Thursday, November 14, 2019
The Reforms of Michel Fokine Essay -- essays research papers
 The Reforms of Michel Fokine  à  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã    à  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Photography, painting, videography, and literature have all progressed over time.   New technology, and new ways of thinking have brought these arts to new levels. There  seems to be a broad misconception, though, that ballet is an art form that does not  progress; does not change. Many people assume that balletââ¬â¢s set vocabulary of movement  places limitations on how far the art can expand. Little do many people realize that this  vocabulary is a mere foundation for the myriad of interpretations that the art went and will  continue to go in. Michel Fokine is one revolutionary ballet choreographers, whose  reforms have taken this previously monotonous art to a new level.   à  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Fokineââ¬â¢s ideas were revolutionary for his time, but ironically made perfect sense.   He believed that all of the elements in a ballet should be parallel. In other words, he  thought that the music, costuming, makeup, movements, and sets should all reflect the  same culture and time period of the ballet. During this time in ballet there were often  incongruencies. For example, there would be Russian music, and pointe shoes in a ballet  that supposedly was based on a foreign medieval culture. Fokine was extremely and  consciously consistent in his works. Fokine explains, ââ¬Å"The ballet should be staged in  conformity with the epoch represented.â⬠   à  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Fokine sets his 1911 ballet, Petrouchka, in Russia. The first scene is a street fair,  which Fokine sets appropriately. He is sure to make the costumes realistic of that time  and place. Rather than dressing the dancers in tutus and leotards, they wear dresses that   are brightly colored and long. They are bundled up appropriately in many colorful layers,  considering the chilling temperatures of Russian winters. They also do not wear pointe   Atkins 2  shoes with long laces, but instead high heel character shoes that were typical of the time  period. Fokine also successfully creates personalities for the three dolls, partly by their  costumes. Petrouchka, who is a forlorn rag doll, wears a thin suit that is as lifeless and  limp as his personality. The costume and makeup is effective in showing his lack of  motivation and sadness. The Moor doll on the other hand, who is a very bold and vain  character is seen in dress that corres...              ...ure to not let the music dictate the dance, as many artists before him had  done. In his Memoirs of a Ballet Master, he wrote ââ¬Å"The choreography for [a pas de deux  I performed with Anna Pavlova] we mostly staged ourselves . . . We did whatever we felt  we could do best,â⬠ (Fokine quoted in Cass). This superficial movement was completely  against what Fokine believed in. Movement that did not contribute to the purpose and  plot af the piece was useless. Due to his intense focus on his intent, he successfully gave  the music, choreography, costumes, and sets equal importance and relevance to the entire  creation.   à  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Fokineââ¬â¢s exceptional dedication to his art is quite obvious. It is simply seen  thorough his opinion of applause, that his focus is his art, more than any recognition he  may get for it. While most artists would bask in the glory of each set of applause, Fokine  despised it, except at completely appropriate times. He believed that to move on from  tradition, one must be thoroughly trained in that technique, which he was. His many  daring reforms truly opened the world of ballet up to new possibilities, while not straying  too far from traditional technique.                       
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