George Tsypin

George Tsypin is an American stage designer, sculptor and architect. He was an artistic director, production designer and coauthor of the script for the Opening Ceremony of the Olympic Games in Sochi in 2014.

George Tsypin

Early life and education

Tsypin was born in Kazakhstan (former Soviet Union).[1] He studied architecture in Moscow and theater design in New York.

Career

Tsypin has worked for many years with renowned directors and composers, such as Julie Taymor, Peter Sellars, Francesca Zambello, Pierre Audi, Jurgen Flimm, Philip Glass, John Adams, Kaija Saariaho and Andrey Konchalovsky. He has a longstanding creative association with the conductor Valery Gergiev.

He has won many awards, including the International Competition of "New and Spontaneous Ideas for the Theater for Future Generations" at Georges Pompidou Center in Paris.

His designs for opera have been produced all over the world, including Salzburg Festival, Opera de Bastille in Paris, Covent Garden in London, La Scala in Milan, Mariinsky Theater in Saint Petersburg, Bolshoi Theater in Moscow and Metropolitan Opera in New York.

Tsypin has worked in all major theaters in the United States, as well as in film and television.

His sculpture received its first one-man gallery show in 1991 at the Twining Gallery in New York. He created the Planet Earth Gallery, one of the Millennium Projects in England: a major installation of moving architectural elements, videos and 200 sculptures.

Tsypin was chosen to exhibit his work at the Venice Biennale in 2002. His monograph, GEORGE TSYPIN OPERA FACTORY: Building in the Black Void, was published by Princeton Architectural Press in 2005.

Tsypin's Broadway debut as a set designer for a musical was Disney Theatrical's production of The Little Mermaid, at the Lunt-Fontanne Theatre.[2] He designed the set for the new musical Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark for which he won Outer Critics Award and received Tony Award nomination.

He designed the SeaGlass Carousel for Battery Park next to the World Trade Center site.[2][3][4]

Family

George lives in New York with his wife Galina. He has two daughters, Allie and Sonja, Allie is a director of music videos, Sonja is a cinematography student at the American Film Institute in Los Angeles.

Selected publications

  • Sculpting Space in the Theater: Conversations with the top set, light and costume designers - Paperback (Oct. 12, 2006) by Babak Ebrahimian
  • George Tsypin Opera Factory: Invisible City, Princeton Architectural Press, 2016
  • GEORGE TSYPIN OPERA FACTORY: Building in the Black Void" Princeton Architectural Press, 2005.
  • Inside George Tsypin Opera Factory by Lucy Lu, Peking, 2012.
  • Into the Abiss: Essays on Scenography by Arnold Aronson, University of Michigan Press, 2005
  • Tony Davis, Stage Design, RotoVision, 2001
  • Ronn Smith, American Set Design 2, pp. 159–173, Theatre Communications Group Inc, 1991
  • "George Tsypin", Polyhymnion

References

  1. "DESIGN FOR LIVING. George Tsypin constructs sets - and worlds - for New York theater". NY Daily News.
  2. Dunlap, David (13 August 2015). "New York's New Carousel Puts You in a Whirling School of Mechanized Fish". New York Times. Retrieved 14 August 2015.
  3. Sheftell, Jason (18 April 2013). "Sea-themed carousel set for Battery Park". New York Daily News. Retrieved 14 August 2015.
  4. Hoffman, Barbara (15 August 2015). "You have to see NYC's new $16 million carousel". New York Post. Retrieved 16 August 2015.
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