Costume and Scenery Designs
"The Russian Ballet, also known as the Ballets Russes, was founded by Serge Diaghilev* (1872-1929). Diaghilev, the Russian Ballet's producer and creative director, rejected conventional ideas of ballet. His great achievement was to integrate design, music and dance. By encouraging the artistic collaboration of painters, choreographers and composers, Diaghilev created a new art-modern ballet. From 1909 until 1929 the company performed in Paris, throughout Europe and in North and South America. Ironically, the Russian Ballet company never appeared in Russia."[source]
Portrait: Olga Spessivtzeva*
Pencil and pastel drawing on paper by Maurice Charpentier, 1935, for a Serge Diaghilev production.
Pulcinella : scene drawing
Inkwash on paper sketch by Ethelbert White (undated) for a production that included the dancer, Léonide Massine*.
Salome: portrait of Tamara Karsavina*
Watercolour on paper sketch by George Barbier, 1914.
Costume design: [young man with swan]
Undated gouache and pencil drawing on pasteboard by Nicolas Remisoff*.
La Valse: costume design for Vera Karalli*
1922 gouache and silver leaf sketch by Pavel Tchelitchev* for a Berlin production.
Le Cirque : set design
1927 gouache on paper drawing by Alexandra Exter for Le Cirque, a ballet by Elsa Krüger, a dancer and the manager of Berlin’s Russian Theatre.
Othello: costume designs for swordsmen
Gouache drawings from 1927 by Alexandra Exter
Till Eulenspiegel : costume design : Foule [men]
1916 coloured chalk and pencil on paper design by Robert Jones for a ballet about the impudent German folkloric figure, Dyl Ulenspegel*, choreographed by Vaslav Nijinsky*.
Set design for an unidentified production
Gouache and pencil on pasteboard sketch by Nicolas Remisoff, possibly for a 1938 production of Beauty and the Beast.
Petrouchka: costume design: civil servant disguised as a pig and worker disguised as a fox
Watercolour, pen and ink and pencil on paper: 1957 design by Alexandre Benois* for the Igor Stravinsky scored production of Petrouchka (Petrushka).
Paganini: costume design : Scandal, Gossip, Greed and Jealousy
Undated watercolour sketch by Serge Soudeikine. The ballet, Paganini, emerged from a close collaboration between choreographer Michel Fokine* and composer Sergei Rachmaninoff, who together co-wrote the libretto. (premiered in 1939)
Scene design for unknown production
Undated gouache drawing on illustration board by scenery and costume designer, Andre Delfau.
Costume design for unknown production: Clown
Undated crayon drawing by Serge Soudeikine.
Four Seasons: character study: Man with Pipe
Undated crayon drawing by Serge Soudeikine.
Death of Tarelkin: costume design: [two men]
Undated gouache and pencil on paper sketch by Alexandra Exter [or Ekster] (d. 1949), who is described on wikipedia as "a Russian-Ukrainian painter (Cubo-Futurist, Suprematist, Constructivist) and designer."
Death of Tarelkin : costume design : beak-nosed figure
1921 gouache sketch by Alexandra Exter.
[click through for enlarged versions; in most cases much larger images are available from the source site; some of the above images have been cropped and background spot-cleaned modestly; most of the notes above are quoted or paraphrased; a few more images were saved in this set]
Russian Theatre Designs from the Harvard Theatre Collection - Most of these are associated with productions of Diaghilev's Ballets Russes. Note that there is a thirty minute access timer once you click through
Review of the collection in Harvard Magazine.
Wikipedia has a reasonable background to the Ballets Russes and a fair sampling of related links.
9 comments :
Divine! There's also a really beautiful exhibition on in Paris at the moment (runs until the end of May) at the National Costume Museum. details here
http://kickcanandconkers.tumblr.com/post/448527400/la-khovantchina-coll-cncs-onp-operas-russes-a
I love the sketchy ghostliness of white pencil on colored paper. These are beautiful, thank you!
Love this!
Thank you so much for posting these--they're a real inspiration. I love the book pages, too.
Excellent! I'll have to swipe some.
Wonderful post! I almost visited it daily! Best wishes from Romania!
Hi - Have been following your blogs for only a short time and I can only but admire the work your researchers must put in. Fantastic art work from varied sources. Lovely to view Kind regards Patrick
A nice effort to put information about Ballets Russes. Thanks
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