Wednesday 17 February 2010

Interesting collaborations



Santiago Calatrava has been given the opportunity by the New York City Ballet to create five stage designs for a series of world premiere productions in the company's spring season. Entitled "Architecture of Dance," the season will begin on April 29 and include ballets by Benjamin Millepied, Melissa Barak, Maruo Bigonzetti, and Peter Martins. It will be the first time that Calatrava has designed for the ballet, but not the first time that the New York City Ballet has commissioned an architect to design its sets. In fact Phillip Johnson collaborated with the company in 1981.

Calatrava, painter and sculptor himself had his designs exhibited at MoMA and the Metropolitan Museum of Art in the past and has designed buildings for the Atlanta's symphony and Palma de Mallorca's Opera in Spain.

Jacques Herzog and Pierre de Meuron have teamed up with fashion designer Miuccia Prada to create costumes and scenic designs for Verdi's "Atilla," which maestro Riccardo Muti is bringing to the stage on February 23. The acclaimed Swiss architects, previously designed sets for the Berlin State Opera's 2006 production of "Tristan und Isolde."