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Charles Marvin Fairchild (SFS '48) Memorial
Gallery
October 17, 2005 · January
15, 2006
Home · Illustrations · Press
Gallery Talk: A
gallery talk for TILTING AT WINDMILLS: DON QUIXOTE
AT 400 will be held on Friday, November 18, from 11:00
a.m. to noon in the Fairchild Gallery, with Prof. Barbara
Mujica, of the Department of Spanish and Portuguese.
Admission is free and is open to the public. If you
plan to attend, please contact the Georgetown University
Art Collection at (202) 687-4484; artcollection@georgetown.edu.
The gallery talk is being held in conjunction with
the symposium on Don Quixote being held by
the Department of Spanish and Portuguese
in the Murray Room on the fifth floor of Lauinger Library,
including
a panel discussion at 1:00 p.m. with
Professors Francisco LaRubia Prado, Gwen Kirkpatrick,
and Barbara Mujica,
to be followed at 3:00 p.m. with a presentation
of the 1985 film Monsignor Quixote, with Alec
Guinness, directed by Rodney Bennett.
To see the images, please click the thumbnails;
a larger image will open in a new window.
Close the window to return to the Tilting
At Windmills:
Don Quixote at 400 illustration page.
Lucille Gilling
b. 1905 Hamilton, Missouri
d. 1997 Toronto
A Portfolio of Ten Etchings by Lucille Gilling
based on Don Quixote de la Mancha, by Miguel de Cervantes (Willowdale, Ontario: The Studio, 1968)
color etchings; ed. 14/100
from plates approximately 25 x 21 cm
Georgetown University Library
Special Collections Division

The Knighting
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Windmills
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Encounter with
the Biscayan
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Maritornes
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Sancho Tossed
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The Convict
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Dulcinea
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Flight of Clavileno
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Sancho's Judgement
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The Return
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Lucille Gilling began her art studies at the Kansas
City Art Institute. After graduating, she
continued her art training overseas in Paris, Italy,
and England,
where she met and married her second husband,
a Canadian military officer, in 1942. After the war
they moved
to Ontario, where Gilling studied etching
under the noted artists Nicholas Hornyansky and Guillermo
Silva
Santamaria. She joined the Society of Canadian
Painter-Etchers and Engravers in 1958 and exhibited
her work in several
galleries in the environs of Toronto. In
1966, Gilling created a portfolio of ten color etchings
based on
Chaucer's Canterbury Tales, the success
of which led her to undertake this second literary-inspired
portfolio, on Cervantes' Don Quixote in 1968.
Her Don Quixote was exhibited at the Houston
Galleria in 1972. Gilling's autobiography, Bright
Shines the Sunlight, was published in London in 1986.
El Ingenioso Hidalgo Don Quixote de
la Mancha, compuesto por Miguel de Cervántes
Saavedra. Nueva ed. Corregida por la Real
Academia Española... Madrid,
por Don Ibarra Impresor de Cámara
de S.M. y de la Real Academia. (Madrid:
Ibarra
and Spanish Royal Academy, 1780)
Commissioned by the Real Academia de la
Lengua in Madrid, and produced by the preeminent
eighteenth century publisher Joaquín
Ibarra y Martín (1728-85), this
is one of the finest early editions of
Cervantes' masterpiece. With this elaborate,
critical edition, the Academia decisively
embraced Cervantes' epic as a classic of
Spanish literature and culture, well after
its critical reception in England and France.
Volume I (unfortunately, missing from
Georgetown's holdings) contains an introduction
with a biography of the author, an analysis
of the novel, and a chronological outline
of the adventures and exploits of the wandering
Don. The volume also features a double-page
map of Spain, and an engraved portrait
of Cervantes. The four-volume set is embellished
by engraved frontispieces and thirty-one
full-page engravings after drawings by
various artists including Antonio Carnicero,
José del Castillo, and Gregorio
Ferro. Printed on rich, heavy paper, by
the finest artists and artisans of the
day, it is a monument of Spanish printing
and book production.
