Rostislav Doboujinsky (3 April 1903 – 23 June 2000) was a Russian designer of costumes, masks, sets and interiors, and a painter and illustrator. He belonged to the second generation of Russian artists who developed the tradition of the 'Ballets Russes' in Western Europe. He was noted for his work on Louis Jouvet's Ondine by Jean Giraudoux in the 1930s and Max Ophul's film Le Plaisir in 1951, for the mouse masks and costumes he created for Rudolf Nureyev's The Nutcracker (1967), the costumes for The Sleeping Beauty ballet at London's Covent Garden (1968) and the animal masks for The Tales of Beatrix Potter (1971). He achieved international success with his masks for Alfredo Arias's adaption of Balzac's Peines de Coeur d'une Chatte Anglaise (1977).[1][2]

Rostislav Doboujinsky
Doboujinsky working in his studio
Born(1903-04-03)3 April 1903
St Petersburg, Russian Empire
Died23 June 2000(2000-06-23) (aged 97)
Paris, France
Resting placeSainte-Genevieve-des-Bois, Île-de-France,
Known forDesign of masks, costumes, sets, stage, posters, interiors
Notable work
Spouse
Lydia Nikolaevna nee Kopniaeff
(died 1965)
Family

Biography edit

Early life edit

 
Drawing by Doboujinsky - Portrait d'un poéte russe, 1939

Rostislav Mstislavovitch Doboujinsky was born on 3 April 1903 in Saint Petersburg, Russian Empire. He was the eldest son of ballet and opera designer Mstislav Valerianovich Doboujinsky, who co-founded the Le Monde de l'art movement - mir iskusstva - with Alexandre Benois and Sergei Diaghilev.[1] Introduced from childhood to the world of the arts by his father, he took classical secondary studies in Russia and attended the Higher School of Fine Arts in Petrograd. In 1920 he worked as assistant designer at the Gorky theatre in Petrograd, in 1921 received his first stage design credit and in 1922 worked as set and costume designer for avant-garde and research group “Le Jeune Theater”.[3] In 1924, the family fled to Lithuania where the young Doboujinsky was employed at the Kaunas theatre. A year later Rostislav moved to France with his wife Lydia, where he worked as a set designer and Lydia founded a fashion house which supplied costumes to ballets in Sweden and Monte Carlo. From 1925–27 he also studied at the National School of Decorative Arts and the Faculty of Letters in the Sorbonne.[3] In 1939, Doboujinsky designed the costumes for Ondine, then worked with Christian Bérard, Leonor Fini, Lila de Nobili, and founded his own set workshop with Lydia.[1] In 1950, he became a member of Societe des auteurs, compositeurs et editeurs de musique (SACEM).[3]

The Sleeping Beauty (1968) and Tales of Beatrix Potter (1971) edit

 
Wolf mask from The Sleeping Beauty (1968)

Lila de Nobili brought Doboujinsky over from Paris to make animal masks for the first act of The Sleeping Beauty at Covent Garden. According to the V&A, Doboujinsky's wolf mask for this ballet was:

"a superb example of animal headdress-making. It was devised by the great mask-maker Rostislav Doboujinsky... Dancing under the heat of stage lights is uncomfortable, and having to wear full head mask is not popular with the performers, so the masks have to be as light as possible and give some ventilation. By the 1960s, new materials allowed Doboujinsky to create heads that were substantial but light enough to be worn for long periods, give as wide an angle of vision as possible and try to ensure that the wearer did not overheat."[4]

 
Mouse masks from The Tales of Beatrix Potter (1971)

