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CATALOGUE
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William Henry Archibald Constable
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William (Bill) Henry Archibald Constable
Constable was born in Bendigo, where he received early artistic training in
watercolours from Meta Townsend. After undertaking part of an apprenticeship as
an electrical engineer at the Jolimont Workshops, he pursued his studies at the
National Gallery of Victoria School in 1926, and the St. Martin's School of Art,
London in 1930.
Returning to Australia in the early 1930s, Constable's first engagement as a
theatre designer was for (1934) the Garrick Theatre, Melbourne. Other theatrical
designs that Constable executed during this period were a series for the New
Theatre, including Catherine Duncan's The Sword Sung (1937) and three
productions for J. C. Williamson Ltd.'s Marie Ney season, which included Ladies
in Retirement (1940), Private Lives (1941), and No Time for Comedy (1941).
Constable continued his association with theatrical design, working on
productions such as Rashomon for St. Martin’s Theatre, designing and supervising
the tapestry curtain for Her Majesty's, Sydney, in 1973, and holding an
exhibition of his theatrical designs at the Munster Arms Gallery in 1973, and
Lennox Street Galleries in 1977. Constable also exhibited paintings of Cambodia
at the Munster Arms Gallery in 1972, and later at the Victorian Artists Society
Galleries in 1975, and of Central Australia and the Great Barrier Reef at the
Richmond Hill Gallery in 1974
Constable’s first engagement in the film industry was the Australian production
of Long John Silver (1954), for which he was the production designer. He later
worked in a similar capacity for the television series The Adventures of Long
John Silver (1955). Travelling to London in 1957, Constable proceeded to earn a
reputation as an art director and production designer on films such as The
Trials of Oscar Wilde (The Green Carnation) (1960) for which he won a medallion
for best art director of the year at the Moscow Film Festival, The Long Ships
(1963), Lord Jim (1965), and Salt and Pepper (1968). Constable returned to the
ballet to design Noel Coward’s London Morning for the London Festival Ballet in
1959.
Constable continued his association with theatrical design, working on
productions such as Rashomon for St. Martin’s Theatre, designing and supervising
the tapestry curtain for Her Majesty's, Sydney, in 1973, and holding an
exhibition of his theatrical designs at the Munster Arms Gallery in 1973, and
Lennox Street Galleries in 1977. Constable also exhibited paintings of Cambodia
at the Munster Arms Gallery in 1972, and later at the Victorian Artists Society
Galleries in 1975, and of Central Australia and the Great Barrier Reef at the
Richmond Hill Gallery in 1974
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