1341645 The Flapper (ref #34A). Marco Montedoro.
The Flapper (ref #34A)
The Flapper (ref #34A)
The Flapper (ref #34A)
Montedoro, Marco

The Flapper (ref #34A)

A painting by costume designer Marco Montedoro showing a flapper dress design for an unidentified production. Unsigned. Gouache and pencil on paper. Dimensions: w 11 in x h 17 in. Condition: Good to very good. Paper lightly age-toned and marked. Two closed tears: one to lower left edge (1 in) and one to center right edge (⅝ in). The tear to the center right edge has been stabilized with tape on the verso. Some bumping to edges and corners, including a crease to lower left corner and a small open tear to lower right corner. Some marking and yellowed tape to verso.

THIS ITEM IS AT OUR DUPONT STORE.

1341645

Arts & Antiques

Price: $200

NOTES

Marco Montedoro (1887-1947) was born in Italy to a family of musicians. Regarded as a child prodigy, he was sent to Paris to study drawing and painting as a teenager. He established himself as an artist there, and remained in Paris until 1913 when he became the artistic director of the Metropol in Berlin. Montedoro moved back to Italy for the duration of WWI, where he designed posters for Italian theaters and cinemas. He returned to Paris after the war, and found work designing costumes for Le Palace, Les Ambassadeurs, Moulin Rouge, and Folies Bergère (including a 1927 production featuring Josephine Baker). During this period, he also designed productions in Milan, Berlin, London, St. Petersburg, and Poland.

In 1930, Montedoro relocated to New York City and designed for the Schuberts, including the 1941-1942 Broadway production of La Vie Parisienne. From 1932-1947, he worked alongside Vincinte Minelli designing sets and costumes for Radio City Music Hall, where Montedoro became head designer. Montedoro's talent is featured in Angelo Luerti's 2006 book Non Solo Erté - Not Only Erté, Costume Design for the Paris Music Hall 1918-1940.

Provenance: Before his death, Montedoro gave a significant collection of his designs to his close friend Hella Aronson (a German Jewish newspaper illustrator who had emigrated to New York from Nazi Germany before the beginning of WWII). The collection has remained with the Aronson family since that time.

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