The frontispiece to volumes I and II,
shown here, reveals the heroic knight about
to be crowned by a hovering Cupid. The
books burning in the left corner may be
an allusion to the anti-clerical sentiment
of the reign of Charles III, with the substitution
of a goat-devil for the curate who burned
Quixote's books of knight-errantry in Part
1, chapter 6 of the novel. The lion beside
him is a reference to chapter 17 of Part
2, when the Don is made "Knight of the
Lions," after his perceived triumph over
a caged lion. The woman attired as a jester
to his right, an allegorical representation
of folly, holds a mirror to his face bearing
the image of Dulcinea. Rachel Schmidt explains
in Critical Images: The Canonization
of Don Quixote Through Illustrated Editions
of the Eighteenth Century*, how this frontispiece
parodies the traditional memorializing
devices of contemporary visual allegory.
This mock-heroic parody, in keeping with
the befuddled delusions of the Don, seems
a fitting subversion of the traditional
use of allegory to elevate the author or
patron on a book's frontispiece.
* Montréal, Ithaca: McGill-Queen's
University Press, 1999.
William Hogarth
b. 1697 London
d. 1764 London
engravings
Georgetown University Library
Special Collections Division

The Adventure of Mambrino's Helmet (22.5
x 17 cm)
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The Freeing of the Galley Slaves (22
x 17.7 cm)
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Don Quixote and the Knight of the Rock (23.8
x 17.9 cm)
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The Curate and Barber Disguising Themselves (23
x 17 cm)
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William
Hogarth, the preëminent satirist of eighteenth
century British society, submitted six
engravings for the 1738 edition of Don Quixote published by J. and
R. Tonson, as commissioned by John, Viscount Carteret.
His illustrations, however, were not included in that
publication, but those of another artist, John Vanderbank,
were. It is not known exactly why the Hogarth works
were rejected, whether the artist did not appreciate
Carteret's control over the project; or whether
Carteret and the publishers favored the more passive
drawings by Vanderbank, which often presented a more
subtle interpretation of the narrative.
The Hogarth plates, purchased by Tonson, were acquired
by print publisher John Boydell and published by him
in 1790, as well as by the engraver William Heath in
1822.
Georgetown University Library owns four of the six
engravings, titled above. The other two, shown here
in reproduction, are: The Funeral of Chrysostom, and
Quixote Being Cared for by the Innkeeper's Wife
and Daughter. All scenes are from Part 1 of the novel.
Paul Gustave Doré
b. 1832 Strasbourg
d. 1883 Paris
Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra, The history of Don
Quixote. The text ed. by J. W. Clark, and a biographical
notice
of Cervantes by T. Teignmouth Shore; illus.
by Gustave Doré (London: Cassell, Petter, and Galpin, 1864)
Georgetown University Library
Special Collections Division
The prolific, virtuoso etcher and engraver Gustave
Doré completed illustrations for several classic
works of literature, including La Commedia by Dante
Alighieri, Paradise Lost by John Milton, and The Bible.
The approximately 180 illustrations eventually published
for Don Quixote in 1863 are among Doré's
most famous, and have been reproduced in editions in
a number of languages. This edition is open to Doré's
depiction of Don Quixote's reference to "a
great lake of pitch, boiling hot, and swimming and
writhing about in it, a swirling mass of serpents,
snakes, lizards, and many other kinds of grisly and
savage creatures..." during his argument
with the canon, from chapter 50 of Part 1.
Cervantes describes Don Quixote as "about
fifty years of age, of a sturdy constitution, but wizened
and gaunt-featured...." Doré's
image of the knight-errant as an elderly, haggard man
with a long beard has had wide influence on later artistic
representations, as can be seen from other illustrations
in the exhibition. According to The Cervantes Encyclopedia, "Doré's
romantic vision of Don Quixote and Sancho
Panza, together with his superb evocation
of the legendary world of
chivalry, have made this the single most
reprinted and imitated set of graphic interpretations
of Miguel
Cervantes' novel." (Howard Mancing, The
Cervantes Encyclopedia, Volume 1: A-K [Westport, Conn.:
Greenwood Press, 2004], 247.)

