“Sometimes new students come in and it takes a minute for them to adjust their perceptions,” Maiberg says, punctuating it with a laugh. “It motivates me to teach a better class.” With her soft curves and toned—but not chiseled—muscles, she has spent her fair share of time pondering her body shape. As an instructor, she says, there’s pressure to look a certain way and she doesn’t fit that mold. In fact, she still doesn’t consider herself a “fitness person,” as she puts it, but is so convinced of the transformative power of Pilates that she’s devoted her life to it (she co-owns her East Village studio with Jeremy Laverdure).
Maiberg recently had the chance to celebrate her love of the practice when she was invited to be a part of MarchMatness, a campaign launched by Pilates guru Benjamin Degenhardt. It spreads awareness around Joseph Pilates’ traditional mat exercise techniques by encouraging members of the Pilates community to post photos of poses from Pilates’ original book, Return to Life Through Contrology, on social media.
When she decided to do MarchMatness, Maiberg admits she freaked out—a lot of fitness celebrities participate and she knew she couldn’t (and didn’t want to) compete with all the carefully staged snaps that they were posting. But then she realized she could get creative and do something no one else was: post pictures of herself being, well, herself.
Maiberg teamed up with photographer friends Emily Johnston and Deneka Peniston to shoot her doing Pilates at the studio and in her home, wearing the outfits she loves and wears beyond just the studio (think vintage dresses and bold leggings). Maiberg wanted to show what Pilates looks like on a real person, in real life, and to prove that you don’t have to have a stereotypically fit body to do it. “The photo project definitely made me feel more vulnerable,” she remembers. “I was afraid that all the comments would be ‘Why is this fat girl doing Pilates?’”
But that never happened; instead, positive feedback started flooding in. “People on Facebook and the MarchMatness site left comments saying it was nice to see different shapes represented. Some people even said I made them realize that they could also do Pilates, and that it wasn’t only for skinny girls and ballerinas. It was worth the fear of being in the spotlight.”
Click ahead for a glimpse of Maiberg’s photography project and its rare subject: a non-model doing Pilates with a body that reminds us of our own. —Larkin Clark
To learn more about Maiberg and keep up with her ongoing photography projects, visit sixthstreetpilatesny.com
(Photo: Emily Johnston)
(Photo: Deneka Peniston)
“People should know that there are places where the teachers are more interested in showing someone who doesn’t think they belong that they are capable of doing amazing things with their bodies,” Maiberg explains. She adds, “Seeing the light bulb go off is really what makes our job inspiring.”
(Photo: Emily Johnston)
(Photo: Deneka Peniston)
(Photo: Emily Johnston)
(Photo: Deneka Peniston)
(Photo: Emily Johnston)
Why New York City’s Pilates gurus say the time-tested workout is here to stay
How Joseph Pilates started today’s mind-body boutique craze nearly 100 years ago
6 Pilates moves that will transform your whole body