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Theatrical flower spray

Theatre Costume
1954 (designed)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Costume designing involves not just the major clothes for a production, but every accessory and total ‘look’ of the character. The character of each role is reflected in the clothes that they wear, which means that the designer has to have a total knowledge not just of the play as written, but of the play as interpreted by the director as well as the preferences of any star actor.

The spray is one of several, of differing sizes but of the same overall concept, scale and style of making. However, identifying how items like this were used in a theatre production can be difficult, involving lengthy detective work. Some could be decorations for the hair, or for a coat or a hand muff. Not every design survives and those that do may not be in great detail. Messel, had a team of makers and assistants familiar with his methods, and only had to use a ‘shorthand’ or even just verbally explain what he wanted. In fact, these objects are unusual in their making; Messel usually favoured a bolder approach and used unusual materials, like acetate, pipe cleaners or chandelier drops. The fabric and bead flowers are more like the sprays available to the general public for fashionable wear.

Possibly the sprays were part of the original concept, but were abandoned either during the initial dress parades, when the finished costumes were seen together for the first time, or in subsequent dress rehearsals.

Oliver Messel (1904-1978) was Britain’s leading theatre designer from the early 1930s to the mid 1950s, working in every aspect of entertainment - ballet, drama, film, musical, opera and revue - as well as in interior decoration and textile design. His lavish, painterly and romantic designs informed by period styles, were perfectly in tune with his times and earned him an international reputation. By 1960, however, Messel’s style had become unfashionable, having no sympathy with the new 'kitchen sink' school of theatre. He increasingly concentrated on his non-theatrical painting and designing and eventually retired to the Caribbean, where he began a new career designing and building highly idiosyncratic luxury villas.


Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleTheatrical flower spray (generic title)
Materials and techniques
wired stems with fabric flowers and flower spray of beads, pearls and green and gold thread leaf sprays
Brief description
Flower spray possibly designed by Oliver Messel for Edith Evans as the Countess in Christopher Fry's play The Dark is Light Enough, 1954. Large curved floral spray of fabric flowers with wire and bead leaves and stems.
Physical description
Small flower spray, the main stems of wire covered with green paper and sewn together at the centre. The principal flower, backed with two glazed cotton 'leaves' is a bold pale pink open 'rose' of large outer petals and smaller gathered petals of bold pink with yellow artificial flower centres. To either side are loops of green and gold thead, simulating small leaves and pale blue velveteen 'forget-me-nots'. To one side is a spray of small wax buds; to the other flowers made of a central faceted blue stone surrounded by upstanding goldish bugle beads, each topped with a tiny pearl. At the back are two wire loops.
Dimensions
  • Height: 12cm (approximately)
  • Width: 10cm (approximately)
Credit line
Acquired with the support of the National Lottery Heritage Fund, Art Fund and the Friends of the V&A
Object history
A similar spray was identified in the original listing of the Messel collection as for the Countess in The Dark is Light Enough, a verse play in three acts, written by Christopher Fry, first produced at the Aldwych Theatre, London, in 1954. Directed by Peter Brook and designed by Oliver Messel, it starred Edith Evans as the Countess and James Donald as Gettner.
Lord Snowdon, Oliver Messel's nephew, inherited Messel's theatre designs and other designs and artefacts. The designs were briefly stored in a disused chapel in Kensington Palace before being housed at the V&A from 1981 on indefinite loan. The V&A Theatre Museum purchased the Oliver Messel collection from Lord Snowdon in 2005.
Production
The attribution of this and related floral sprays to Messel's designs for The Dark is Light Enough must remain tentative until the 'detailed design' is retrieved.

Reason For Production: Commission
Summary
Costume designing involves not just the major clothes for a production, but every accessory and total ‘look’ of the character. The character of each role is reflected in the clothes that they wear, which means that the designer has to have a total knowledge not just of the play as written, but of the play as interpreted by the director as well as the preferences of any star actor.

The spray is one of several, of differing sizes but of the same overall concept, scale and style of making. However, identifying how items like this were used in a theatre production can be difficult, involving lengthy detective work. Some could be decorations for the hair, or for a coat or a hand muff. Not every design survives and those that do may not be in great detail. Messel, had a team of makers and assistants familiar with his methods, and only had to use a ‘shorthand’ or even just verbally explain what he wanted. In fact, these objects are unusual in their making; Messel usually favoured a bolder approach and used unusual materials, like acetate, pipe cleaners or chandelier drops. The fabric and bead flowers are more like the sprays available to the general public for fashionable wear.

Possibly the sprays were part of the original concept, but were abandoned either during the initial dress parades, when the finished costumes were seen together for the first time, or in subsequent dress rehearsals.

Oliver Messel (1904-1978) was Britain’s leading theatre designer from the early 1930s to the mid 1950s, working in every aspect of entertainment - ballet, drama, film, musical, opera and revue - as well as in interior decoration and textile design. His lavish, painterly and romantic designs informed by period styles, were perfectly in tune with his times and earned him an international reputation. By 1960, however, Messel’s style had become unfashionable, having no sympathy with the new 'kitchen sink' school of theatre. He increasingly concentrated on his non-theatrical painting and designing and eventually retired to the Caribbean, where he began a new career designing and building highly idiosyncratic luxury villas.
Other number
ROT 8852:3 - TM Rotation Number
Collection
Accession number
S.540-2006

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Record createdMarch 2, 2007
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