design museum in london exhibits the last ‘world of tim burton’ with 600 set props and more

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The world of tim burton at the design museum in london

 

The Design Museum in London hosts The World of Tim Burton, a comprehensive retrospective on the director’s 50 years of creative outputs, including hundreds of his artworks and several of his set costumes, designs, and props. Some of his personal archives are also on view in the UK for the first time, and the exhibition sums up 600 items detailing Tim Burton’s expansive repertoire. Recognizable characters and their associated objects grace the show, including Michelle Pfeiffer’s Catwoman costume from 1992’s Batman 2 Returns and the black and white striped dress from 1999’s Sleepy Hollow, worn by Christina Ricci. 

 

The World of Tim Burton – which opens on October 25th, 2024 and ends on April 21st, 2025 – also showcases over 18 of his movies to celebrate his creative processes, including Beetlejuice (1988), Batman (1989), Edward Scissorhands (1990), and Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (2005). The traveling exhibition arrives in London after a decade-long world tour, visiting 14 cities and 11 countries since 2014. The London show is special to Tim Burton because it’s the first time he brings the show to the city, and it’s also the very last time that the exhibition is staged. Since London is the final stop, The World of Tim Burton is physically reimagined, especially for the Design Museum.

portrait of Tim Burton | all exhibition images by Matt Crossick, courtesy of the Design Museum

 

 

Exhibition with 600 artworks, designs, props, costumes and more

 

The World of Tim Burton is a chance for the visitors of the Design Museum in London to get to know the director and how he thinks and creates his productions. It’s rightful then that when they enter the space, they learn about his studies at college and his stint working as an apprentice animator at Disney. Slowly, they may get acquainted with his signature stop-motion animation, a recurring approach to some of his movies, once they step inside the ‘Crafting Imagination’ space of the exhibition. It’s an art and design convention for the director, especially when visitors explore the designs of the 13 key feature films in ‘Building Worlds’, including the TV series, Wednesday.

 

Hundreds of artworks come forth in the other room to inform the visitors how much of a visual storyteller and artist Tim Burton is. Sketches here and there, at times just drafts, are laid down and encased in glass or hung on walls, as if the Design Museum in London becomes a work studio itself. While Tim Burton is mainly known to be a director, he’s done several other works out of his field, including publishing books and working on music videos. They’re documented in the ‘Beyond Film’ room in the exhibition, which also displays and narrates the designers who have been inspired by the Burton flair, such as the photographer Tim Walker.

tim burton design museum
the Design Museum in London hosts The World of Tim Burton

 

 

Physical staging inspired by tim burton’s cinematography

 

It’s not a Tim Burton exhibition without physical staging inspired by his style, and at the Design Museum, it occurs just that. Specific landscapes that recall the director’s cinematography are present, from the suburbs to angular corridors and film soundstages. As the visitors walk through them, they listen to the custom soundscape created especially for the Design Museum by sound designer Tomi Rose. While the majority of the exhibition demonstrates the long-term collaborations of Tim Burton with designers working across costume, set, and production design, parts of the show inject some of his earliest unrealized projects as a form of looking back to his roots.

 

They all fall under the umbrella of the 600 items present at the Design Museum, which includes loaned objects from Tim Burton’s very own personal archives and a few key film studios, including Paramount, Amazon MGM Studios, and Warner Bros. This is the last time visitors can see hundreds of Tim Burton’s sketches, drawings, and works that he has created since childhood. ‘It’s a strange thing, to put 50 years of art and your life on view for everyone to see, especially when that was never the original purpose. In the past, I have resisted having the exhibition in London; however, collaborating with the Design Museum for this final stop was the right choice,’ says the director. The World of Tim Burton is on view at the Design Museum in London between October 25th, 2024 and April 21st, 2024.

tim burton design museum
it’s the first time that the director brings the traveling show to London

tim burton design museum
the World of Tim Burton at the Design Museum is the final show and stop of the traveling exhibition

tim burton design museum
exhibition view of The World of Tim Burton inside the Design Museum in London

the exhibition sums up 600 items detailing Tim Burton’s expansive repertoire
the exhibition sums up 600 items detailing Tim Burton’s expansive repertoire

the show is a comprehensive retrospective on the director’s 50 years of creative outputs
the show is a comprehensive retrospective on the director’s 50 years of creative outputs

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‘His music has joy and energy. It is luminous’: Steven Isserlis on the genius of Gabriel Fauré | Classical music

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‘Fauré? Ah, yes, I love the Requiem. And there’s that lovely Pavane too …” This is the typical reply to the question: “Do you like the music of Gabriel Fauré?” But it’s about as satisfactory a response as would be, to a similar question about Beethoven: “Oh yes! There’s that great symphony – the one that goes da-da-da DAA.”

