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Set Model

2004 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

John Gunter (1938-2016) trained at Central School of Art and Design under Ralph Koltai before working at the Queen’s Theatre, Hornchurch and the Bristol Old Vic. In 1965 he became resident designer at the Royal Court where his style ranged from the stark minimalism of Edward Bond’s Saved to social realism in Peter Gill’s landmark revivals of D H Lawrence’s coal-mining plays.

John Gunter's international career began in 1970 with a residency at Zurich’s Schauspielhaus. He returned to head up the Theatre Design Department at Central School in the 1970s, meanwhile making his mark at the Royal Court, the Royal Shakespeare Company and Nottingham Playhouse. His collaboration with director Richard Eyre at Nottingham led to a remarkable run of hits at the Royal National Theatre in the 1980s, starting with setting and costumes for The Beggar’s Opera in the Cottesloe and the sensational neon-lit Guys and Dolls in the Olivier. Gunter mastered the latter theatre for The Rivals directed by Peter Wood, with ingenious moveable houses mounted on trucks, and panoramic vistas of Bath. In Gogol’s The Government Inspector, audiences adored the surreal setting: its sea of bureaucratic paperwork and huge portrait of the Tsar stole the show every night.

Other major directors John Gunter worked with included Peter Hall and Trevor Nunn, most notably the latter’s Porgy and Bess at Glyndebourne in 1986, and Hamlet at the Old Vic in 2004 with Ben Whishaw in the title role. He won Best Designer award from SWET for Guys and Dolls(1982), and an Olivier for Best Designer with Wild Honey (1984).

On moving house in 2008 he kindly donated to the Museum six set models including this one - all of which he made himself. To mark the occasion he was interviewed by Geoffrey Marsh, Director of the V&A Theatre & Performance Department, in his studio before it was dismantled by the removers. A copy of the interview is viewable in the Theatre & Performance Department's archive.


Object details

Category
Object type
Materials and techniques
Card, wood, glue, paint and masking tape
Brief description
Set model by John Gunter for Hamlet, Old Vic, 2004
Physical description
The set model is made of card painted metallic grey to represent the towering interior of a minimalist, modernist castle with doors and small windows on either side. It features a staircase to the rear, tiled floor oversailing the front of the raked stage, an extension to the rear to maximise the vista, and a cut-out male figure made of card glued towards the back of the stage. The whole is contained in a frame of wood and card painted black.
Dimensions
  • Height: 30cm
  • Width: 38cm
  • Depth: 50cm
Credit line
Given by John Gunter
Summary
John Gunter (1938-2016) trained at Central School of Art and Design under Ralph Koltai before working at the Queen’s Theatre, Hornchurch and the Bristol Old Vic. In 1965 he became resident designer at the Royal Court where his style ranged from the stark minimalism of Edward Bond’s Saved to social realism in Peter Gill’s landmark revivals of D H Lawrence’s coal-mining plays.

John Gunter's international career began in 1970 with a residency at Zurich’s Schauspielhaus. He returned to head up the Theatre Design Department at Central School in the 1970s, meanwhile making his mark at the Royal Court, the Royal Shakespeare Company and Nottingham Playhouse. His collaboration with director Richard Eyre at Nottingham led to a remarkable run of hits at the Royal National Theatre in the 1980s, starting with setting and costumes for The Beggar’s Opera in the Cottesloe and the sensational neon-lit Guys and Dolls in the Olivier. Gunter mastered the latter theatre for The Rivals directed by Peter Wood, with ingenious moveable houses mounted on trucks, and panoramic vistas of Bath. In Gogol’s The Government Inspector, audiences adored the surreal setting: its sea of bureaucratic paperwork and huge portrait of the Tsar stole the show every night.

Other major directors John Gunter worked with included Peter Hall and Trevor Nunn, most notably the latter’s Porgy and Bess at Glyndebourne in 1986, and Hamlet at the Old Vic in 2004 with Ben Whishaw in the title role. He won Best Designer award from SWET for Guys and Dolls(1982), and an Olivier for Best Designer with Wild Honey (1984).

On moving house in 2008 he kindly donated to the Museum six set models including this one - all of which he made himself. To mark the occasion he was interviewed by Geoffrey Marsh, Director of the V&A Theatre & Performance Department, in his studio before it was dismantled by the removers. A copy of the interview is viewable in the Theatre & Performance Department's archive.
Collection
Accession number
S.3381-2009

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Record createdDecember 16, 2009
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