While at Covent Garden, Doboujinsky talked with Richard Goodwin and Christine Edzard, the producer and writers for The Tales of Beatrix Potter (1971). In October 1969, he agreed to make a sample mask for The Tales' mouse character 'Hunca Munca', whose face is “perhaps the most appealing in the film”. He remade the mask thirteen times over the winter, working “at his own pace – and to his own standard of perfection” until he was satisfied with the fourteenth attempt in February 1970.[5] Doboujinsky collaborated with Christine Edzard on the masks “on which much of the picture's success depended”.[5] His original masks for the film, made of bike helmets, polystyrene, hand-sewn hair and vision holes covered in gauze, had to be recreated for the stage, with a larger field of vision for the dancers. The artist used moulds of the originals, drilling hundreds of holes at the front and covering the mask in nylon hair “using electrostatic charges.”[6]

Interior Design edit

 
Chandeliers: Great Gala, May 1962. Courtesy Royal Albert Hall Archive ref: RAHE/3/1962/1

A collaboration in the 1960s with Renzo Mongiardino at the International Second World Congress of Man-Made Fibres Gala launched Doboujinsky into interior design, where he worked alongside other outstanding designers including Luchino Visconti, Franco Zeffirelli and Giorgio Strehler.[7] The Great Gala was held at the Royal Albert Hall in London on 3 May 1962, and was “A Gala Divertimento of music, song and dance and brilliant decor” featuring renowned artists including Yehudi Menuhin.[8] It was staged by Zeffirrelli with costumes by Lila de Nobili, orchestra conducted by Adrian Boult and design by Mongiardino. Tonton created a 20 ft tall chandelier surrounded by a dozen smaller ones, each piece of 'crystal' created using tiny pastry molds.[7]

His first work for the Rothschild family was a coming-of-age party at the Château de Ferrières near Paris for which he made a dozen big plastic chandeliers for the ballroom and an enormous candelabra for the roof. Opulent chandeliers became a Doboujinsky trademark. Another project was the refurbishment in 1974 by Mongiardino's team of one of the Rothschild residences – the Hôtel Lambert on the Île Saint-Louis in Paris. Doboujinsky designed a fake cordovan-leather dado and borders to frame a series of 17th century panels depicting David's triumph over Goliath, across the four walls of one room. For Marie-Helene de Rothschild's bedroom he created extravagant wall coverings inspired by a 17th century rug.[7][3]

Doboujinsky‘s technique was a combination of “unorthodox materials” and “painstaking craft”. For the dado at Hôtel Lambert he made a shallow mould, adding latex to it to make sheets of embossed “leather’ which he gilded and glazed using centuries-old methods. Designer Claudio Briganti described Doboujinsky as “enormously inquisitive”, exploring “scores of craft techniques” rather than relying simply on stencils and “faux-marbre”. For Marie-Helene de Rothschild’s bedroom wallcoverings he took inspiration from a very old, “enormous” and “very worn” Persian rug whose weave could not have been reproduced. Instead Doboujinsky combined painting methods, using pigments of oil paints and gouache applied to the back of canvas which seeped through to the front to evoke the colours and motifs of the original and “suggest its lovely threadbare quality”.[7]

In 1981-82, Doboujinsky worked on the design for Hans Heinrich Thyssen-Bornemisza's New York dining room – inspired by the floral pattern of an 18th century Turkish rug.[7][3] Doboujinsky used silk-screen and textile-printing methods on a variety of suitable materials – silk, velvet, terrycloth and burlap - to produce a “correspondence” of colour and motif to the original ancient rug, rather than a precise copy. According to Briganti, Doboujinsky’s painting and sculpting talents were “rarely allied in one so ingeniously inventive person” and is what made him “uniquely valuable”.[7]

Peines du coeur d'une chatte anglaise (1977) and later years edit

 
Masks from Peines du coeur d'une chatte anglaise Museum of the City of New York. Access. no. 95.139.958

Doboujinsky received international recognition for the masks he created for Alfredo Arias' 1977 production of Peines du Coeur d'une chatte anglaise, based on the story by Honoré de Balzac in Scenes from the Private and Public Life of Animals, illustrated by J. J. Grandville.[1][2] The play was produced for the Shiraz festival and toured France from 1977 to 1983. In March 1980 it went to Broadway at the Theatre Anta, as Heartaches of a Pussycat. Costumes were designed by Claudie Gastine and animal masks by Doboujinsky.[9][10]