Glorious though Fauré’s Requiem and Pavane are (along with his other best-known works, such as the first violin sonata and first piano quartet), there are whole other worlds to his music that deserve to be far better known. Luckily, 2024 marks the centenary of Fauré’s death, which gives us Fauréans a wonderful opportunity to share with audiences his lesser-known masterpieces.

Gabriel Urbain Fauré was born on 12 May 1845 in the village of Pamiers, in south-western France. A lonely childhood was largely spent playing alone in a beautiful meadow outside his house; in the middle of this meadow was a chapel. Elements of both these features – the beauties of nature, and the peace and tranquillity of worship – were to become crucial aspects of Fauré’s music.

Gabriel Fauré (1845-1924) in his early 20s. Photograph: Heritage Images/Getty Images

Sent to the Niedermeyer school – an institution specialising in early church music – at the age of nine, the boy’s musical education was entrusted to a brilliant if irascible young man with a huge nose, Camille Saint-Saëns. The two became friends for life, Saint-Saëns – whose own two little sons were to die within six weeks of each other – taking a fatherly role in the life of his younger protege.

Growing up, the quietly charming Fauré fitted perfectly into the elegant, highly artistic world of the Parisian salons, where many of his works received their first hearings; an observer remembered him “moving at his ease among the milling crowds, a blissful smile on his face like an Olympian deity”. (Marcel Proust, among countless others, became a devoted fan.) Life was not all roses, though. Fauré suffered from acute migraines and bouts of depression. Furthermore, his career as a composer failed to take off to the level it so richly deserved, forcing him for many years to earn his living as a church organist.

It wasn’t until his early 60s that he finally landed a major position, as head of the Paris conservatoire. There the gentle composer astounded everyone by introducing drastic reforms, sweeping away the crusty traditions that had reigned for generations. (As a young boy, I knew an old gentleman who had studied there during Fauré’s tenure; “his influence was everywhere,” he affirmed.) Alas, by that time another problem was threatening Fauré’s equilibrium: he was losing his hearing. His deafness was to become profound, with all that that change entails – particularly for a musician.

At least there were compensations in his private life – albeit with a rather French twist. His marriage, in his late 30s, to Marie Frémiet produced two sons, one of whom became a famous biologist, the other a writer. His relationship to Marie, however, seems to have lacked passion – though the couple remained close until the end of Fauré’s life, Marie becoming a musical confidante in whom he seems to have had absolute trust – she would kiss his manuscript paper to bring him luck.

‘Fauré’s music uplifts – and also moves us deeply’: Steven Isserlis. Photograph: Satoshi Aoyagi

But Fauré looked for other outlets for his romantic energies. Among his lovers, for some years, was Emma Bardac, who was later married to Debussy. And for the last 25 years of his life, Fauré was in a close relationship with a pianist, Marguerite Hasselmans. She was apparently the finest interpreter of his music; frustratingly, there seem to be no recordings of her playing. On his deathbed in 1924 the composer begged his sons to look after Marguerite, who despite the very public nature of their relationship, was officially invisible. Thankfully, the two men did just that.

So to the music: what is so special about Fauré? How can one explain the unique magic of his art? And why is much of his music, if not his name, so little known, compared with that of his younger compatriots Debussy and Ravel (the latter a student of Fauré’s)?

It’s a tricky question. Despite his innate modesty, Fauré knew his own worth. In a cross letter to the pianist Alfred Cortot (a great musician, but an opportunistic careerist), chiding him for performing so much of Debussy and Ravel’s music while neglecting his, Fauré inquired of Cortot why he was “more modest on my behalf than I am myself?”