Adolphe Lalauze
b. 1838 Rive-de-Gier, France
d. 1906 Milly, France
Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra, The History of the
Ingenious Gentleman Don Quixote of la Mancha / translated
from
the Spanish by P. A. Motteux... (Edinburgh: William
Paterson, 1879-1884)
This frontispiece portrait by French engraver Adolpe
Lalauze is based on various earlier prototypes,
all derived from the presumed portrait of Cervantes
attributed
to Juan de Jáuregui (c. 1570-1640) in the Real
Academia Española (Spanish Royal Academy) in
Madrid. Lalauze, winner of several medals
at the annual Paris Salon exhibitions and
Chevalier of France's Legion
of Honor, engraved thirty-seven plates
for this four-volume edition published
in Edinburgh in 1879.
Enric-Cristófol
Ricart
b. 1893 Barcelona
d. 1960 Barcelona
The ingenious
gentleman Don Quixote of La Mancha
/ by Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra; translated,
and with
an introduction, by John Ormsby; illustrated
by Enric-C(ristófol)
Ricart (Barcelona: Oliva de Vilanova for the
Limited Editions Club, 1933)
ed. 51/1500; signed on colophon
Georgetown University Library
Special Collections Division
Gift of Mary Jane Donner in honor of
the Library's bicentennial This two-volume Don Quixote was one of the early issues
from the Limited Editions Club, founded during the
Great Depression by publisher George Macy (1900-1956)
to provide quality cloth editions of classic and important
contemporary books, with fine illustrations, by annual
subscription for a middle-class market. Macy would
contract with printers around the world to produce
the books; Don Quixote was printed by Oliva de Vilanova
of Barcelona, which hired noted Barcelona portraitist
and illustrator Enric-Cristófol Ricart. This
engraving facing the title page shows Ricart's Art
Deco interpretation of the famous "imagination" scene
from chapter 1, represented elsewhere in this exhibition
with works by Doré and Mueller. A catalogue
raisonné of Ricart's prints was published in
1988.
Bohumil Krátký
b. 1913 Prague
Don Quixote and Sancho Panza, 1980
color lithographic
bookplate
10.5 x 8 cm
Anonymous private collection
Bohumil Krátký is a Czech lithographer,
illustrator, and designer of fine ex libris, or book
plates. He studied at l'École des Beaux-Arts
in Paris and the Academy of Fine Arts in Prague. After
the Second World War, Krátký settled
permanently in his wife's hometown of Telc, south
of Prague. Beginning in 1968 with the "Prague
Spring" invasion of Czechoslovakia by the Soviet
Union and its allies, Krátký became an
active protestor against those forces, and as a result
was banned from creating or exhibiting art works for
many years. Today he is a highly esteemed and actively
collected graphic artist, and is the recipient of numerous
national and international prizes. He has created more
than 470 ex libris prints, including a series of twelve
based on Don Quixote, and has exhibited throughout
Europe, India, and Japan.
Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra, Don Quixote; trans. Walter Starkie, with introduction
by Edward H. Friedman (New York: Penguin Putnam,
Inc./Signet
Classic, 2001)
Collection of David C. Alan
After four centuries, editions of Don Quixote continue
to be issued. This Signet Classic paperback, with a
new introduction from 2001, features on its cover a
masterful 1955 ink drawing by Spanish artist Pablo
Picasso (1881-1973), now in le Musée d'art
et d'histoire in Saint-Denis, France. The incongruous
pair of Don Quixote and Sancho Panza has become so
famous that these abstract silhouettes (against a backdrop
of the tell-tale windmills) are immediately recognizable.
Most of the quotations from Don Quixote in this exhibition
have been taken from this translation.
Arvid Paulson and
Clayton Edwards, The Story of Don Quixote (New York:
Stokes, 1922)
Anonymous private collection
This condensed, juvenile edition of Don Quixote by
Arvid Paulson and Clayton Edwards was selected for
its attractive cover paste-down illustration. The book
interior includes four color plates by Florence Choate
and Elizabeth Curtis, New York illustrators who worked
together on more than a dozen children's books in the
first half of the twentieth century. Both women had
studied at the Art Students League in New York and
in Paris.