Walter Kerr, reviewing the Broadway show for the New York Times in March 1980, wrote :

“There are whiskered tomcats in frock coats, beribboned dachsunds in tea-party finery. Birds with beaks you'd do well to shy away from...I can't believe that anyone has ever designed masks – they're full, three-dimensional heads, really - more persuasive than those here provided by R. Doboujinsky.” [11]

At the age of eighty, and in collaboration with Sabine Dutilh, he designed the sets, costumes and masks for Arias and Kado Kostzer's Sortileges in 1983, which were “a great strength of the production”. His design work featured “many exquisite details” such as ermine tails along the hem of the red curtains, and an “especially fanciful” Jester's costume in which the “egg-like bald head was balanced in front by a pear-shaped belly”, creating an effect of “delicate grotesqueness.”[12]

Personal life and legacy edit

 
Drawing of 'Tonton' by Lila de Nobili

A modest man, Doboujinsky referred to himself as a “jack of all trades”, “only an amateur, only a dabbler” and was referred to by the entire profession as 'Tonton' ('uncle').[7][1]

Actress Marilù Marini, who played the English cat 'Beauty' in Arias's Peines de Coeur d'une Chatte Anglaise said of him: “He was a great artist who remained like a child who goes to the theater for the first time and wants to know what is behind the scenes."[1] Journalist Jean-Louis Perrier wrote in Le Monde: "He never exhibited his immense culture or science. Every time, he was inventing something new. Everything for him was a bridge to the imagination. And there was this baroque, expressive, fantastic, Russian side in all his creations.”[1]

Alfredo Arias and René de Ceccatty paid homage to Doboujinsky in Les Peines de coeur d'une chat française (1999) in the guise of a big bear named Djinsky.[1]

Although Doboujinsky was so detailed in his work and obsessed by craftmanship, he lived in minimalist surroundings, spending most of his time in a cluttered studio in the working class quarter of Belleville in Paris.

 
Doboujinsky at work in his Paris studio 1988

He said “I’ve never planned a décor for myself”, as a child “I lived among pictures and furnishings of immense worth that provided the groundwork for my visual education…..Now I’d rather devote my days to doing interiors for others.”[7]

In 1983 he joined forces with Sabine Dutilh who, until then, had been his assistant. The two collaborated on development and creation of works.[3]

During his long life in France, Doboujinsky maintained his status as Lithuanian political refugee. He applied for, and obtained, French nationality a few months before he died in Paris on 23 June 2000.[1]

List of Works edit

Decade/s Year Role Production / Theatre Info
1920s 1920 Assistant designer Gorky Theatre, Petrograd
1922 Set and costume designer Le Jeune Theater
1924 Designer Theatre de Chambre, Riga, Latvia [3]
Assistant to Mstislav Doboujinsky (father) Kaunas, Lithuania [3]
1925 Set designer The Queen of Spades (Tchaikovsky), Kaunas theatre, Lithuania [1]
Designer Theatre de la Chauve-Souris, Paris [3]
Set and costume model creator Lithuanian National Opera and Ballet Theatre, Compagnie Georges Pitoeff, "Ballet National Suedois" and Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo[3][1]
Cinema poster model maker Luna Film
Poster maker leaflets and advertising boards – Loubok, Paris
Designer games and toys - Vera
Creator animations, sets Cine Service and Dessins Animes Associes
1930s-1940s 1939 Costume designer Louis Jouvet's Ondine by Jean Giraudoux the first performance of Ondine opened on April 27, 1939 at the Theatre de l'Athenee[13][1]
Set and costume creator Boris Knyazev company, Theatre Russe, and the Ballets du Marquis de Cuevas[3]
Fabric, theatre costume, mask and accessories Compagnie Charles Dullin (Les Oiseaux), Jean Vilar at Theatre National Populaire (Nuclea), Compagnie Jean-Louis Barrault (Julius Cesar, Tete d'Or, The Rape of Lucretia, The Rhinoceros by Eugene Ionesco), Paris Opera (Carmen, La Dame aux Camelias), Comedie-Francaise (Ruy Blas) [3]
1950s 1950 Costume designer Maxim Gorky's The Lower Depths at Theatre de l'Oeuvre in collaboration with Sacha Pitoeff
1951 Mask creator Max Ophuls's film Le Plaisir
 