Perhaps the reason lies at least partly in Fauré’s dislike of self-aggrandising display, and the immense subtlety of his nature, both personal and musical. (“I’m not in the habit of attracting crowds”, as he told a friend.) Whereas Debussy and Ravel – like so many of their Parisian contemporaries across all the arts – proclaimed their originality in no uncertain terms, producing works with extra-musical, visually or nationally oriented titles that were arresting in themselves (La Cathédrale Engloutie, Le Gibet), Fauré’s extraordinary originality was almost entirely contained within outwardly traditional forms. As the perceptive critic Émile Vuillermoz (1878-1960) put it: “To love and understand Fauré, one must at all costs have a musical nature. Fauré is pure music … It is no good bringing anything in the way of painter’s or sculptor’s gifts to listen to him … Under its apparent classicism, [Fauré’s music] contains the most magnificently revolutionary audacities.”

He’s so right. Particularly in his later works – in which Fauré, like Beethoven before him, having been deprived of the outer world of sound, created his own, ecstatically radiant aural universe – the quiet shock of his extreme harmonies still has the power to make us gasp. As with Beethoven, the creations of his last period contain even deeper subtleties than the (perhaps) more outwardly attractive earlier works. And also corresponding to the older German master (whom Fauré, unlike many of the French composers of his time, revered), Fauré’s music, despite his increasingly poor health never strays anywhere near self-pity or depression. His avowed intention was to show through his music a reality better than our own – and how he succeeds. There is a joy, an energy, a luminous quality to his output that is unique.

Fauré’s music uplifts – and moves us deeply. The French musicologist and Fauré’s contemporary Joseph de Marliave expresses it well when he wrote that the simplicity of Fauré’s music “is so great that it can surprise us before it touches and moves us”. Absolutely true: often in rehearsals I have found that it is the seemingly artless touches – some unassuming passing notes in the slow movement of the second piano quintet, for instance, or the unadorned rising scale that forms the second main theme of the string quartet (his last work) – that suddenly bring tears to the eyes.

Since being introduced as a child to his music Fauré has been an important presence in my life. In fact, he has been something of a benevolent if absent godfather, playing a surprisingly big role in many of the important relationships in my life – it’s no coincidence that my son is named Gabriel. The current festival at London’s Wigmore Hall gives me a rare and precious opportunity to play his entire chamber music output with musician-friends for whom Fauré is a similarly central figure. It is our way of offering thanks for all the blessings he has bestowed on us.

Beyond the Requiem: Steven Isserlis’s five favourite Fauré works

Cantique de Racine Fauré was still a teenager – still at school, in fact – when he wrote this meltingly beautiful choral song.
Theme and variations for piano, op 73 Fauré’s only “official” set of variations, this is a winner.
Clair de Lune, Mandoline There are so many glorious Fauré songs that it’s impossible to pick just one; I find these two especially touching.
Piano trio op 120 If I had to choose one piece by Fauré – thank God I don’t – this would have to be it. Ecstatic hardly begins to describe it …
String quartet, op 121 Fauré’s farewell to life, his last work – profound, gentle, deeply moving; and ultimately joyous.

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✔️This Is Your Strictly Come Dancing 2024 Week 5 Report ✔️

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This week on Strictly Come Dancing … missing lemons, a Quekstep & a crab or two.

LIVE SHOW,Montell Douglas and Johannes Radebe ,BBC Public Service,Guy Levy
Strictly Come Dancing
LIVE SHOW,Montell Douglas and Johannes Radebe ,BBC Public Service,Guy Levy
Strictly Come Dancing
LIVE SHOW,Montell Douglas and Johannes Radebe ,BBC Public Service,Guy Levy

[embed]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5UcwUlYlHE0[/embed]

[embed]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=96aUjWb_Yro[/embed]

Strictly Come Dancing
LIVE SHOW,Sarah Hadland & Vito Coppola,BBC Public Service,Guy Levy

