In June 2013 I made the costumes for Mansfield's Youth Theatre production 'Comic Book Artist'. Unfortunately I haven't got photographs of the finished costumes, but below are the designs:
Saturday, 16 November 2013
Brassed Off at Mansfield Palace Theatre
In July 2013 Mansfield Palace Theatre revisited a very popular show from a few years ago. 'Brassed Off' holds a emotional tone for Mansfield audiences, due to the mining history of the town. The shows musical aspects were performed by Newstead Band, a previously colliery band itself.
The show was directed by Christopher Neil and was performed by the Palace's community theatre troupe.
When the show was originally put on at the Palace the design was the work of Kelly Jago, but due to other commitments she couldn't help realise the recent show. That task was given to me.
The design was kept the same, apart from the colour of the main set pieces, which Kelly deemed to change. The headstocks, reminiscent of colliery machinery, were originally grey but it was decided that they should be more vibrant, to represent the vitality of spirit the troubled characters conveyed.
I made a model of the set design to present to the actors, coordinated the costumes and props and repainted the set pieces.
Photos of the finished production are below.
Inside Out of Mind at Lakeside Arts Centre
In May/June 2013 I assisted Nettie Scriven once again on a play about the care of dementia patients called 'Inside Out of Mind'.
The project was an innovative new production written in conjuction with official NHS research into Dementia, by Tanya Meyers. Tanya worked with a team of ethnographers led by Justine Schneider, Professor of Mental Health and Social Care in the School of Sociology and Social Policy, as well as Director Stephan Lowe of Meeting Ground Theatre Group.
The show elegantly and creatively illustrated life for both carers and patients on a dementia ward, only referred to as 'the ward with no name'.
For this project, as assistant to Nettie Scriven, I re-upholstered some chairs for the set in accordance with Nettie's design. I had never tried upholstery before but found the process to be fairly straight forward, carefully removing the existing chair fabric and using that as a pattern.
Below are the finished chairs:
Saturday, 5 January 2013
End of Desire/Escaping Alice at York Theatre Royal
'End of Desire' by David Ireland and 'Escaping Alice' by Matthew Pegg are two one act plays which ran at the York Theatre Royal in Novemeber 2012 in a double bill format. I designed the set, props and costumes for the productions.
They ran in the Studio Theatre at York.
The main challenge for the design for to create enough of a contrast between the two plays, while considering the restraints of designing for a limited studio space.
Initial set design sketch for 'Escaping Alice':
Costume Designs for 'End of Desire':
Costume Designs for 'Escaping Alice':
Final model for 'End of Desire':
Production Photographs for 'End of Desire':
Production Photographs of 'Escaping Alice':
(Photographs by Ben Bentley)
Sunday, 14 October 2012
'End of Desire/Escaping Alice'
I am currently designing the Studio autumn double bill 'End of Desire/Escaping Alice' at the York Theatre Royal.
Sunday, 19 August 2012
'Grandpa in My Pocket' and 'Gulliver's Travels'
Between January and June this year I design assisted Nettie Scriven for two plays; 'Gulliver's Travels' by Dragonbreath Theatre Company and 'Grandpa in my pocket' at Nottingham Playhouse.
I was predominently involved in model-making for both shows, but on 'Grandpa in my Pocket' I designed some of the props and assisted in the props department at the playhouse.
The following are some photographs from Gulliver's Travels, including some model-making:
The following are some examples of model-making for grandpa in my pocket:
I designed the 'invention' props for Mr Mentor the Inventors workshop based on the props used in the original television programme:
More photographs of these props will follow...
Friday, 27 January 2012
'DreamPlay' by Big Window Theatre Company
In September 2011 I took on the role of design assistant to Nettie Scriven as she designed the set, costume and props for Big Window's production of 'DreamPlay' for very young children and their families.
Big Window endeavor to create inspirational and immersive theatre which will appeal to and stimulate the minds of children, in an intimate and comforting setting. In order to achieve this they are also active in supporting and nurturing local talent.
'DreamPlay', scripted by Peter Rumney, was devised with the intention that small children would know not to be scared of dreaming, and that they would always wake up when they went to sleep.
My role in the production of the play was mainly to create the backdrop of the set; an oriental inspired tree/cloud shape.
Nettie was specific in that she wanted the tree to be thin and fragile looking- whisp was the word she used to describe it. This was illustrated perfectly in the model she had made of the set design but it was harder to create to scale as it needed to be a self-supporting structure which would survive a long tour around Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire. After trying out several maquettes I settled on using a rigid netting fabric and running white-sprayed wire through it, like branches, to support it. I layered lace and other netting fabrics onto the base structure to add depth. Visual Scene in Leicester made the bed-like structures and the tree trunk and branches, which all connected together to minimize movement. I used small velcro patches, concealed in the 'foliage' of the tree to attatch the cloud shape onto the branches.