Henri ("Henry") Morin
b. 1873 Strasbourg
d. 1961
Don Quichotte de la Manche (Paris: H. Laurens, not
dated)
circa 1935
Anonymous private collection
Henry Morin was born in Strasbourg and trained at
l'Académie des Beaux-Arts in Paris. In
his thirties, the artist became an established
illustrator of children's books, and from
1897 to 1925 was
one of the main contributing artists of
the popular serial Mon Journal. Later in his career Morin became
devoted to religious subjects and designed stained
glass windows for various churches, most notably those
of the Le Mans cathedral southwest of Paris.
Stanley Bate
b. 1903 Nashville
d. 1972 Craryville, New York
Don Quixote, 1951
color wood engraving, ed.150
29.7 x 21.2 cm
Georgetown University Library
Special Collections Division
This intriguing abstract line representation of Don
Quixote with his lance atop his faithful steed Rocinante
was the "membership edition" for the Albany Print Club
in 1951. In the presentation essay for the print, Bate's
Don Quixote was said to be "the sad old gentleman distilled
to essence." One can speculate on the influence of
the "wire sculptures" of Alexander Calder (1898-1976)
in conceiving the work's formal approach.
Hans Alexander Mueller
b. 1888; Nordhausen, Germany
d. 1963; New Milford, Connecticut
Don Quixote, 1950
color woodcut, ed. 260
32.6 x 24.2 cm
Georgetown University Library
Special Collections Division
Hans Alexander Mueller was one of several
prominent masters of woodcut and wood-engraving
in Germany who were influential in the
past century. (Among his protégés
was the young Lynd Ward (1905-1985), who
introduced the wood-engraved wordless novel
to the United States, and who was the subject
of the previous Fairchild Gallery exhibition,
Lynd Ward: A Centennial Appreciation.)
Mueller provided forty-six color wood-engraved
illustrations for the 1941 New York/Random
House edition of a translation of Don
Quixote by Peter Anthony (né Pierre
Antoine) Motteux (1660-1718) (see also
in this exhibition the 1879 Edinburgh/William
Paterson edition of Motteux). Of Mueller's
work, editor and critic Edwin Seaver (1900-1987)
wrote in the foreword, "Not since the drawings
of Gustave Doré, it seems to me,
have there been any illustrations for Don
Quixote that can match these...."
For his popular 1939 text Woodcuts & Wood
Engravings: How I Make Them, Mueller
used one of his illustrations being prepared
for the 1941 Don Quixote to
demonstrate how the midtone (color) plate
and the black plate (for shadows and
details) combine against the white paper
to produce images well-defined in volume
and depth.
In 1950, a few years before the semiseptcentennial
of Don Quixote, Mueller was commissioned
by the Cleveland Print Club to produce
a "membership edition" of a scene from
the novel. (Print clubs often offer, as
a benefit of membership, an original commissioned
work available exclusively to members.)
Mueller produced this charming two-color
woodcut, representing as a "castle in the
sky" the flurry of imagination that preceded
Don Quixote's quest; his first adventure
as a "knight-errant" was to be in chapter
2 at the inn, which he saw as "a castle
with four turrets, the pinnacles of which
were of glittering silver...."
Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra, The
first part of the life and achievements
of the renowned Don Quixote de la Mancha; trans.
Peter Motteux (New York: Random House,
1941).
Hans Alexander Mueller, Woodcuts & Wood
Engravings: How I Make Them (New
York: Pynson Printers, 1939).
Luis Sanchez Martinez
b. 1913 Bilbao
d. ?
