Not currently on display at the V&A

Patience

Poster
ca.1900 (printed)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

John Hassall (1868-1948) trained as a painter in Antwerp and Paris, but his plans for a career as a painter were deflected in 1897 by his success with a design for a poster for The French Maid, done in response to a circular letter from the printers David Allen and Sons asking artists if they could produce poster designs. Hassall went on to produce work for Allen and Sons for seven years, designing appealing and commercial posters. He worked fast, and by 1899 had designed over 600 posters as well as producing illustrations for nursery rhymes and fairy stories.

Hassall disliked lettering dominating posters, as he told an interviewer from The Poster, June 1898: 'The less writing the better. Even the principal words should be small; for it the design achieves its object, the public would find the name with a microscope if necessary.' Little lettering was needed on tour posters in any case, since the details of the venue would have been added by the relevant theatres.

Patience opened at London's Opera Comique Theatre in April 1881, transferred to D'Oyly Carte's new theatre the Savoy, in April 1881, and was first revived by D'Oyly Carte at the Savoy in November 1900. It was in the repertory of one of Carte's touring companies from 1881 onwards, but this poster was probably designed for the tour of the first revival.


Object details

Categories
Object type
TitlePatience (generic title)
Materials and techniques
Colour lithograph
Brief description
Poster advertising a D'Oyly Carte Opera Company touring production of Patience composed by Arthur Sullivan, written by W. S. Gilbert. Colour lithograph designed by John Hassall, printed by David Allen & Sons. Possibly designed for the tour of the first revival of the production at the Savoy Theatre, 1900.
Physical description
Colour lithgraph poster for a touring production of Patience featuring an image of Patience in a panniered floral dress and white apron, holding a wide-brimmed hat on her head with her right hand and resting a milk churn against her left hip with her left arm. The poster is signed 'Hassall' and features the title of the opera 'PATIENCE' at the top of the poster and 'D'OYLY CARTE CO.' at the bottom.
Dimensions
  • Poster height: 75.2cm
  • Poster width: 49.5cm
Object history
Associated Production: Patience. The D'Oyly Carte Opera Company. Performance category: opera. Production type: tour.
Summary
John Hassall (1868-1948) trained as a painter in Antwerp and Paris, but his plans for a career as a painter were deflected in 1897 by his success with a design for a poster for The French Maid, done in response to a circular letter from the printers David Allen and Sons asking artists if they could produce poster designs. Hassall went on to produce work for Allen and Sons for seven years, designing appealing and commercial posters. He worked fast, and by 1899 had designed over 600 posters as well as producing illustrations for nursery rhymes and fairy stories.

Hassall disliked lettering dominating posters, as he told an interviewer from The Poster, June 1898: 'The less writing the better. Even the principal words should be small; for it the design achieves its object, the public would find the name with a microscope if necessary.' Little lettering was needed on tour posters in any case, since the details of the venue would have been added by the relevant theatres.

Patience opened at London's Opera Comique Theatre in April 1881, transferred to D'Oyly Carte's new theatre the Savoy, in April 1881, and was first revived by D'Oyly Carte at the Savoy in November 1900. It was in the repertory of one of Carte's touring companies from 1881 onwards, but this poster was probably designed for the tour of the first revival.
Collection
Accession number
S.2792-1995

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Record createdJuly 30, 2010
Record URL
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