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The pictures above are sequential test images of an as-yet unpainted maquette. It’s from my current project, which is to produce illustrations for a concert performance of Stravinsky’s The Soldier’s Tale. Here the Devil approaches. He carries a butterfly net for capturing unwary souls, and a magic book to tempt his prey. Extra hands, feet head and book add flexibility to the figure, allowing me to change the character’s positions and find lots of compositional variety.
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Back at the beginning of February I had an e-mail from the American musicologist and conductor David Montgomery. He’d seen three online images of monoprints I’d made years ago when I was planning an Old Stile Press book based on the libretto of Stravinsky’s The Soldier’s Tale. (L’Histoire du Soldat.)
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That particular project had come to nothing, and yet the music and the story have never been far from my mind. David wondered whether I might give permission for him to use the three existing monoprints. He wanted to screen them above the heads of the orchestra during a concert performance of The Soldier’s Tale in Washington DC this month, and was wondering whether there were any more images in the suite that he could use. There weren’t, but I couldn’t resist asking him how many images he was looking for. He replied that he didn’t think there needed to be many. He could make a little go a long way. How many could I produce?
I realised quite quickly that I couldn’t guarantee more monoprints in a hurry. Produced in sticky oil-based printing-ink on a glass plate, it is to a degree a serendipitous technique that results in one good image every now and again, but is messy and rather slow because of all the cleaning up of the inked plates between printing. I suggested making some collages instead, and David agreed.
To begin with I envisaged producing a cast of maquette characters, and that I would simply use images of those taken in different positions for the projected presentation. But while preparing a puppet of the Soldier…
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…I discovered that if I didn’t join the individual pieces together with metal brads… my usual technique… but simply used them as separate components to loosely compose each image, then these unfixed ‘collages’ could be much more flexible and diverse both in terms of composition and story-telling possibilities.
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For instance I could make extra pieces for each puppet, allowing a head to turn or allowing a hand to close around a violin bow.
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One figure could double up in many images, facing left, right or front according to what was required. A coat could be removed from a character, or a hat added. Using the techniques of replacement that are more usually the animator’s province, I could create in front of the camera not animation per se, but a great many diverse collage images. I wouldn’t aim for passages of fluidity, but I could produce narrative sequences characterised by a kind of slow-motion strobe. After all, The Soldier’s Tale lasts an hour. I couldn’t hope to produce an animation that long, but I could make enough collage images to stretch. It would even be relatively simple to produce an opening sequence for the concert, with a title card and a list of credits of the participants.
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Thereafter the characters could come to life in sequential imagery, projected onto a large screen above the orchestra. I’d effectively talked myself into another project and another tight deadline. Right now I’m working flat out on The Soldier’s Tale. My deadline is March 17th for the images, and the concert is to be on the 23rd. Anyone looking at what exists at the moment would be hard-pressed to make sense of it. Puppets and props are boxed and labelled. Upturn any box and a confetti shower of painted paper components spills out that would confound all but the most passionate devotee of jigsaw puzzles. But later this month and in front of a fixed camera and lights, the world of Stravinsky’s Soldier’s Tale will briefly come to life in my studio as I work to assemble the many images from the hundreds of fragments. The results will be e-mailed to the States, the video presentation edited together from them, and on the 23rd of March in Washington DC, Joseph the Soldier will caper as he plays his violin, the Devil’s carriage and the horses that pull it will sail above the toy landscape beneath, and the newly awakened Princess will dance to Stravinsky’s seductive, jazzy tango. All thanks to the magic of the world wide web!
Igor Stravinsky’s L’HISTOIRE DU SOLDAT (THE SOLDIER’S TALE)
Die Vereinigte Kirche (The United Church)
1920 G Street NW, Washington, D.C.
March 23rd