Cervantes memorial on the façade
of the Trinitarian Convent, Madrid
Plaza de España, Madrid, with
Cervantes monument; Edificio de España
behind
1961
watercolors
26.5 x 20; 19 x 25.2 cm
Georgetown University Library
Special Collections Division
Francis L. Fadner, S.J., Collection
Cervantes fought against the Ottoman Turks
in the Battle of Lepanto in 1571, and joined
his brother in the company of Manuel Ponce
de Leon a year later. The Trinitarian Friars
secured Cervantes' release from an Algerian
prison with the sum of 500 gold pieces
in 1580, after five years' incarceration
and four escape attempts. Close to the
end of his life, Cervantes became a member
of the order of San Francisco. The Franciscans
buried don Miguel de Cervantes, by then
known as "the prince of the ingenious," in
a Trinitarian convent in Madrid on April
23, 1616. Coincidentally, this was the
same day as Shakespeare's death at Stratford-Upon-Avon
in England. It often is speculated that
the bard could have read Part I of Don
Quixote, as the first English translation
by Thomas Shelton was published in 1612.
These watercolor views are of the Trinitarian
convent with the memorial on its façade
to Cervantes, and the Cervantes monument
on the Plaza de España in Madrid.
The watercolors were acquired by Georgetown
University's Francis L. Fadner, S.J. (1910-1987),
Third Regent of the University's School
of Foreign Service and professor of history,
during one of his sojourns in Spain. They
are by a Spanish artist born in Bilbao,
who founded an artists' society in that
city called Nueva Bohemia; he was a noted
painter of landscape and still-life.
The Cervantes monument in Madrid's Plaza
de España, with its statues of Don
Quixote and Sancho Panza, was created by
Lorenzo Coullaut-Valera in 1928-30. A popular
and prolific Spanish sculptor, C.-Valera
executed a number of monuments in parks
and gardens throughout Madrid and Seville,
where he was born in 1876.
François-André Danican Philidor
b. 1726 Dreux, France
d. 1795 London
Antoine Alexandre Henri Poinsinet
b. 1735 Fontainebleau
d. 1769 Córdoba
Sancho Pança dans son isle:
opéra bouffon en un acte; par
M. Poinsinet, le jeune; la musique est
de M. Philidor ; représenté pour
la premier fois par les Comédiens
italiens ordinaires du Roi, le 8 juillet
1762 (Paris: Chez Duchesne ...,
[1762?])
Georgetown University Library
Special Collections Division
François-André Danican Philidor
was an early composer of "comic operas," who
collaborated with librettist Antoine Alexandre
Henri Poinsinet on a number of Philidor's
more commercially and artistically successful
works. Sancho Pança dans son
isle is based on the episode from
chapter 45 of Part 2 of Don Quixote in
which the knight-errant's sidekick is made
governor of the island of Barataria. This
opera is one of several works in the exhibition
that highlight the continuing influence
of Don Quixote on not only the
visual arts, but in other art forms as
well.
Reference: Grove Music Online <www.grovemusic.com>
Mitch Leigh, Joe Darion, and Dale Wasserman,
composers, Original Cast: Man of La
Mancha (phonographic disc) (New York:
Kapp Red Label Series: KRL-4505, 1966);
cover illustration by Al Hirschfeld
Collection of David C. Alan
The American National Theatre and Academy, Man
of La Mancha (audience program)
(Albert Marre, director; New York, 1965)
Collection of David C. Alan
The beloved Broadway musical Man of
La Mancha had 2,328 performances
in an original run of nearly six years,
and in 1972 was made into a motion picture. Man
of La Mancha presented a challenging
dramatic concept, with the leading role
alternating between the character Don
Quixote and the author Miguel Cervantes.
The cover of the theatre program featured
the Gustave Doré illustration of
Don Quixote in the first chapter absorbing
the books of chivalry that had become his
obsession: "His imagination became filled
with a host of fancies he had read in his
books - enchantments, quarrels, battles,
challenges, wounds, courtships, loves,
tortures, and many other absurdities. So
true did all this phantasmagoria from books
appear to him that in his mind he accounted
no history of the world more authentic." Declaring
that "No character in literature has been
as copiously illustrated as the MAN
OF LA MANCHA," the program featured a spread
of some of the better-known depictions,
including by Honoré Daumier (1808-79)
and the William Hogarth Adventure of
Mambrino's Helmet shown in this exhibition, along
with original illustrations.
