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Trinidadian artist (born 1941) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Peter Minshall (born 16 July 1941) is a Trinidadian carnival artist (described colloquially in Trinidad and Tobago as a "mas-man").
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Peter Minshall was born in Georgetown, Guyana on July 16, 1941.[1] He moved to Trinidad as a small child after his father took a job as a cartoonist. Growing up in Port of Spain, Minshall was exposed to Carnival from a young age. He made his first costume at age 13. He attended Queen's Royal College, then went on to study Theatre Design at the Central School of Art and Design in London.
Minshall designed Carnival costumes for relatives and family friends while in school. At art school, he wrote a thesis about the bat (a traditional Carnival character). His first major theatrical commission, for a production at Sadler's Wells, came after a director saw a portfolio of his Carnival designs.
Minshall's mother asked him to create a costume for his adopted sister Sherry-Ann Guy (Coelho) to wear for carnival 1974, the pivotal event in Minshall's Carnival career. The costume he created was called "From the Land of the Hummingbird".[2] According to him, it took five weeks, 12 people and 104 feathers, each made of 150 different pieces of fabric.
Minshall designed the art and sculptures for the 1996 Olympics in Atlanta, Georgia USA and along with Israeli artist Doron Gazit is generally credited as the co-inventor of the tube man[3][4] which was prominently featured in the design for the Games.
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