felt the same -- and Diaghilev expected each to deliver a work that would get people talking. He received such…

Sources Used in Documents:

Works Cited

Buckle, Richard. Nijinsky. UK: Trinity Press, 1971. Print.

Griffin, G. Edward. The Creature from Jekyll Island. NY: Amer Media, 1998. Print.

Hans Richter. Dada: Art and Anti-Art. NY: Thames and Hudson, 1997. Print.

Hewett, Ivan. "The Rite of Spring 1913: Why did it provoke a riot?" Telegraph, 16


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