Mask from Le Plaisir (1951)
Doboujinsky created the mask worn by Ambroise, played by Jean Galland, to disguise his aged appearance.[1]
1957 Set and costume designer The Crucible (Les Sorcieres de Salem) (film) by Raymond Rouleau In collaboration with Lila de Nobili.[1][3][14]
Design model maker Christmas windows – The Snow Queen – for Galeries Lafayette In collaboration with Lila de Nobili.[3]
1960s 1962 Maker of chandeliers The Second World Congress of Man-Made Fibres or Great Gala, Royal Albert Hall, London In collaboration with Renzo Mongiardino.[7]
Designer, sculpture creator Raoul Levy's Marco Polo (film). clothes and caparacons for men, horses and elephants – living figures of a chess game [1][3]
1963 Costume designer, manager of costume design workshop Cyrano de Bergerac, Comedie-Francaise.[3]
1965 Costume designer Numance, Jean-Louis Barrault, Odeon.[3]
Maker of sculptures for masks and accessories Contes d'Offmann, Opera-Comique.[3]
Creator of models, sculptures and masks, and costume designer The Merchant of Venice, Teatro Valle, Rome.[3]
1966 Head of Specialist Design Department The Taming of the Shrew (film) by Franco Zeffirelli.[3]
1967 Maker of set and costume design models L'Orfeo, Amsterdam In collaboration with Jean-Marie Simon [3]
Creator of mouse mask and costumes – The Nutcracker, Stockholm, by Rudolf Nureyev.[1][3]
1968-1969 Costume designer, mask maker The Sleeping Beauty, Covent Garden, London In collaboration with Lila de Nobili.[1][3][15][16]
Costume design models Blood Wedding, Lyon.[3]
(1960s) Creation of chandeliers and candelabra Château de Ferrières, France.[7]
1970s 1969–1970 Mask maker, co-creator costume design The Tales of Beatrix Potter (film) by Christine Edzard, London.[17]
Creator of patterns and painted decorations for costumes Malatesta, Comedie-Francaise
Creator costume models and masks Rashomon, Lyon and Spoleto (Festival dei Due Mondi)
Sculptor of heads for animals Christmas windows – The Private and Public Life of Animals by J. J. Grandville – for Galeries Lafayette
Costumes and masks Reportage sur un squelette ou Masques et bergamasques film, directed by Michel Mitrani, in collaboration with Leonor Fini.[18]
1971 Set and costume model maker L'Histoire du Soldat, Cartoucherie de Vincennes
Sculptures and models, armour and breastplates Don Quichotte, Festival de Carcassonne
1973 Creator costume models Liliana Cavani's film Milarepa.[1]
Creator, sculptor and model maker for ball masks Un ballo in maschera, directed by Franco Zeffirelli, Teatro alla Scala, Milan
1974 Modelling, sculpting, painting and creation work framing of The Triumph of David, and creation of bedroom wall coverings – Hôtel Lambert, Paris.[7]
1977 Creator of masks Peines de Coeur d'une Chatte Anglais by Alfredo Arias with Marilu Marini in the title role.[1]
1978 Designer of Egyptian tomb Agatha Christie's Death on the Nile (film) directed by John Guillermin
Mask creator Alice in Wonderland, Holiday on Ice
1979 Costumes and painting Ballet de Legumes in Little Ida's FlowersChristine Edzard's film Stories from a Flying Trunk and later designed as costumes for the ballet Pas de legumes by Frederick Ashton
1980s 1980 Creator of cat masks and costumes L'enfant et les sortilèges, Metropolitan Opera
1981–1982 Creation of various decorative interior panels a 'gothic-Indian' decoration for the tea room of an English residence; fabric paints for the walls of Hans Heinrich Thyssen-Bornemisza's dining-room in New York;[7] the walls of a living room, Quai Voltaire (Paris)
1982 Drawings and sculptures for bas-relief 'the Palace'– Luisa Miller, Theatre de la Monnaie
Designer table top for Biennale des Antiquaires, Paris.
Designer of miniature sets, creation of animated figures The Nightingale (film) by Christine Edzard for Sands Films, London
1983 Mask creator, set and costume design Sortilèges by Alfredo Arias and Kado Kostzer.[1]
Interior design New York apartment
1984–1985 Costume and set design work inuagural exhibition – Musee des Arts de la Mode et du Costume, Paris
1985 Set models, parrot sculpture Christine Edzard's film Little Dorrit, London
1986–1987 Designer decorative panels and hangings for villa entrance and staircase – Madrid
Designer canvas panels, including “a band of Grotesques”, bed cover and panels for a villa – Los Angeles.[3]
1987 Designer Wall decorations and panels for a drawing room – Place Iena, Paris

