Not currently on display at the V&A

Costume

Artist/Maker

Like many designers, Messel was fascinated by costume and crafts. He collected items not particularly because he was researching for a specific production, but simply because they took his fancy. He amassed a collection of hats and headdresses, including examples from Europe, Eastern Europe and Central Asia . This particular example is a military Hussar hat.

The hat may have been used in a theatrical production, but it is more likely to be fancy dress. Many society families kept costumes for use in private theatricals or charades and notes on some of the non-theatrical Messel costumes indicate that he too had a 'dressing up' box. It is possible that he also wore them at fancy dress balls, which were a popular recreation among high society in the early and mid 20th century.

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
Materials and techniques
synthetic astrakhan, silk cord, cardboard, leather
Brief description
Hussar hat in black astrakhan. Oliver Messel Collection.
Physical description
Hussar hat in black artificial astrakhan, with, from the side crown, a loose cream cord loop and below a longer plaited crean cord loop. At the sides is fixed a chin strap of various plaited black cords. The hat is stiffened with card at sides and crown and the leather sweatband has been slit to fit against the sides. The hat is unlined.
Dimensions
  • Inner rim ( upper) circumference: 65.5cm
  • Inner rim ( lower) circumference: 55.5cm
  • Height: 13.5cm
Credit line
Acquired with the support of the National Lottery Heritage Fund, Art Fund and the Friends of the V&A
Object history
This Hussar hat belongs to Messel's collection of costume artefacts, which he acquired mostly out of interest in dress and crafts, not because he was necessarily researching a for a particular production. Alternatively, it may have been worn for a fancy dress ball.
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.
Summary
Like many designers, Messel was fascinated by costume and crafts. He collected items not particularly because he was researching for a specific production, but simply because they took his fancy. He amassed a collection of hats and headdresses, including examples from Europe, Eastern Europe and Central Asia . This particular example is a military Hussar hat.

The hat may have been used in a theatrical production, but it is more likely to be fancy dress. Many society families kept costumes for use in private theatricals or charades and notes on some of the non-theatrical Messel costumes indicate that he too had a 'dressing up' box. It is possible that he also wore them at fancy dress balls, which were a popular recreation among high society in the early and mid 20th century.

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 8969 - TM Rotation Number
Collection
Accession number
S.566-2006

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Record createdMarch 7, 2007
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