💬 SenQuotes.com
 Quotes

August Bournonville Quotes

1.
The art of Mime encompasses all the feelings of the soul. The Dance, on the other hand, is essentially an expression of joy, a desire to follow the rhythms of the music.
August Bournonville

2.
It is not so much upon the number of exercises, as the care with which they are done, that progreses and skill depend.
August Bournonville

3.
The height of artistic skill is to know how to conceal the mechanical effort and strain beneath harmonious calm.
August Bournonville

4.
The beautiful always retains the freshness of novelty, while the astonishing soon grow tiresome.
August Bournonville

5.
The Dance can, with the aid of music, rise to the heights of poetry. On the other hand, through an excess of gymnastics it can also degenerate into buffoonery. So-called "difficult" feats can be executed by countless adepts, but the appearance of ease is achieved only by the chosen few.
August Bournonville

Similar Authors: Ralph Waldo Emerson William Shakespeare Donald Trump Mahatma Gandhi Barack Obama Rush Limbaugh Henry David Thoreau Friedrich Nietzsche Mark Twain Rajneesh Cassandra Clare C. S. Lewis Albert Einstein Oscar Wilde Thomas Jefferson
6.
It is a fine art because it strives for an ideal, not only in plastic but also in lyrical respect.
August Bournonville

7.
The beauty to which the Dance ought to aspire is not dependent upon taste or pleasure, but is founded on the immutable laws of Nature.
August Bournonville

8.
Mannerism is not character, and affectation is the avowed enemy of grace. Every dancer ought to regard his laborious art as a link in the chain of beauty, as a useful ornament for the stage, and this, in turn, as an important element in the spiritual development of nations.
August Bournonville

Quote Topics by August Bournonville: Dance Art Skills Weakness Strive Beautiful Hands Ought Demand Law Joy Novelty Expression Gymnastics Effort Aspire Exercise Spiritual Taste
9.
Joy is a strength; intoxication, a weakness.
August Bournonville

10.
The Dance is an art because it demands vocation, knowledge, and ability.
August Bournonville

11.
The beauty to which the Dance ought to aspire
August Bournonville