Amargosa Opera House. |
In the spring of 1967, when Marta Becket found herself peering into the the old theater that would become the Amargosa Opera House, it was obviously abandoned.... and had been for some time. |
In July of 1968, Marta began what would become years of painstaking work, painting an entire audience on the walls, filled with characters who might have attended an opera back in the 16th century. From the King and Queen, to royalty, nobility, bullfighters, monks and nuns, the walls came to life. Inside the double doors she painted a lady dancing to an accompaniment provided by a musician playing an antique musical instrument. More characters from out of the past spilled onto the walls from her imagination, from ladies of the night to gypsies; from revelers to a group of royal children tended by a governess who is being courted by a gentleman seated in the balcony above.
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THE WALLS OF THIS THEATER AND I DEDICATE THESE MURALS TO THE PAST WITHOUT WHICH OUR TIMES WOULD HAVE NO BEAUTY Fin-1972 |
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When the mural was completed, Marta looked up at the ceiling and saw that those four happy years could be extended, perhaps two or three years. For the following two summers, she stood every day on the scaffold painting a blue sky filled with dancing cherubs, billowing clouds, the four winds in each corner, and a central dome with sixteen ladies playing antique musical instruments. She completed the ceiling by painting seven doves flying overhead for peace. |
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