Strictly Come Dancing Week 5

  • Montell Douglas and Johannes Radebe – Couple’s Choice to Skeleton Move by KG, Zanda Zakuza
  • Punam Krishan and Gorka Márquez – Viennese Waltz to She’s Always A Woman To Me by Billy Joel
  • Sam Quek MBE and Nikita Kuzmin  – Quickstep to Unwritten by Natasha Bedingfield
  • Sarah Hadland and Vito Coppola – Samba to Do It Do It Again by Rafaella Carrà
  • Tasha Ghouri and Aljaž Škorjanec – Tango to Dog Days Are Over by Florence + The Machine
  • Chris McCausland and Dianne Buswell – Waltz to You’ll Never Walk Alone by Gerry and the Pacemakers
  • Jamie Borthwick and Michelle Tsiakkas – Paso Doble to Malagueña by Ernesto Lecuona
  • JB Gill and Amy Dowden – Jive to Hey Ya! by Outkast
  • Paul Merson and Karen Hauer – Samba to Car Wash by Rose Royce
  • Pete Wicks and Jowitza Przystal – Rumba to Don’t Look Back In Anger by Oasis
  • Shayne Ward and Nancy Xu – American Smooth to Get Here by Sam Smith
  • Wynne Evans and Katya Jones – Quickstep to Mr. Blue Sky by Electric Light Orchestra

[embed]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ip9fKZu6okU[/embed]

Strictly Come Dancing
LIVE SHOW,Wynne Evans and Katya Jones ,BBC Public Service,Guy Levy
Strictly Come Dancing
Paul Merson & Karen Hauer,BBC Public Service,Guy Levy

Short trip down Strictly Memory Lane, FYI :

Strictly Come Dancing
LIVE SHOW,Shayne Ward & Nancy Xu,BBC Public Service,Guy Levy
Strictly Come Dancing
Dr Punam Krishan and Gorka Marquez,BBC Public Service,Guy Levy

[embed]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uyZ8cibfRDo[/embed]

Strictly Come Dancing
LIVE SHOW,Sarah Hadland & Vito Coppola,BBC Public Service,Guy Levy
Strictly Come Dancing
LIVE SHOW,Sam Quek and Nikita Kuzmin ,BBC Public Service,Guy Levy

[embed]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X23vAiXjMeU[/embed]

Strictly Come Dancing
JB Gill,BBC Public Service,Guy Levy
Strictly Come Dancing
Pete Wicks and Jowita Przystal ,BBC Public Service,Guy Levy

Don’t miss a Strictly sequin by clicking on the image below!

Strictly Come Dancing

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The bohemians who trained a generation of British artists

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From the October 2024 issue of Apollo. Preview and subscribe here. Since its reopening in 2022, after a major capital development that fully restored its Georgian house and garden, Gainsborough’s House has been enjoying many improvements. Among them is the three-storey exhibition wing, which has gifted Suffolk with its largest gallery. It is proving to be a handsome environment for art of all…

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6 Photos of Street Art by Banksy in Gaza, Palestine

In the rubble-strewn streets of Gaza, an unexpected figure emerges – a playful kitten adorned with a sassy red bow. This street art gem is none other than Banksy’s signature touch, adding a splash of amusement to a landscape of devastation.

Banksy‘s kitten, with its wild fur and wide-eyed curiosity, feels like a tongue-in-cheek nod to resilience amidst chaos. It’s as if the kitten is saying, “I’ve got nine lives, and not even this rubble can phase me!” Yet, the ruins around tell a deeper, sadder tale of a city bearing the scars of conflict.

In just one image, Banksy manages to capture Gaza’s heartbreaking reality and sprinkle it with a dash of hope and humor. It’s a bittersweet blend of artistry, offering a momentary escape while urging us not to forget.

More from Palestine: In August 2005, Team Banksy visited The West Bank


Street Art by Banksy in Gaza, Palestine 1

Street Art by Banksy in Gaza, Palestine 2

Banksy: A local man came up and said ‘Please – what does this mean?’ I explained I wanted to highlight the destruction in Gaza by posting photos on my website – but on the internet people only look at pictures of kittens.


Street Art by Banksy in Gaza, Palestine 3

Street Art by Banksy in Gaza, Palestine 4

Banksy: Gaza is often described as ‘the world’s largest open air prison’ because no-one is allowed to enter or leave. But that seems a bit unfair to prisons – they don’t have their electricity and drinking water cut off randomly almost every day.