It was wonderful to see how well the children responded to the environment we created and the way their imaginations were invested entirely in the play and its innovative methods.
Thursday, 26 January 2012
Prime Cuts Exhibition in Old Truman Brewery, Brick Lane
In July 2011 I was asked to be a part of the 'Prime Cuts' Exhibition in the Old Truman Brewery near Brick Lane in London.
I was very excited to be a part of the exhibition, whose main goal is to provide British graduates from all over the UK with the opportunity to exhibit in the capital. Elliot Scott, one of the founders of the exhibition, is a graduate from Nottingham Trent University and it was his desire to take his final year exhibition to London which gave rise to 'Prime Cuts'.
The exhibition was very well organised and put together and provided the perfect stage to showcase national talent.
I took my York Prize set Design for 'My Family and Other Animals' and my design for the Curve Young Company production of '3am'. I also included my costume designs and sketchbooks for both, my development folio for the Curve project and my portfolio.
I received very positive feedback from everyone I spoke to and made some valuable industry contacts.
The following link leads to a page on the Prime Cuts website, and I feature in the 2011 festival video.
Sunday, 24 July 2011
Designer for '3am' Curve Young Company production, Curve Theatre in Leicester
In the second term of my third year at Nottingham Trent I had to opportunity to design a production at the Curve Theatre in Leicester. The production was the first from the newly formed 'Young Company', the Curve's own Youth Theatre group directed by Adel Al-Salloum and Peter Rumney, and would be my own first realised project.
The piece was to be fully devised by the Young Company themselves, which meant that my design process was different from anything I had previously done because it was to be inextricably linked with development of the Company's own process.
I observed the Company in rehearsals and picked out main themes from the work they were producing and tried to gage the tone of their work. This meant that the designs I produced were extremely emotional in response because they came from the raw emotionality and truth of the Company's work. The directors gave the company graphic novels as their catalyst for their development, due to the strong images embodied in the art form and the human, and sometimes supernatural, struggles in their stories. This engender the idea that the piece would take place in an urban landscape.
I considered a number of different possibilties for the design of the show based on the key themes which arose while the company created the characters they would develop. These themes included; loneliness, confusion, a desire for resolution, chaos, fear and feelings of being trapped. I took these themes and used the meta-narrative overlying all of them, journey, and paired it with the only direction I had been given at this point, which was the hope that the production would be in traverse. I arrived at the design aspect which forms of the foundation of my concept; a road. Because of the previously mentioned them of a desire for resolution I considered that the company could build something as they progressed through the narrative; the idea of going from chaos to resolution. I also considered a tree-like structure, which could represent hope, which leads on to my development model.
The photos that follow are of my development model.
I used the tree to represent hope, while the rubble which formed the trunk showed both ruin and resolution through the act of building. The branches are hanging which I used to illustrate the transience of human life. After a discussion with the directors we decided that the tree being focused at one end of the traverse stunted the space's natural flow, and that the ideas embodied in the structure needed to be distilled and spread throughout the space. The road was the key aspect, and needed to be treated as such.
I used the tree to represent hope, while the rubble which formed the trunk showed both ruin and resolution through the act of building. The branches are hanging which I used to illustrate the transience of human life. After a discussion with the directors we decided that the tree being focused at one end of the traverse stunted the space's natural flow, and that the ideas embodied in the structure needed to be distilled and spread throughout the space. The road was the key aspect, and needed to be treated as such.
I saw the theme of ruin as being important to the piece, and this concept bore heavily on the costumes. When designing the costumes post-apocalyptic survival came to mind; the idea of clothes being practical yet ripped and well-worn. This meant the clothes would be in keeping with their environment. The budget was small for the show and working the costumes this way meant that the company could bring in old clothes of their own which could be broken down, keeping clothes to be bought and made to a bare minimum. The following is my group costume drawing depicting my ideas.
My final stage design retained the road as the central theme and by keeping both ends clear both the flow of the space and the perception of past and future; chaos and resolution were kept intact. I carried the concept of ruin through, designing piles of rubble and broken artifacts at the sides of either end of the road. Using such materials meant they could be found, and not bought, keeping costs down and allowing more money to be spent on the rendering of the road. I designed telephone wires as hanging over-head. This suggested simultaneously; an urban setting, human interaction and the ephemeral spoken word. Writing, as a tool for extending the existence of the spoken word but also the existence of humanity itself, would take place on the floor in chalk. The following photos show my design.
Lastly I include photographs from the production which show set, costumes and how the space was used.
In this scene a piano was flown in. I made sure everything that would appear on stage would be suitably broken down, in keeping with the design rationale.
Curve Young Company production of '3am', photos by Pamela Raith
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