REVISTA DE LA UNIVERSIDAD DEL ZULIA. 3ª época. Año 12 N° 34, 2021  
					
					
					transitions, but works as a local spot, because the transmission of the chiaroscuro heavies  
					stops the movement. The elastic and musical line outlines the figure of Harlequin’s costume  
					in the ballet "Carnival" (1910). Throughout the refined, elegant movement, Bakst creates an  
					image of an exquisitely inviting hero. Softly, like an inaudible breeze, smiling at us, standing  
					on the pointe shoes of T. Karsavin’s "Bride" -this is the sketch of the costume for the ballet  
					"The Blue God" (1932, SCTM).  
					With all the ease of the transmitted movement, unlike "Harlequin", the specific shape  
					of the ballerina can be guessed here. For Bakst, it is important not just to develop the look of  
					a costume, it is equally important to create a ballet image of a specific artist in this costume.  
					Another series of Bakst’s costumes are suits, the movement of which develops not only one  
					supporting leg, but both, or rather they do not have the support at all, but hang in the air; it  
					is a reception that gives the artist the lightness and the weightlessness of the classical dance.  
					"Kiarina" is the sketch of the costume for the ballet "The Carnival" (1910, SPMA), "The  
					Firebird" is the sketch of the costume for the ballet "The Firebird" (1916, MMA), etc; or the  
					costumes, that find the scope and breadth, when the movement is transferred to them. Their  
					compositional drawing develops the expressive, flight movements, as the most vividly  
					expressing the elements of the very ballet movement, the floating. These are such like: "Echo",  
					"Beotijka", "Two Boeotiki" – these are the costumes for the ballet "Narcissus" (1911, SPMA,  
					Lobanov-Rostovsky’s Collection, the USA). Let's look at the way Bakst portrays the  
					movement. It's easy to see that his characters dance in a certain kind of theballet of otherness,  
					as if they feel the charm of the process. The exquisite head tilt, the half-opened eyes, the  
					developing folds of clothes, the flying hair, a wave of hands with the beautifully curved  
					brushes - all this in a true found and delicately sensed movement conveys the pulse of the  
					dance itself, the very atmosphere of the artists' stay in the image. In the costumes of Bakst, it  
					is difficult to catch the certain ballet movements, his dance is rather antique, coming from  
					the school of A. Duncan. This is dictated, of course, by the content of the ballet itself, by the  
					Fokin reforms of the emancipation of the body, but I still think that by its ornamental  
					character, the sheet organization, and the interpretation of the draperies resembling the  
					modernity, the goal of Bakst is to show the human body in some of the most beautiful and  
					whimsical movements. Moreover, such provisions and angles cannot be obtained with the  
					accurate reproduction of the classical ballet, since its poses and positions have rather strict  
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