Royal Opera House unveils colourful hand-painted silk installation telling its story
Designer Ali Pretty's twelve giant banners will be displayed in September
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Your support makes all the difference.London’s Royal Opera House has unveiled the huge hand-painted silk installation that will hang in the Paul Hamlyn Hall next month.
Twelve giant, 11-metre banners will be displayed vertically in the Covent Garden hall’s stunning vaulted glass ceiling as part of the Deloitte Ignite festival from 4 September.
Ali Pretty, founder and artistic director of not-for-profit outdoor arts organisation Kinetika, has designed the artwork, which tells the story of the Royal Opera House from its establishment and evolution of its architecture to the changing nature of performances and its development in the late Nineties. It also offers a glimpse of plans for the historic building’s future.
Pretty spent nearly 750 hours waxing and painting the colourful installation along with a dedicated team of 20 local artists and volunteers. She used the batik method, in which selected areas of silk are blocked out using wax before being hand-dyed.
The project is of personal significance for Pretty as her mother danced with the Royal Ballet Touring company in the Fifites.
“The Royal Opera House is one of the world’s most foremost cultural institutions. Telling almost 300 years worth of history in such a small space has been a challenge - there’s so much! - but we’re happy with how we’ve captured it,” she said.
“With the silks, the aim was to create something that connects the narrative of the Royal Opera House with the building itself. The silks will live on as a unique snapshot of the past that can be used over and over again.”
The installation is open to the public for free, with Kinetika also offering free hour-long batik workshops on 5 and 6 September.
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