Not currently on display at the V&A

Acis and Galatea

Set Design
1842 (painted)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Design for a stage right trick setting piece and ground row for Acis and Galatea, showing a stream with a waterfall falling to centre, the water a cut covered by a painted talc or mica sheet acting as a transparency andattached to the design with size glue. Painted in pink, brown, white and blue gouache.


Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleAcis and Galatea (generic title)
Materials and techniques
Gouache on card and mica or talc
Brief description
Design by Clarkson Stanfield for a trick setting piece for Acis and Galatea, Drury Lane Theatre, 1842
Physical description
Design for a stage right trick setting piece and ground row for Acis and Galatea, showing a stream with a waterfall falling to centre, the water a cut covered by a painted talc or mica sheet acting as a transparency and attached to the design with size glue. Painted in pink, brown, white and blue gouache.
Dimensions
  • Height: 185mm
  • Width: 443mm
Production typeUnique
Credit line
Acquired from the Bagshawe Estate
Object history
Clarkson Stanfield had two children by his first marriage and ten by his second to Rebecca Adcock (d.1876). The theatre designs, S.13 - S.99-2000, and other Stanfield studio residue passed to the oldest surviving son of the second marriage, George Clarkson Stanfield (1828-78), also a painter. He died of liver disease at the Hampstead home of his sister, Harriet Thesesa (1837-1911). In 1861 Harriet had married William Henry Gunning Bagshaw (1825-1901), a barrister, QC and judge, and the couple had a large family, of whom the fifth child, Joseph John Richard Bagshawe (1870-1909), was also a professional artist. Joseph married in 1901 and had two sons, Edward and K.G.R., the latter becoming a solicitor in the firm of Seaton, Gray, Bell and Bagshawe at Whitby. The collection of Clarkson Stanfield designs (S.13 - S.99-2000) was discovered in K.G.R. Bagshawe's attic on the latter's death. It had presumably been left with his grandmother, Harriet, on George Stanfield's death and been passed down through the family. K.G.R.'s daughter, Susie, took the designs to Christie's for a probate valuation, and Christie's alerted Dr Pieter van der Merwe of the National Maritime Museum, an acknowledged expert on Clarkson Stanfield. Dr van der Merwe then contacted the Theatre Museum. The collection comprises working designs and model pieces made in the Drury Lane scene room from the mid-1820s to the mid-1840s.
Literary referenceAcis and Galatea
Summary
Design for a stage right trick setting piece and ground row for Acis and Galatea, showing a stream with a waterfall falling to centre, the water a cut covered by a painted talc or mica sheet acting as a transparency andattached to the design with size glue. Painted in pink, brown, white and blue gouache.
Collection
Accession number
S.88-2000

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Record createdOctober 24, 2000
Record URL
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