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In 1998
the Kent State University Museum presented an exhibition entitled
"Court and Conquest: Ottoman Origins and the design for Handel's
"Tamerlano" at the Glimmerglass Opera" featuring costumes designed
by Judy Levin. The exhibition was organized by the Museum and
the AXA Gallery (formerly the Equitable Gallery) with the cooperation
of the Glimmerglass Opera, Cooperstown, New York. The AXA Gallery
is sponsored by the Equitable Life Assurance Society of the
United States.
In 2001,
the exhibition will be on display at The Brunei Gallery of The
School of Oriental and African Studies of the University of
London. The London venue is sponsored by Continental Airlines.
Curated
by Dr. Walter B. Denny, University of Massachusetts, Amherst,
the exhibition focused on the original Ottoman and European
Orientalist sources used by Miss Levin as inspirations for her
designs. Included were Ottoman textiles, armor, illuminated
manuscripts, sultan portraits, Orientalist prints, clothing
and jeweled buckles juxtaposed with the opulent opera costumes
created for the 1995 Glimmerglass Opera production.
Composed
by Handel in 1724, just 25 years after the Treaty of Vienna
concluded peace between Eurpoean states and the Ottoman empire,
the opera's story of the Central Asian conqueror Timur's epic
battle and defeat of the Ottoman sultan Bayezid I, in 1402,
had great currency for Handel's audience. The director of the
Glimmerglass production, Jonathan Miller, felt that the design
of the production should reflect the eighteenth century view
of the Ottoman empire and of the historic fifteenth century
battle. The challenge met by set designer John Conklin and costume
designer Judy Levin was to create a contemporary opera production
that fulfilled Dr. Miller's concept for the opera.
The Kent
State University Museum published a fully illustrated catalog
to accompany the exhibition with essays by Dr. Denny, Dr. Aileen
Ribeiro of the Courtauld Institute, London, Judy Levin and Jean
L. Druesedow, Director of the Museum. The catalog is available
through the museum store
as well as through the University of Washington Press.
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