Image of Gallery in South Kensington
On display at Young V&A
Play Gallery, Moving and Making, Case 2

This object consists of 3 parts, some of which may be located elsewhere.

Automaton

1867-1872 (designed)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This automaton was produced in Paris by the company Roullet-Decamps, most likely in the late 19th or early 20th century. It has a clockwork mechanism that, when wound with the key and released by pulling the pin at the back, starts a music box and causes the cat to turn to the front and peer out of the top hat, sticking its tongue in and out while doing so, before popping back into the hat.

Roullet-Decamps began trading in Paris in 1866, initially as a workshop specialising in cutting tools. It was around this time that many designers of automata began trading in the Marais, and Roullet exhibited his first production in the 1867 Exposition Universelle. Automata would become the main focus of the business and by 1889, when Decamps joined the business as partner, the company was employing 50 people in different workshops: mechanics, sculptors, seamstresses, artists and more.

Much of the automata produced in the Marais was aimed at a mature audience, depicting well known celebrities, activities such as smoking, and with music boxes playing popular music of the time. The nature of this clockwork, however, would have appealed to those young as well as old.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Parts
This object consists of 3 parts.

  • Automaton
  • Key
  • Key
Materials and techniques
Clockwork mechanism with moulded staff head, covered with animal fur, glass eyes and painted metal with ribbon decoration, contained within felt hat with leather inner band and outer ribbon.
Brief description
Fur and fabric cat in a hat clockwork automaton made in France by Roullet-Decamps in the late 19th century.
Physical description
Clockwork automaton plus two keys.

Upturned red felt hat with a white fur cat figure that rises out from within and sticks its tongue out while a music box plays.

Metal key with large open oval bow and long plain barrel. A second key ith short barrel and bow of a circle either side of the barrel.
Dimensions
  • Automaton height: 225mm
  • Automaton width: 240mm
  • Automaton depth: 210mm
  • Key [1] length: 80mm
  • Key [1] width: 43mm
  • Key [2] length: 48mm
  • Key [2] width: 50mm
Credit line
Given by Richard Peter Pratt
Subjects depicted
Summary
This automaton was produced in Paris by the company Roullet-Decamps, most likely in the late 19th or early 20th century. It has a clockwork mechanism that, when wound with the key and released by pulling the pin at the back, starts a music box and causes the cat to turn to the front and peer out of the top hat, sticking its tongue in and out while doing so, before popping back into the hat.

Roullet-Decamps began trading in Paris in 1866, initially as a workshop specialising in cutting tools. It was around this time that many designers of automata began trading in the Marais, and Roullet exhibited his first production in the 1867 Exposition Universelle. Automata would become the main focus of the business and by 1889, when Decamps joined the business as partner, the company was employing 50 people in different workshops: mechanics, sculptors, seamstresses, artists and more.

Much of the automata produced in the Marais was aimed at a mature audience, depicting well known celebrities, activities such as smoking, and with music boxes playing popular music of the time. The nature of this clockwork, however, would have appealed to those young as well as old.
Collection
Accession number
B.70:1 to 3-2011

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Record createdAugust 16, 2011
Record URL
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