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Pavel Tchelitchew
Queen of the Night
, 1942
29 x 43 cm. (11.4 x 16.9 in.)
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Pavel Tchelitchew
Queen of the Night
, 1942
29 x 43 cm. (11.4 x 16.9 in.)
close
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Pavel Tchelitchew
Russian, 1898–1957
Queen of the Night
,
1942
Pavel Tchelitchew
Queen of the Night
, 1942
29 x 43 cm. (11.4 x 16.9 in.)
close
Pavel Tchelitchew
Queen of the Night
, 1942
29 x 43 cm. (11.4 x 16.9 in.)
close
Contact the gallery
for more images
View to Scale
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Medium
watercolor
Size
29 x 43 cm. (11.4 x 16.9 in.)
Price
15,000 USD
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Russian Art Salon
New York
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Modern Art
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Description
Project for the costume of the Queen of the Night in Mozart's "Magic Flute" signed 'P Tchelitchew' (lower right) sepia and India ink on paper 11 ½ x 17 in. (29.2 x 43.2 cm.) Executed in 1942. Provenance : Durlacher Brothers, New York; Property From The Holdings Of The Ford Foundation; Christie's Sale 12199 Living with Art 2 - 3 December 2016, New York, Rockefeller Center lot 74 ["Between 1928 and 1942, Tchelitchew worked closely with George Balanchine, Igor Stravinsky, and others in the theatre-and-dance world. In 1942, Tchelitchew was invited by the editors of ARTnews to create a work illustrating how the artist would present The Queen of The Night, scene from Mozart’s opera, The Magic Flute. This particular drawing was published with the caption, “Drawn especially for ART News by
TCHELITCHEW
Pavel Tchelitchew.”The editors considered Tchelitchew the “the most fantastic of the moderns, he seemed to us perhaps the only available man equipped both in stage knowledge and imagination to deal with the most fragile and fanciful of Mozarts . . .” After a brief introduction, the editors quote Tchelitchew’s “description of the costume”: “The Queen of The Night in Mozart’s Magic Flute is Queen Maria Theresa of Austria who is portrayed in the opera as a malevolent, raging spirit who tries to prevent Tamino the prince from ascending the Throne. In the scene of her great aria she appears in an ‘Egyptian mirage’. The scene represents the big ballroom of the palace of Schonbrunn . . . The Queen of The Night steps forth atop a projection with her court of nine planets. She is dressed in dark indigo—blue taffeta embroidered with jet and sequins. Her wings of a night-moth are embroidered with the signs of the constellations in small sequins or diamonds, the stars in large shining stones. Her dress is embroidered in the same way with signs of the Zodiac. The Planets who hold her baldaquin-like wings are dressed in much darker taffeta decorated with jet. On their pale silver-blue chiffon turbans they carry black statues’ heads. The Planets—Mercury, Mars, Venus, and the rest—are covered with precious stones. The underskirt of the Queen’s costume represents an evening sky just after sunset and is pale blue-grey-mauve satin covered with chiffon on which cloud effects are painted. She walks atop a continuous projection of a cascade behind a glass balustrade . . . “ 1942 was the last year Tchelitchew created décor for the stage and dance theatre. If you look closely, you can find small figures (people) trapped in her wings. These metamorphic “interior images” were a dominate theme in Tchelitchew’s drawings and paintings at this time, especially in his major painting, HIDE AND SEEK, exhibited in 1942, in his retrospective at The Museum of Modern Art. This drawing is a fine example of Tchelitchew’s stage art. Bibliography: What The Metropolitan Opera Might Do: An Ideal for the “Magic Flute.” Tchelitchew: Project for the Magic Flute. ART News. Vol. XLI. No. 3. March 15-31. 1942. Pg 8." http://www.christies.com/lotfinder/drawings-watercolors/pavel-tchelitchew-project-for-the-costume-of-6041734-details.aspx?from=searchresults&intObjectID=6041734&sid=1d41710e-2182-4d37-a523-91988c6bd3c2 ]
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