reprinted from Huffington Post:
Lulumania is sweeping New York, And Lulu, it seems, is everywhere.
Frank Wedekind's legendary femme fatale, who's beguiling behavior inspired nearly as many artists as Helen of Troy's beauty launched ships, can be found all over New York City.
Alban Berg's modernist opera, Lulu, which was based on Wedekind's two "Lulu" plays, Erdgeist (Earth Spirit, 1895) and Die Büchse der Pandora (Pandora's Box, 1904), has just opened a month-long run at the Metropolitan Opera. This new production stars the soprano Marlis Petersen and is directed by the South African artist William Kentridge, who's dynamic art for the staging of the opera proves as seductive and active as Lulu herself. The Met's new production of Lulu runs through December 3. On November 21, Lulu will be live streamed to theaters across the United States.
Kentridge's Lulu at Marion Goodman Gallery
PHOTO: Marion Goodman Gallery
Kentridge's Lulu at Marion Goodman Gallery
PHOTO: Marion Goodman Gallery
PHOTO: Marion Goodman Gallery
The Arion Press edition of The Lulu Plays is a fine achievement. Four-hundred copies of this limited edition artist's book were printed by letterpress on luxurious creamy paper utilizing period type in fittingly black and red inks. The book, which is hand bound and comes in a slipcase, can be seen and no-doubt fondled at the Arion Press booth at the IFPDA Print Fair at the Park Avenue Armory through November 8.
Louise Brooks as Lulu in the 1929 film Pandora's Box.
PHOTO: Louise Brooks Society
If you are looking for a little background on Kentridge's art and its use in the new production of Berg's opera, as well as the Arion Press edition of The Lulu Plays, check out this video of a recent onstage conversation between Kentridge and Arion publisher Andrew Hoyem which took place last month at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Those in upstate New York who can't make it to NYC can look forward to seeing some of this work in the future. The newly renamed George Eastman Museum in Rochester recently announced that Kentridge has given the definitive collection of his archive and art -- including films, videos and digital works, as well as his work for Lulu -- to the museum. Founded in the 1940s, the museum has one of the world's largest and oldest photography and film collections. And as fans of the actress well know, it was also the longtime home of Louise Brooks.
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