I am interested in seeing a good performance of Hanon out of curiosity and also for inspiration to practice these exercises.
I am interested to see what the hands look like during performance of Hanon at or very near the high tempo recommended by Hanon (not at breakneck speeds) from a very good to world class piano player. Best would be all 60 exercises played by a world class player, but I would like to see at least the first 10 or 20 exercises at 108 BPM. I’m guessing that many or most world class players have played Hanon at least at one point.
What do world class piano player’s hands look like playing Hanon? How do they sound playing Hanon? I can get an idea by watching videos of world class players playing concert pieces such as Bach inventions, Mozart sonatas, Chopin etudes, etc., so it is not necessary to see them play Hanon, but it would be fun for me to see. With the popularity of Hanon, I thought I might see at least a couple students at Julliard or Curtis or some other top school record and post their playing of Hanon during a practice session. Thanks for the responses!
In response to this, I just don't think you're going to find it. I would find it difficult to believe a world class pianist (either in the beginning or well into their career) would consider a few low-level finger exercises worthy of recording.
Furthermore it would be potentially misleading, I think for a world class pianist to perform this and give the impression that it provided or aided to their "world class" ability (I imagine you are familiar with the controversy around these particular exercises)
Lastly, what you see and what you feel is two different things, I believe you would have nothing to gain from "seeing" a good pianist perform these exercises. Inspiration is probably the wrong word, inspiration is ideas, example, for composing. As previously stated, Hanon studies are nothing more then technical exercises, they're there for you to identify your own weak areas and use them to aid you overcome that (again results are questionable)
A piano teacher would be the best person to demonstrate these studies or any other studies to you so it can be explained exactly what's going on and also if any of them are going to be beneficial to you.
You are better off finding musical studies, such as Czerny studies which you will find a lot of these examples online, and provide technical benefits on a more musical level.
It is also a bold statement to suggest that every world class pianist would have touched Hanon because I can guarantee you that's not the case. These are by no means a set of studies, in which if you complete at the goal tempo you can then move onto Chopin Ballads, or Beethoven Sonatas.
I hope this response doesn't come off aggressive, i'm simply trying to broaden your goals here, I've played through all 20 exercises, i'm not now off to Carnegie Hall xD
Plan A should be - get a teacher - see if the studies are necessary for you.
Plan B run through them, if there are any you struggle with, practice those, do so with caution, and do not let them take more then half of your practice sessions, you can have time better well spent on other things.