FLEMISH BRICKS AND DUTCH METAL thumbnail 1
Not currently on display at the V&A

FLEMISH BRICKS AND DUTCH METAL

Costume Design
1860 (designed)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This is one of a set of seven designs by Richard Wynn Keene or Dykwynkyn (1809-1887), for an assortment of comic Knights in the first Christmas pantomime ever staged at Her Majesty's Theatre which opened on Christmas Eve, 1860. Harlequin and Tom Thumb!, or, Merlin The Magician and the Good Fairies of the Court of King Arthur was by all accounts a splendid pantomime, with brilliant set designs supervised by the well-known scene designer William Beverley, and remarkable costumes and the pantomime 'big heads' designed by the artist, sculptor, mask and property maker and costume designer known as Dykwynkyn. 'Big heads' traditionally featured in the opening of pantomimes at this date, and their design was a speciality of Dykwynkyn's.

The Knights in Tom Thumb appeared in 'The Banqueting Hall in the Palace of King Arthur', the scene in the Harlequinade in which Tom Thumb lived in King Arthur's Court. This design is entitled 'Flemish Bricks and Dutch Metal'. The Knights with the cockerel on their banner and shield relate to the 'Flemish Bricks' of the title, while that with the kettles on his shield relate to the 'Dutch Metal'.


Object details

Category
Object type
TitleFLEMISH BRICKS AND DUTCH METAL (generic title)
Materials and techniques
Pencil and watercolour on paper
Brief description
Costume design for a group of knights, captioned 'Flemish Bricks and Dutch Metal', one of several Knight designs for the pantomime Harlequin and Tom Thumb! or, Merlin The Magician, & the Good Fairies of the Court of King Arthur, Her Majesty's Theatre, 24 December 1860. Pencil and watercolour by 'Dykwynkyn' - Richard Wynn Keene (1809-1887)
Physical description
Pencil and watercolour costume design on cream paper pasted on card for 'Flemish Bricks and Dutch Metal', depicting four knights. Two knights, at left, facing forwards, one holding a banner emblazoned with a crowing cockerel and one with a double-headed axe and a shield with a crowing cockerel emblem. At right, two knights, one, viewed from the back, holds an axe and a shield, and the other, viewed from the side, holds axe and a shield with a design of three kettles. Signed Dykwynkyn on a palette design.
Dimensions
  • Overall height of support paper height: 26.7cm
  • Overall width of support paper width: 33.1cm
  • Width of smaller sheet width: 15.0cm
Marks and inscriptions
  • 'Three Dutch kettles on the Ban...'(?) (Pencil note on right margin.)
  • Dykwynkyn (Signed in watercolour below his right foot on the shape of an artist's palette.)
  • FLEMISH BRICKS & DUTCH METAL (In red paint along lower left edge)
Credit line
Given by Mrs. W.W. Smith
Object history
Given to the donor in the 1920s by her husband's aunt, a friend of Florence Glossop Harris, daughter of Sir Augustus Harrris and wife of Frank Cellier.
Subjects depicted
Summary
This is one of a set of seven designs by Richard Wynn Keene or Dykwynkyn (1809-1887), for an assortment of comic Knights in the first Christmas pantomime ever staged at Her Majesty's Theatre which opened on Christmas Eve, 1860. Harlequin and Tom Thumb!, or, Merlin The Magician and the Good Fairies of the Court of King Arthur was by all accounts a splendid pantomime, with brilliant set designs supervised by the well-known scene designer William Beverley, and remarkable costumes and the pantomime 'big heads' designed by the artist, sculptor, mask and property maker and costume designer known as Dykwynkyn. 'Big heads' traditionally featured in the opening of pantomimes at this date, and their design was a speciality of Dykwynkyn's.

The Knights in Tom Thumb appeared in 'The Banqueting Hall in the Palace of King Arthur', the scene in the Harlequinade in which Tom Thumb lived in King Arthur's Court. This design is entitled 'Flemish Bricks and Dutch Metal'. The Knights with the cockerel on their banner and shield relate to the 'Flemish Bricks' of the title, while that with the kettles on his shield relate to the 'Dutch Metal'.
Associated objects
Other number
S.12-2008 - Cancelled number
Collection
Accession number
S.736-1987

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Record createdFebruary 19, 2008
Record URL
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