Hengler's  thumbnail 1
Not currently on display at the V&A

Hengler's

Illustration
28 February 1874 (published)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

The cutting from the weekly illustrated newspaper The Illustrated London News, published on 28th February 1874, records acts that appeared at Hengler's Circus in London's Argyll Street.

Following his father as a circus performer and equestrian, Frederick Charles Hengler, always known as Charles Hengler (1820-1887), operated tenting circus from 1846 until 1857 when he opened his first permanent circus building in Liverpool in 1857, followed by others in Glasgow and Dublin in 1863; Hull, 1864; Birmingham and Bristol, 1886, and London in 1871.


Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleHengler's (assigned by artist)
Materials and techniques
Printed paper
Brief description
Illustration of various acts in Hengler's Circus, reproduced from a lithograph by Wallis Mackay. Page from The lllustrated London News, 28 February 1874
Physical description
Page from The Illustrated London News, 28 February 1874, with text verso, reproducing on page 8 a lithograph by Wallis Mackay, titled 'Hengler's Circus', illustrating various acts featuring in the circus, including a clown, a male equestrian with four-in-hand, a bowl-spinner, a foot juggler, two horses performing a comic dining act, a female equestrienne, and a juvenile performance featuring a carriage and a boy and girl in 18th-century dress, bowing to each other as if at a ball. Also featuring head and shoulders portraits of Charles Hengler, Felix Revolti, and Mr. Teesdale, as cards in a pack.
Dimensions
  • Height: 36.1cm
  • Width: 25.7
Credit line
Gabrielle Enthoven Collection
Associations
Summary
The cutting from the weekly illustrated newspaper The Illustrated London News, published on 28th February 1874, records acts that appeared at Hengler's Circus in London's Argyll Street.

Following his father as a circus performer and equestrian, Frederick Charles Hengler, always known as Charles Hengler (1820-1887), operated tenting circus from 1846 until 1857 when he opened his first permanent circus building in Liverpool in 1857, followed by others in Glasgow and Dublin in 1863; Hull, 1864; Birmingham and Bristol, 1886, and London in 1871.
Collection
Accession number
S.661-2016

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Record createdNovember 8, 2016
Record URL
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