Hugh Stevenson design
Costume Design
1950 (painted)
1950 (painted)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
Costume design by Hugh Stevenson for Cassius (played by John Wyse) in Julius Caesar, showing a drawing of Roman armour with sketched in head, trunk hose and vestigal left leg, left arm, in dull steel blue with black strips set with ochre ovals on the kilt and sleeves. Around the lower edge, armholes and neck is an ochre twisted rope band and on the body are scrolled designs. The design is inscribed with the name of the role, actor and fabric details and is signed and dated.
The ochre paint is used to indicate gold braid or metal.
The ochre paint is used to indicate gold braid or metal.
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Title | Hugh Stevenson design (generic title) |
Materials and techniques | Pencil and gouache on paper |
Brief description | Costume design by Hugh Stevenson for Cassius (played by John Wyse) in Julius Caesar in a programme of scenes from Shakespeare, British Council tour, early 1950s |
Physical description | Costume design by Hugh Stevenson for Cassius (played by John Wyse) in Julius Caesar, showing a drawing of Roman armour with sketched in head, trunk hose and vestigal left leg, left arm, in dull steel blue with black strips set with ochre ovals on the kilt and sleeves. Around the lower edge, armholes and neck is an ochre twisted rope band and on the body are scrolled designs. The design is inscribed with the name of the role, actor and fabric details and is signed and dated. The ochre paint is used to indicate gold braid or metal. |
Dimensions |
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Styles | |
Production type | Unique |
Marks and inscriptions |
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Credit line | Cyril W. Beaumont Bequest |
Object history | This is one of 25 designs by Hugh Stevenson for a programme of excerpts from Shakespeare devised for a British Council tour in the early 1950s. It was performed by a small company led by Walter Fitzgerald and called for costumes that would clearly indicate the different characters while allowing for quick changes. This Stevenson achieved by creating a basic costume in the Elizabethan style for each actor to which were added robes, tunics, overdresses or accessories. The designs are part of the collection that came to the Museum from the dance historian and publisher Cyril Beaumont and may originally have formed part of the London Archives of the Dance. Historical significance: A group of designs showing how a designer solves the problem of creating costumes for a programme of extracts from various Shakespeare plays (which means allowing for quick changes), by creating several basic costumes which can be adapted, or to which accessories can be added, to indicate specific characters |
Subjects depicted | |
Literary reference | Julius Caesar |
Collection | |
Accession number | S.162-2000 |
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Record created | September 13, 2000 |
Record URL |
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