Costume design for the Entry of Music thumbnail 1
Costume design for the Entry of Music thumbnail 2
Image of Gallery in South Kensington
On display at V&A South Kensington
Europe 1600-1815, Room 7, The Sheikha Amna Bint Mohammed Al Thani Gallery

Costume design for the Entry of Music

Costume Design
1625 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This is one of a group of 69 costume designs for the court ballets of Louis XIII, now in the V&A Theatre Collections. The designs, which date from 1615-1635, are from the workshop of Daniel Rabel (1578-1637), the artist responsible for creating costumes for the spectacular entertainments performed by and for the French court. The ballets were based on the social dances of the day, but this was social dance elevated to an elaborate art form which combined choreography with poetry, music, song and pageantry, and included elements of satire and burlesque. The ballets were enormously popular. Most were given at least three performances and all required a great amount of work from their creators and performers: the Ballet de Tancrède of 1619, which used elaborate stage machinery, is known to have had 30 rehearsals. Some professional dancers, actors and singers took part but the majority of the participants were members of the nobility. Many of these aristocratic amateurs were skilled performers, including the King, who adored dancing and devised some of the ballets himself.

The Ballet des Fées de la Forest de Saint Germain (the Ballet of the Saint German Forest Fairies), also called the Ballet des Ridicles, was first performed on 9 February 1625. The King was happy to spend enormous sums of money on his entertainments and this ballet was one of the most expensive, the costumes costing more that 16,380 livres. Its creator, René Bordier, devised a simple plot in which to set the dances. Five fairies from the Forest of Saint Germain visit Paris to admire the beauty of the Queen and her ladies. Each fairy has an outlandish entourage (peasants, musicians, dancers, gamblers or madmen) whose dances burlesque different branches of learning. Guillemine la Quinteuse, the Fairy of Music, was followed by a company of musicians led by the bespectacled figure who represented Music.


Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleCostume design for the Entry of Music (generic title)
Materials and techniques
Watercolour, ink, pencil and gold paint on paper
Brief description
Costume design for the Entry of Music in the Ballet des Fées de la Forest de Saint Germain, performed by the Ballet de Cour of Louis XIII, 1625
Physical description
Costume design for a figure representing Music. A bespectacled female figure wearing a pink dress with a wide panniered skirt, with lutes hanging from the pannier. She holds a book of music in her left hand. A triangle hangs from her left ear and her headdress is made from a hurdy-gurdy. Mounted on paper in a card mount.
Dimensions
  • Design height: 31.7cm
  • Design width: 20.8cm
  • Including paper mount height: 39.7cm (maximum)
  • Including paper mount width: 29cm (maximum)
  • Including card mount height: 53.8cm
  • Including card mount width: 38.5cm
Marks and inscriptions
  • '55' (Identification number in watercolour, upper right hand corner)
  • '53' (Identification number in pencil, upper left of figure)
Gallery label
Costume design for the Entry of Music About 1625 One of the most expensive burlesque ballets performed at Louis XIII’s court, The Ballet of the Fairies of Saint Germain Forest was populated by humorous figures. Organised around the idea of playing games, it comprised a series of separate scenes known as ‘entries’ performed by bizarre characters. This figure, who appeared at the very start of the ballet, was immediately identifiable by her musical attributes. France (Paris) By the workshop of Daniel Rabel Watercolour, ink, pencil and gold paint Designed for The Ballet of the Fairies of Saint Germain Forest, also known as the Ballet of the Ridiculous Ones Family label for Europe 1600-1815: Louis the thirteenth (XIII) of France loved dance. He spent a fortune on special productions and costumes. This is a design for a music fairy. She has lutes, which are like guitars, hanging from her skirt and wears a musical triangle as an earring. What would your fantastical costume look like?(09.12.2015)
Credit line
Purchased with Art Fund support
Object history
One of a group of 69 costume designs for the court ballets of Louis XIII acquired from a collection of 188 designs discovered in a private library in Germany. The designs were bound in an album, apparently dating from the 1580s. Each design is numbered, indicating that the collection as originally constituted contained 239 items.
Summary
This is one of a group of 69 costume designs for the court ballets of Louis XIII, now in the V&A Theatre Collections. The designs, which date from 1615-1635, are from the workshop of Daniel Rabel (1578-1637), the artist responsible for creating costumes for the spectacular entertainments performed by and for the French court. The ballets were based on the social dances of the day, but this was social dance elevated to an elaborate art form which combined choreography with poetry, music, song and pageantry, and included elements of satire and burlesque. The ballets were enormously popular. Most were given at least three performances and all required a great amount of work from their creators and performers: the Ballet de Tancrède of 1619, which used elaborate stage machinery, is known to have had 30 rehearsals. Some professional dancers, actors and singers took part but the majority of the participants were members of the nobility. Many of these aristocratic amateurs were skilled performers, including the King, who adored dancing and devised some of the ballets himself.

The Ballet des Fées de la Forest de Saint Germain (the Ballet of the Saint German Forest Fairies), also called the Ballet des Ridicles, was first performed on 9 February 1625. The King was happy to spend enormous sums of money on his entertainments and this ballet was one of the most expensive, the costumes costing more that 16,380 livres. Its creator, René Bordier, devised a simple plot in which to set the dances. Five fairies from the Forest of Saint Germain visit Paris to admire the beauty of the Queen and her ladies. Each fairy has an outlandish entourage (peasants, musicians, dancers, gamblers or madmen) whose dances burlesque different branches of learning. Guillemine la Quinteuse, the Fairy of Music, was followed by a company of musicians led by the bespectacled figure who represented Music.
Collection
Accession number
S.1163-1986

About this object record

Explore the Collections contains over a million catalogue records, and over half a million images. It is a working database that includes information compiled over the life of the museum. Some of our records may contain offensive and discriminatory language, or reflect outdated ideas, practice and analysis. We are committed to addressing these issues, and to review and update our records accordingly.

You can write to us to suggest improvements to the record.

Suggest feedback

Record createdJuly 1, 2009
Record URL
Download as: JSONIIIF Manifest