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Theatre

Chagall’s magical curtain finds a new home

As the Bristol Old Vic announces a revival of a play about Marc Chagall, the artist's enormous stage curtain for The Magic Flute is sold at auction in New York

November 19, 2020 15:18
Chagll- Stage curtain JPG

ByJohn Nathan, John Nathan

2 min read

In the way that only the universe can, the cosmos this week conjured two seemingly unrelated events which, though they happened far away from each other, are very connected.

As Bristol Old Vic Theatre began selling tickets to its revival of Kneehigh Theatre’s gorgeous Marc Chagall show The Flying Lovers of Vitebsk, bids were being prepared in New York for the auction of one of the Jewish artist’s greatest — at least in size — paintings.

The latter of these two is a stage curtain that was created for the Metropolitan Opera’s 1967 production of Mozart’s Die Zauberflöte (The Magic Flute). Chagall is by no means the only artist to have worked for the stage. Picasso and Hockney designed costumes and sets for major opera and ballet productions, as have many others. However Chagall went further by painting the ceiling of the Palais Garnier, home to the Paris ballet.

The Russian (now Belarus)-born son of a Chasidic family became part of the avant-garde art revolution in Russia and then France where he settled with his wife Bella. The rise of the Nazis forced the couple to America where Bella died suddenly of a throat infection in 1944 after swimming in a lake.