Street Art by Banksy in Gaza, Palestine 5

Street Art by Banksy in Gaza, Palestine 6

More by Banksy: 24 artworks by Banksy: Who Is The Visionary of Street Art


What do you think about this street art by Banksy in Gaza?:

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‘Smile 2’ | Anatomy of a Scene

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“Hi, I’m Parker Finn. I am the writer, director and one of the producers of “Smile 2.” This scene takes place in the back half of the film, and we are with the character of Skye Riley, a pop star played by Naomi Scott. She’s the main character of the film. And we are jumping into this scene when she is at a peak level of paranoia. So in this scene, Skye is encountering this group of smilers. We’d never done a full group before. It felt like a really exciting new thing to do in this film. So this moment when they are chasing down the hallway after her. My production designer, Lester Cohen, and I had designed this mirrored hallway because we knew that by sending this horde of dancers down the hallway, all the reflections was going to exponentially grow the amount of faces and arms and limbs we see. These dancers that I got to work with and my choreographer, Celia Rowlson-Hall, it was this incredible collaboration to create something that felt both like a menacing attack, but also at the same time dance. For the bulk of the scene, we had 14 dancers and they’re all performing this choreography, but they all also had to be employing the smile throughout. So it was really about coaching them, how to do the smile, but also how to hold onto it while doing all of this movement. But also how we have Naomi, who is performing choreography, but for her to make it look not like choreography, like she’s just suddenly being attacked and doesn’t know what’s going to happen next.

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A memorial slide show for David

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A memorial slide show for David

Friday | October 18, 2024    open printable version

After David’s memorial service in May (a video recording of which is permanently on Vimeo with no password necessary), some people on my Facebook page asked if a collection of photographs of David could be made available.

There was a slide show created to run on a loop in the lobby of the funeral home on the day of the service. I just posted it on Vimeo, also on the channel that David set up in order to put some lectures online. Again, there’s no password and it will remain online. This link takes you directly to it.

I thought it would be appropriate to begin and end it with frames from the funeral scene in Ozu’s End of Summer (above). In between are photos provided by many of our friends and colleagues, going back as far as a scan of a college yearbook photo of David as part of a group of projectionists he belonged to in his undergraduate days. The photos range from David alongside celebrities, at festivals and conferences,  and just relaxing at  the badminton parties we used to hold in our back yard.

The slides change automatically about every twelve seconds, but as with any video you can pause them. Many of you will want to do that for group photos; you’ll recognize old friends.

Thanks to our friend Michele Smith, who put together the original slide show. I think the images capture his personality as we all fondly remember him. Thanks also to Erik Gunneson for turning it into a video and for posting it.

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on Friday | October 18, 2024 at 2:42 pm and is filed under David Bordwell, Film comments.

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YSG Studio Blends Nordic Minimalism with Middle Eastern Exuberance in a Victorian Home in Melbourne

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One of the most remarkable aspects of the renovation is the owners’ colour-blindness, which allowed YSG Studio to take bold creative liberties with the palette. Vibrant hues that might overwhelm a more traditional home were used to dramatic effect, with rich textures enhancing the scheme's appeal. Garnet-red, peach, and baby-blue floor tiles anchor the space, while natural lime wash on the walls provides a tactile, earthy finish. Light Queensland Maple timber joinery adds warmth in the spirit of Scandinavian interiors throughout the home, contrasting beautifully with the kitchen’s apple-green birch cupboards, tangerine pulls, and turquoise granite fruit vessels cleverly integrated into the island. Garnet-red upholstery enlivens the breakfast nook, which is designed as a curvaceous alcove inspired by Egyptian architect Hassan Fathy’s mud-brick constructions, blending traditional influences with contemporary flair.

Coloured glass ribbons adorning the windows add yet another layer of playfulness. The strategic use of coloured glass, which can be found throughout the house, not only accentuates YSG Studio’s vibrant colour scheme but also ties into the home’s overarching theme of blending cultural motifs, as seen in the shifting hues from deep garnet in the communal areas to soft pinks and lilacs in the master suite. The use of vibrant marble in the bathrooms—Rosso Asiago in the powder room and Verde Riviera in the master ensuite—further plays into the house’s tactile and colourful narrative, as does the master bedroom’s quilted lapis lazuli headboard which provides a counterpoint to the softer baby blue, lilac and pink hues.



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