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Mikhail Baryshnikov: Perfection Is A Theory
You’d think the greatest dancer in history would be a perfectionist.
Heralded by longtime New York Times critic Clive Barnes as “the most perfect dancer I have ever seen,” Mikhail Baryshnikov led the Kirov Ballet until 1974 when he defected to join the world’s premier dance companies and study under masters George Balanchine and Jerome Robbins.
He has won the National Medal of Honor, the French Legion of Honor, and multiple Emmys. But the 64-year-old Latvian expat waffles if you ask him about being perfect.
“Perfection is a theory,” he says. He’s sitting in the back of an art gallery in the Flatiron District, there to host the opening of his new photo series Dance This Way and celebrate the debut of a video he made with the denim brand Citizens of Humanity. “It’s a kind of astronomical detachment—it’s infinity.”
The man looks trim and strong enough to suggest otherwise. Since leaving his post as artistic director of the American Ballet Theatre in 1989 he has distinguished himself in dozens of creative projects and film and TV work (the most notable for casual fans: Sex And The City). In 2005 he opened the Baryshnikov Arts Center as a way to cultivate local and international artists.
It’s a commitment that explains why Citizens founder Jerome Dahan choose Baryshnikov as the first subject of his yearlong video series—Baryshnikov is as devoted to dance as Dahan is to denim. “I am very passionate about this,” says Dahan, who also founded Seven jeans. “I design for tomorrow.”
The series will feature 20 artists and creators discussing what drives them and how their work contributes to experiencing humanity. New subjects and videos will be released monthly accompanied by a limited edition t-shirt from each contributor.
Baryshnikov, for one, says dance is rightly placed at the forefront of such an effort. He alternately called it “divinity,” the “sport of the gods,” an “activity of the human spirit.”
Which is exactly why it doesn’t serve dancers well to judge themselves obsessively against an unattainable concept, he adds. Art is a process toward self-betterment. Thinking otherwise will only make you crazy.
“Art when your heart is burning but your mind is cool–that is the best combination,” Baryshnikov says. “When they are both burning, it goes nowhere.”
http://www.forbes.com/sites/hannahelliott/2012/10/02/mikhail-baryshnikov-perfection-is-a-theory/
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