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Peter Minshall is an artist,
designer, artistic director and masman who is renowned
for his works of mas for Trinidad carnival and
large-scale spectacle events and performances. Much of
Minshall’s success came as a result of his
investigation into the kinetics of the human body in
motion and the development of structural techniques to
amplify the energy of the masplayer’s performance. This
has resulted in an array of innovations that continue
to have a substantial impact in the Trinidad carnival
and in spectacle performance internationally.
Peter Minshall was born in Guyana on
16th July, 1941, and grew up in Trinidad. He attended
Queen’s Royal College where he became heavily involved
with the school’s theatre productions and did designing
for the Trinidad Light Opera. After high school, he
trained in theatre design at the Central School of Art
and Design in London, England. He was one of the first
to design costumes for the Notting Hill Carnival in
London.
As he studied design and was exposed
to the world of art and theatre in London, Minshall
gradually came to appreciate the value and potency of
mas as a form of creative expression. Several
opportunities arose for him to design mas in Trinidad,
which led to groundbreaking works: the individual From
the Land of the Hummingbird (1974) and Paradise Lost
(1976). After a few years dividing his time between
London and Port-of-Spain, Minshall returned to Trinidad
for good and devoted his full creative attention to the
mas. Over the course of three decades, his masbands
have embraced diverse themes, each expanding the
possibilities of what a mas can be and what it can
achieve.
One of his earliest innovations was
the articulated bird wing, which allowed for the
complete freedom of wing-waving movement and dance seen
in his costume From the Land of the Hummingbird (1974)
and many others. Another signature Minshall structure
is the fixed wing attached at the shoulders, often
depicting magnificent angel or devil characters. Radial
veins give the wings shape, body, and sometimes
scalloped feather-like tips as in Paradise Lost (1976)
and The Golden Calabash (1985). Another innovation was
attaching elements of the mas structure – ribbons,
flags, panels – to the performer’s feet, so that they
rise and fall with each dancing step, as in Fire Fire,
from Paradise Lost (1976) and Zodiac (1978).
As Minshall’s kinetically expressive
mas creations became more sophisticated and more
distinctive, he coined the term “dancing mobile” to
classify them. Perhaps the most advanced of these
dancing mobiles was the articulated armature that made
the foundation of ManCrab (1983) and Callaloo Dancing
Tic Tac Toe Down the River (1984). This structure
transmits and amplifies the dancing energy of the mas
performer into billowing constructions of fabric and
film, high above the performer’s head. A subsequent
development brought together the technologies of
backpacks, foot attachments, hinged arms, and spiral
tubes to create a giant dancing puppet that can be
motivated by a single performer, reversing the
traditional relationship between puppet and puppeteer.
The most famous of these were Tan Tan and Saga Boy
(1980).
At the international level, Minshall
played a major role in the design and artistic
direction of the opening ceremonies of the Summer
Olympics in 1992 and 1996, and the 2002 Winter
Olympics, among other major spectacle events.
He has received numerous awards for
his achievements, among them: the University of the
West Indiesa Guggenheim Fellowship (1982); an honorary
doctorate from The University of the West Indies
(1991); the Trinity Cross (1996); and an Emmy for the
Opening Ceremony of the 2002 Olympic Winter Games.
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