Eugene Berman

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Eugene Berman
1899-1972
Costume for "La Serva Padrona"
1952
Opaque watercolor and black ink on paper.
10 15/16 x 8 3/8 inches (278 x 213 mm)
The Joseph F. McCrindle Collection.
2009.26
Notes: 

In 1949, the Ringling Museum in Sarasota, Florida purchased and reconstructed the world renowned Asolo Theater, which had been dismantled in 1930 and stored in Venice for almost 20 years. For the opening performance on February 26, 1952, A. Everett Austin, Jr., the museums's director, selected two short eighteenth century operas. One was La Serva Padrona (The Maid Mistress) by Giovanni Battista Pergolesi (1710-1736). The costumes and stage sets were designed by the Russian-born American painter Eugene Berman, who had received his first commission for the stage from "Chick" Austin at the Hartford Athenaeum in 1936. Pergoles's La Serva Padrona, premiering in Naples in 1733, was originally written as an intermezzo, a short comic piece to be performed during the intermissions of a longer, "serious" opera. Generally acknowledged as Pergolesi's best work, La Serva Padrona surpassed its more serious counterparts and became the template upon which future opera buffas, or comic operas, were based. The opera follows the maid mistress Serpina's elaborate schemes to win the hand of her master, the curmudgeonly bachelor Doctor Pandolfo, here pictured from the rear in Bermans costume design. This costume study is accompanied by a second sheet, depicting Pandolofo from the front, also gifted to the Morgan from the McCrindle Collection. Rory O'Dea, 2009

Inscription: 

Inscribed at lower right in pen and black ink, "E.B. 1952"; inscribed at top in pen and black ink, "La Serva Padrona".

Provenance: 
Joseph F. McCrindle, New York (McCrindle collection no. A0052).
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