As the snow swirls in
dainty puffs across Manhattan, I am reminded of a piece of art located in that
fine city’s Museum of Modern Art (MoMA). By the American artist Joseph Cornell
(1903 – 1972), it is called “Taglioni’s Jewel Casket” in honor of a ballerina and
her legendary dance across an animal skin in the snow.
Made in 1940, “Taglioni’s Jewel
Casket” is a wooden box covered in blue velvet containing a number of glass
“ice cubes,” a necklace, jewelry fragments and glass chips. So what does this
have to do with the famous Italian ballerina Marie Taglioni of the 19th
century? (Above: Image
of “Taglioni’s Jewel Casket” courtesy of MoMA.)
Throughout
the course of his career, Cornell – who remained in Queens, N.Y. his entire
life – was enchanted, even obsessed, with famous women near and far. These ranged
from Hollywood starlets, such as Lauren Bacall, to Medici princesses to stars of
the Romantic Era’s ballet movement of the 1800s. He was the ultimate fan of
whimsical beauty in its various guises. (Above: Cornell’s “Untitled” penny arcade portrait
of Lauren Bacall (1945-46), which Christie’s sold in 2014 for more than $5
million.)
Taglioni was the ultimate
muse for Cornell, who is now revered as a pioneer of boxed assemblages. She was born in Stockholm,
Sweden in 1804 to Sophie Karsten and Filippo Taglioni, who trained her and landed
her in his ballet creation, La Sylphide,
in 1832. This introduced her to the Paris Opéra – ballet’s most revered stage
at the time. (Above: Lithograph
of Taglioni, from La Sylphide, courtesy of National Portrait Gallery in
London.
Taglioni
was among the first women to integrate pointe work – dancing on the extreme
tips of the toes – into a performance. Known for her delicacy of movement, she
also ushered in a new style of ballet marked by floating leaps and the
arabesque pose. She even introduced the diaphanous tutu, which was created
expressly to expose her footwork. (Above: Lithograph by Chalon and Lane of Marie
Taglioni as Flora in Zéphire et Flore, London, 1831, from the Victoria
and Albert Museum.)
So
where does “Taglioni’s
Jewel Casket” come into the picture? Cornell created the box after a legend
told about the famous ballerina. According to the tale, among the jewels in her
box she kept an imitation ice cube to commemorate an occasion when her carriage
was beset by a traveling Russian thief. During this incident, Taglioni
reportedly danced upon an animal skin placed across the snowy road to charm the
robber. It’s a tale as romantic as the Romantic ballet itself. (Above: Lithograph of Taglioni
as Bayadère, 1831, from the Victoria and Albert Museum.)