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Not currently on display at the V&A

Costume Design

1964 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

One of the preliminary designs created by Sally Jacobs for a production of Alfred Jarry's play Ubu Roi,one of a series of plays presented by the Royal Shakespeare Company in its 1964 Theatre of Cruelty Season at L.A.M.D.A. (the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art).

The Theatre of Cruelty Season was led by Peter Brook and Charles Marowitz. They aimed to explore ways in which ideas first advocated by the French playwright, actor and director, Antonin Artaud (1896-1948) could be used to find new forms of expression and retrain the performer. The result was a showing of 'works in progress' made up of improvisations and sketches.

Ubu Roi, one of the precursors of the Theatre of the Absurd and the surrealist art movement of the early 20th century, is the first of three stylised burlesques in which Jarry satirises power, greed and their evil practices. It created a scandal when first performed at the Theatre de l'Oeuvre in Paris in 1896. Critics were divided between those who compared it to Rabelais and Shakespeare (Père and Mère Ubu like the Macbeths without consciences or poetry), and those who dismissed it as rubbish and a degenerate joke. With its bad language and schoolboy humour, the play tells the farcical story of Père Ubu, an officer of the King of Poland (thought to epitomise the mediocrity and stupidity of middle-class officialdom). Aided and abetted by his wife, Père Ubu kills the King and claims the throne. Having amassed a great fortune by executing his subjects and seizing their property, he is finally driven out by the whole Russian Army and flees across Europe.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Watercolour on paper
Brief description
Costume design by Sally Jacobs for Ma Ubu in Alfred Jarry's play Ubu Roi. Part of the Royal Shakespeare Company's 'Theatre of Cruelty Season', L.A.M.D.A. Theatre, London, 1964. Watercolour on paper
Physical description
Costume design for Ubu Roi by Sally Jacobs. A rough outline of a female figure sketched in brown watercolour with red details. The figure is shown in profile. She wears a dress with a wide ankle length skirt, spotted in red, and a red stylized crown. Signed.
Dimensions
  • Height: 28cm
  • Width: 21.3cm
Marks and inscriptions
'Ma UBU - [UBU ROI] / Theatre of Cruelty 1964 / Sally Jacobs' (Inscription in ink, lower right hand corner)
Credit line
Given by Sally Jacobs
Literary referenceUbu Roi
Summary
One of the preliminary designs created by Sally Jacobs for a production of Alfred Jarry's play Ubu Roi,one of a series of plays presented by the Royal Shakespeare Company in its 1964 Theatre of Cruelty Season at L.A.M.D.A. (the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art).

The Theatre of Cruelty Season was led by Peter Brook and Charles Marowitz. They aimed to explore ways in which ideas first advocated by the French playwright, actor and director, Antonin Artaud (1896-1948) could be used to find new forms of expression and retrain the performer. The result was a showing of 'works in progress' made up of improvisations and sketches.

Ubu Roi, one of the precursors of the Theatre of the Absurd and the surrealist art movement of the early 20th century, is the first of three stylised burlesques in which Jarry satirises power, greed and their evil practices. It created a scandal when first performed at the Theatre de l'Oeuvre in Paris in 1896. Critics were divided between those who compared it to Rabelais and Shakespeare (Père and Mère Ubu like the Macbeths without consciences or poetry), and those who dismissed it as rubbish and a degenerate joke. With its bad language and schoolboy humour, the play tells the farcical story of Père Ubu, an officer of the King of Poland (thought to epitomise the mediocrity and stupidity of middle-class officialdom). Aided and abetted by his wife, Père Ubu kills the King and claims the throne. Having amassed a great fortune by executing his subjects and seizing their property, he is finally driven out by the whole Russian Army and flees across Europe.
Associated object
THM/428 (Archive record)
Collection
Accession number
S.908-2011

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Record createdMarch 8, 2012
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