Les Sylphides
Artist
Henry Tonks
(1862 - 1937)
Datec. 1909
MediumPastel on paper
Dimensions58.3 x 58.7 cm
ClassificationsPastels
Credit LineCollection & image © Hugh Lane Gallery.
Lane Bequest, 1913.
Object number191
DescriptionThis pastel shows a scene from the ballet 'Les Sylphides'. 'Les Sylphides' is a short, non-narrative ballet blanc. Its original choreography was by Mikhail Fokine, with music by Frédéric Chopin orchestrated by Alexander Glazunov. Glazunov had already set some of the music in 1892 as a purely orchestral suite, under the title 'Chopiniana', Op. 46. In that form it was introduced to the public in December 1893, conducted by Rimsky-Korsakov. It was presented as 'Les Sylphides' in the first season of Sergei Diaghilev's Ballets Russes in 1909.Les Sylphides has no plot, but instead consists of many sylphs dancing in the moonlight with a poet or young man. These figures can be seen at the base of the picture with the theatrical scenery of a forest reaching high up above the dancers. Sylphs are mythical creatures associated with the air and are generally described as being invisible, however, through literature, in particular the famous poem by Alexander Pope entitled 'Rape of the Lock', they take on the form of a spirit.
On View
Not on viewHenry Harris Brown
1890