Costume Design
Costume Design
ca.1970 (drawn)
ca.1970 (drawn)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
Kenneth Rowell (1922-1999) was born in Melbourne, Australia. His original ambition was to be a dancer, but realising his physical limitations, he turned to theatre design. His third design, for the Walter Gore ballet Winter Night given by Ballet Rambert during their Australian tour in 1949, brought him to Marie Rambert's attention, and she and Laurence Olivier recommended him for a British Council scholarship, which enabled him to come to England in 1950 to study scenic design. He came under the influence of John Gielgud and, only two years later, the commission to design Macbeth for Gielgud's production at Stratford established him as a major theatre designer. Throughout the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s, he designed a wide range of plays, operas and, especially, ballets, both in England and Australia, and also established himself as a distinguished painter before returning to live in Australia in the 1980s.
His designs trod the line between paintings and working designs, building up textures in paint, collage or wood relief to indicate the fabrics and look that he required, evocations of the design and mood of the work rather than finished working drawings, but, translated into fabric, canvas and paint, the results were truly theatrical and magical.
His designs trod the line between paintings and working designs, building up textures in paint, collage or wood relief to indicate the fabrics and look that he required, evocations of the design and mood of the work rather than finished working drawings, but, translated into fabric, canvas and paint, the results were truly theatrical and magical.
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Title | Costume Design (generic title) |
Materials and techniques | Pencil, watercolour and crayon on black paper. |
Brief description | Costume design by Kenneth Rowell for a female figure in an unidentified production, ca.1970 |
Physical description | Costume design by Kenneth Rowell for female figure in unidentified production. Full length female figure in profile wearing a brown and black geometric patterned cloak with padded shoulders and a white dress with blue, yellow, pink and green stripes. She wears an elaborate brown turban with contrasting front section in the same colours as her dress. Held in a cardboard mount. |
Dimensions |
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Marks and inscriptions | Signed 'Rowel'. (Bottom left-hand side corner. Handwritten in pencil.) |
Credit line | Given by Patricia Fara in memory of Stephen and Helen Fenlaugh |
Summary | Kenneth Rowell (1922-1999) was born in Melbourne, Australia. His original ambition was to be a dancer, but realising his physical limitations, he turned to theatre design. His third design, for the Walter Gore ballet Winter Night given by Ballet Rambert during their Australian tour in 1949, brought him to Marie Rambert's attention, and she and Laurence Olivier recommended him for a British Council scholarship, which enabled him to come to England in 1950 to study scenic design. He came under the influence of John Gielgud and, only two years later, the commission to design Macbeth for Gielgud's production at Stratford established him as a major theatre designer. Throughout the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s, he designed a wide range of plays, operas and, especially, ballets, both in England and Australia, and also established himself as a distinguished painter before returning to live in Australia in the 1980s. His designs trod the line between paintings and working designs, building up textures in paint, collage or wood relief to indicate the fabrics and look that he required, evocations of the design and mood of the work rather than finished working drawings, but, translated into fabric, canvas and paint, the results were truly theatrical and magical. |
Collection | |
Accession number | S.77-2007 |
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Record created | April 15, 2009 |
Record URL |
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