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Costume for “Coppelia” by Delibes: Swanilda

Georg Kirsta

Artwork Details

Costume for “Coppelia” by Delibes: Swanilda
1929
Georg Kirsta
gouache heightened with gold on paper
12 1/8 in x 8 3/4 in (30.8 cm x 22.2 cm);12 1/8 in x 8 3/4 in (30.8 cm x 22.23 cm);19 1/4 in x 14 1/4 in (48.9 cm x 36.2 cm)
Museum Purchase
1948/1.218

Description

Subject Matter:

Coppelia is a ballet by French composer Leo Delibes. It opened in Paris in May of 1870. It is a comical twist on E.T.A. Hoffman's "Der Sandmann" (1816). 

Georg Kirsta was a Russian painter and costume and set designer who worked for European theatres and ballet companies. After the Russian Revolution, Kirsta emigrated to Berlin, Germany and then to Vienna, Austria; in the late 1930s, Kirsta moved to London. Throughout Kirsta's career, he worked for Bronislava Nijinska, Hedy Pfundmayr, Grete Wiesenthal, Hilde Holger, and Helene Tels; Kirsta also worked with the Metropolitain Ballet and the London Festival Ballet. In 1951, Kirsta organized a new Original Ballet Russe after the death of his associate Wassily de Basil, the co-creator of Les Ballets Russes de Monte Carlo with George Balanchine. Kirsta had an integral role in the popularization of ballet across the world.

Physical Description:

This color drawing for a costume design shows a dirndl dress with a white blouse underneath and a full, tea-length skirt. The dress is blue but for a white stripe that bisects it vertically, runs around the hem and becomes three stripes at the bottom left.

Usage Rights:

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