Thursday, April 11, 2013

Sidewalk Nuts

So much depends on nuts in the sidewalk . . .
Last Friday I was in Houston for business. I passed a patch of sidewalk full of nuts and bolts—literally. Embedded in the cement. (Picture shows only a small portion.)

Why? Don't know. How? Couldn't say. Purposeful or random? Not sure. Interesting? Definitely.

Monday, March 18, 2013

Aida Time


rendering (with swatches) for guard










shirt prototype—love seeing the vision take shape

Well, it's time I started posting more things about Aida, the 2014 monster opera I'm working on. This project is huge, and I've already been designing costumes for about a year.

Progress is being made, however. Lots of fabric was bought last summer (lots but not all; stay tuned—another fabric buying trip to come!), and now several prototypes and actual garments are being draped. Great work being down by our costume department!

Monday, February 11, 2013

Saturday AM Mossy Wall


Saw this stone wall while out on a Saturday Morning Stegall Family Fun Run (our first but hopefully not our last). Loved the greens and greys and blues as well as the mosses and all of the irregularly shaped stones. Notice the small fern-like plants poking through some of the crevices.

Monday, February 4, 2013

It's Really Richard!

Richard III's skull
Well, the verdict is finally in—the bones found under the Leicester carpark are indeed those of the last Plantagenet king of England: Richard III. He'll now be buried in Leicester cathedral (not in London as was previously speculated). Very cool.

Thursday, January 31, 2013

Nifty Fifties

kitchen/living room—plastic plant, linoleum, perfect!

kitchen—enjoyed picking wallpaper, coffee pot, toaster,
breadbox, kitschy knick-knacks, etc.

living room—note the working 50s television
These are set shots for a show I'm directing entitled Break the Knot. The play is set in 1959. I did the scene design about 6 years ago, and I still like it. (Note the ghosted image of the year on the cabinets—we're working on getting that tweaked and onto the stage right cabinets.) The pictures don't do the 50s aqua colored cabinets and frig justice. I searched flea markets and antique shops from Greenville to St. Louis. My kids still talk about a road trip on which we packed nearly every square inch of our SUV with kitschy stuff—frames, vases, telephone, lamps, dishes, canisters, pictures, a vintage typewrite, etc., etc. I don't do semi-realism often, but when I do, it sure satisfies my junk itch.

The show is tonight (1/31/13) at 7:00 and 8:30. It runs just under an hour with no intermission.

Wednesday, January 23, 2013

Who Knew?


Who knew that teabags could make such a great visual? Saw this display at an Anthropology store a while back and decided to post for inspiration. Style on the cheap. This could be done even on a schoolteacher's budget.

Imagine a garment out of these. . . .

But don't even think about where they've been. They're all unused and perfectly sterile, I'm sure.

Monday, January 14, 2013

Chevrons

—a wall of chevroned frame samples at a local frame shop

—chevrons in various architectural applications: arches, floors, doors, walls (those are thin, stacked stones, I think), streets/sidewalks





Maybe I'll look into this further as I continue to do research for the 2014 Aida I'm working on.

Wednesday, December 19, 2012

R3 in the News Again

architect's 3D model
Well, those sedulous folks in Leicester, England, have done it again—they've discovered yet another modern-day connection to our man of the year, Richard III. Last fall it was the bones of a male that they believe may be the medieval king (still waiting on DNA test results—now supposedly coming mid-January). A couple of weeks ago a metal boar was found. Now someone has made a 3D model of the Blue Boar Inn, the place at which Richard spent at least a night before he was killed at Bosworth Field. Here's the full story.
The director of archaeological services at the University of Leicester found detailed drawings in the notebooks of a 19th-century architect—instructions for framing, fireplaces, room sizes, etc., and exact measurements. Perhaps some day they'll recreate the inn full-scale—especially if the body under the parking lot is indeed Richard III's.

Monday, December 10, 2012

Richard III, the Boar

A copper-alloy boar "mount"
I'm checking almost every day to see whether the remains found underneath a car park in Leicester, England, are indeed those of King Richard III. No word yet. 

However, some amateur metal detector sleuths did find something very interesting at the edge of the Thames near the Tower of London in October (evidently I was too busy with other things to see it then)—a mount in the shape of a boar.

Mounts were metal pieces that were often used on pieces of furniture or as decorations on a leather item. Researchers believe this one was once owned by a supporter of Richard III or possibly even the king himself. It is also said that Richard ordered metal badges to be made for his coronation in 1483. Richard's chosen symbol was the boar.

Shakespeare's Hastings refers to Richard as such—

"To fly the boar before the boar pursues
Were to incense the boar to follow us."

As does Richmond—

"The wretched, bloody, and usurping boar . . .
Swills your warm blood like wash, and makes his trough
In your embowell'd bosoms-this foul swine
Is now even in the centre of this isle,
Near to the town of Leicester, as we learn."

(Note the reference to Leicester, location of said car park!) How great would it be to have one of these as a memento of the Richard project?

My wife sorta wishes I'd incorporated this image/theme of the boar more in Richard III: The Terrible Reign. Ahhh, now begins the post-production coulda-woulda-shoulda.


Monday, December 3, 2012

Design Everywhere

A really great grate
Grate close-up
I'm always on the lookout for design inspiration. In fact, I drive my wife crazy asking her to take pictures  with her iPhone of moss, rocks, tree bark, gates, fences, and brick everywhere we go.

I love the verdegris patina on this grate set in cement against a cement/plaster wall. The dirt/mold patterns are interesting, too, and are good references for when something on a set needs to be "grunged." Grit is so interesting.