Awards edit

Year Title Directed by Award Category
1966 The Taming of the Shrew film Franco Zeffirelli Nastro d'Argento Award Best Costume Design Winner[19]
Academy Award Best Costume Design Nominated[20]
1980 Heartaches of a Pussycat play Alfredo Arias Broadway World's Drama Desk Award Outstanding Costume Design Nominated[21]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Jean-Louis Perrier (June 28, 2000). "Rostislav Doboujinsky". Le Monde.
  2. ^ a b Olga Medvedkova. "Dobuzhinsky Rostislav". Universalis.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y Doboujinsky, Rostislav (1987). "CV pour inscription a la Maison Des Artistes" (Document). Personal Collection of Claudie Gastine.
  4. ^ "Theatre Costume 1968 (made)". Victoria and Albert Museum.
  5. ^ a b Rumer Godden (1971). The Tale of the Tales: The Beatrix Potter Ballet. Frederick Warne & Co. Ltd. p. 30.
  6. ^ Jade Bates. "5 Facts about Sir Frederick Ashton's The Tales of Beatrix Potter". Marquee TV.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Bricker, Charles (April 1987). "Rostislav Doboujinsky: Master of Luxurious Fakery". Architectural Digest. Conde Nast. pp. 238, 240, 242, 244.
  8. ^ "Works: 1960s". The Peter Darrell Trust.
  9. ^ "Peines de cœur d'une chatte anglaise". Les Archives du Spectacle.
  10. ^ "Heartaches of a Pussycat, Broadway, Original". Playbill.
  11. ^ Walter Kerr (March 20, 1980). "Theater: 'Heartaches of a Pussycat'". The New York Times.
  12. ^ Felicia Hardison Londré, Helen M. Whall (May 1984). "Reviewed Work: Sortilèges by Alfredo Arias, Kado Kostzer". Theatre Journal. 36 (2, The Margins of Performance): 259–262. doi:10.2307/3207002.
  13. ^ Grossvogel, David I. (1958), 20th Century French Drama, p. 342, Columbia University Press, New York.
  14. ^ David Jays (March 2, 2002). "Obituary: Lila de Nobili". Guardian.
  15. ^ "The Sleeping Beauty (1968)". Royal Opera House.
  16. ^ "Theatre Costume 1968 (made)". V&A Collections.
  17. ^ "Tales of Beatrix Potter (1970)". The Frederick Ashton Foundation.
  18. ^ "Reportage sur un squelette ou Masques et bergamasques (1970)". IMDb.
  19. ^ "The Taming of the Shrew". IMdB.
  20. ^ "The 40th Academy Awards (1968) Nominees and Winners". Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Retrieved August 27, 2011.
  21. ^ "Rostislav Doboujinsky". Broadway World.

External links edit