Famed caricaturist Al Hirschfeld (1903-2003),
who specialized in entertainment figures,
drew the illustration for the cover of
the best-selling soundtrack from the musical,
which featured Richard Kiley (Don Quixote),
Joan Diener (Aldonza), and Irving Jacobson
(Sancho Panza).
The foolish knight-errant Don Quixote
became a nearly triumphant figure in the
instant-classic hit from the show, "The
Impossible Dream":
To dream the impossible dream,
To fight the unbeatable foe,
To bear with unbearable sorrow,
To run where the brave dare not go....
And the world will be better for this,
That one man, scorned and covered with scars,
Still strove, with the last of his courage,
To reach the unreachable stars!
As critic Brooks Atkinson notes in the
program, "Although Don Quixote is a fool,
no one can afford to be complacent about
him. In worldly terms his foolishness consists
of being an idealist. There is a touch
of nobility behind the clown's mask."
Playbill for the Bolshoi Ballet production
of Don Quixote, Wolf Trap National
Park for the Performing Arts; Vienna, Virginia;
August 5-6, 2005
Anonymous private collection
Playbill for the Suzanne Farrell Ballet
production of Don Quixote, The
John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing
Arts; Washington, D.C.; June 22-26, 2005
Anonymous private collection
Although there were ballet productions
of Don Quixote as early as 1740
with a staging in Vienna by Franz Hilverding,
the version most popularly performed today
had its debut at Moscow's Bolshoi Theater
in 1869. The choreographer and librettist,
Marius Petipa created a four-act ballet
to music by Ludwig Minkus incorporating
the more comic episodes from the second
part of Cervantes' novel featuring the
coquettish innkeeper's daughter Quiteria
(known in the ballet by the Russian Kitri),
and her suitor, a barber named Basilio.
The Petipa work quickly became a classic
of both the Bolshoi Theatre and the Kirov
Theatre of Leningrad; and was re-staged
with subtle changes by Aleksandr Gorsky
in 1906, and others throughout the first
half of the twentieth century. Don
Quixote was performed outside of Russia
in a two-act version, danced by Anna Pavlova
and her company, first in England in 1924.
The complete, full-length ballet was staged
in the West first in 1962 by England's
Ballet Rambert.
The scenes in the ballet open with a traditional
square in Barcelona, and move on to a Gypsy
camp and a fantasy sequence in which Don
Quixote falls asleep and dreams of Dulcinea
in her garden. The elaborate sets and designs
typically include live horses and/or donkeys
in some of the scenes. The final act is
a grand classical wedding at the court
of a Duke and Duchess, presided over by
the Don and his faithful partner Sancho
Panza. Two of the greatest dancers of the
twentieth century, Rudolf Nureyev and Mikhail
Baryshnikov, have immortalized the role
of Basilio, while ballerinas from Anna
Pavlova and Maya Plisetskaya to Gelsey
Kirkland have triumphed as Kitri.
The Russian-born choreographer George
Balanchine, founder of the New York City
Ballet, was inspired by his favorite muse,
the young ballerina Suzanne Farrell, to
create an entirely new staging of Don
Quixote with a commissioned score
by Nicolas Nabokov. As a youth, Balanchine
had performed in the Petipa/Minkus version
at the Marynisky Theater in 1916. At his
premier in 1965, Balanchine himself appeared
as the Don, with Suzanne Farrell as Dulcinea.
Unlike the joyous Petipa production, his
version of the story highlights the Don's
self-deluding fantasies and alienation
from society. At the center of the work
is his idealized love for the pure and
beautiful Dulcinea, whom he idolizes as
his savior. Her ethereal performance in
this role established Farrell as a star
and she was promoted to the rank of principal
dancer. After her retirement in 1989 and
subsequent rift with Balanchine's successor,
Farrell established a chamber troupe with
the financial backing of Washington, D.C.'s
Kennedy Center, where her company revived
the forty-year-old ballet in a performance
this past summer.
All text and images © Georgetown University. All rights reserved.
For reproduction information contact artcollection@georgetown.edu
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