We don’t have an image of this object online yet. V&A Images may have a photograph that we can’t show online, but it may be possible to supply one to you. Email us at vaimages@vam.ac.uk for guidance about fees and timescales, quoting the accession number: E.4098-1923
Find out about our images

Image of Gallery in South Kensington
Request to view at the Prints & Drawings Study Room, level C , Case Y, Shelf 67, Box 63

Poster

ca.1923 (issued)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

The British Empire Exhibition was first conceived in 1902 by the British Empire League. Their inaugural meeting in January 1896 was full of nationalistic pomp with notions such as ‘No nation has a purer or nobler literature’ and thus ‘our mother tongue...bids fair to be the general language of the human race’. Their principal goals were promoting British trade and ‘to modify any laws or treaties which impede freedom of action’ on that front.
The idea was raised again in 1913 by one of the League’s founding members, the Scottish Canadian industrialist, Donald Alexander Smith, 1st Baron Strathcona (1820-1914). He had been governor and principal shareholder of the Hudson’s Bay Company (HBC). Established by King Charles II in 1670, the royal charter stated that the British Empire would not claim land in the Americas settled by ‘British subjects, or “the Subjects of any other Christian Prince or State” meaning it did not consider the rights or sovereignty of Indigenous people at all. By the 18th century, the Canadian colonists’ attitude had grown yet more authoritarian as they sought to cling on to their monopoly in exploiting the people and natural resources of these lands. Sir George Simpson, administrator at the peak of the Hudson’s Bay Company’s power between 1820 and 1860 made his plans chillingly clear when he wrote shortly after his appointment that Indigenous Peoples “must be ruled with a rod of iron, to bring and to keep them in a proper state of subordination”.

Colonial exhibitions such as this propagated the myth of imperial European empires as a ‘civilising’ influence on the rest of the world whilst showing off the riches generated by colonised lands. Identified by ACHAC (a French decolonisation research group) as part of the third and final wave (1920-1940) of such exhibitions, they ultimately acted as a form of propaganda to promote a white supremacist racial hierarchy: ‘The British Empire Exhibition in Wembley in 1924-1925 and Glasgow in 1938 and the International Colonial Exhibition in Vincennes, France, in 1931 were the most emblematic of these during the interwar years.’
Human zoos were a large feature, with mocked up villages populated by 273 people on display from Africa, Asia and the Middle East, kept in compounds on the Wembley site for several months of the exhibition. The event programme claimed the Empire had ‘tamed these savages’ and brought widespread improvement to their lives. Postcards of the Nigerian, Sierra Leonean, and Ghanian villages were sold, with one of the most popular being ‘Princess Baa of Ashanti and her husband’ in front of the Gold Coast pavilion.

With 27 million visitors to Wembley over the two years of the exhibition, the cost of the event considerably overran, and the entire undertaking was considered a financial failure. The official follow-up report by the Commissioner for India for the British Empire Exhibition (published in 1925 by Government India Press, Calcutta) reveals that decolonisation criticisms of the exhibition were also widespread in the 1920s- criticisms the report weakly attempted to dispel as follows:
‘Considerable misapprehensions existed about the objects of the Exhibition. Reports were about that the object of the Exhibition was the exploitation of Indian resources for the benefit of foreign manufacturers and capitalists, that India was being already exploited, and that…as a result of the Exhibition, that there was a still more intensive exploitation. There was a general trade depression which lent colour to this sinister suggestion.’


Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Lithography
Brief description
Lithograph poster of an alphabet designed for sign-writing, passed for use at the British Empire Exhibition 1924. Designed by Frederick Charles Herrick. Great Britain. ca.1923.
Physical description
Lithograph poster of an alphabet designed for sign-writing, passed for use at the British Empire Exhibition 1924. Signed.
Dimensions
  • Height: 101cm
  • Width: 62.5cm
Dimensions taken from: Summary Catalogue of British Posters to 1988 in the Victoria & Albert Museum in the Department of Design, Prints & Drawing. Emmett Publishing, 1990. 129 p. ISBN: 1 869934 12 1
Marks and inscriptions
Signed.
Credit line
Given by Martin Hardie, R.I., R.E.
Subjects depicted
Association
Summary
The British Empire Exhibition was first conceived in 1902 by the British Empire League. Their inaugural meeting in January 1896 was full of nationalistic pomp with notions such as ‘No nation has a purer or nobler literature’ and thus ‘our mother tongue...bids fair to be the general language of the human race’. Their principal goals were promoting British trade and ‘to modify any laws or treaties which impede freedom of action’ on that front.
The idea was raised again in 1913 by one of the League’s founding members, the Scottish Canadian industrialist, Donald Alexander Smith, 1st Baron Strathcona (1820-1914). He had been governor and principal shareholder of the Hudson’s Bay Company (HBC). Established by King Charles II in 1670, the royal charter stated that the British Empire would not claim land in the Americas settled by ‘British subjects, or “the Subjects of any other Christian Prince or State” meaning it did not consider the rights or sovereignty of Indigenous people at all. By the 18th century, the Canadian colonists’ attitude had grown yet more authoritarian as they sought to cling on to their monopoly in exploiting the people and natural resources of these lands. Sir George Simpson, administrator at the peak of the Hudson’s Bay Company’s power between 1820 and 1860 made his plans chillingly clear when he wrote shortly after his appointment that Indigenous Peoples “must be ruled with a rod of iron, to bring and to keep them in a proper state of subordination”.

Colonial exhibitions such as this propagated the myth of imperial European empires as a ‘civilising’ influence on the rest of the world whilst showing off the riches generated by colonised lands. Identified by ACHAC (a French decolonisation research group) as part of the third and final wave (1920-1940) of such exhibitions, they ultimately acted as a form of propaganda to promote a white supremacist racial hierarchy: ‘The British Empire Exhibition in Wembley in 1924-1925 and Glasgow in 1938 and the International Colonial Exhibition in Vincennes, France, in 1931 were the most emblematic of these during the interwar years.’
Human zoos were a large feature, with mocked up villages populated by 273 people on display from Africa, Asia and the Middle East, kept in compounds on the Wembley site for several months of the exhibition. The event programme claimed the Empire had ‘tamed these savages’ and brought widespread improvement to their lives. Postcards of the Nigerian, Sierra Leonean, and Ghanian villages were sold, with one of the most popular being ‘Princess Baa of Ashanti and her husband’ in front of the Gold Coast pavilion.

With 27 million visitors to Wembley over the two years of the exhibition, the cost of the event considerably overran, and the entire undertaking was considered a financial failure. The official follow-up report by the Commissioner for India for the British Empire Exhibition (published in 1925 by Government India Press, Calcutta) reveals that decolonisation criticisms of the exhibition were also widespread in the 1920s- criticisms the report weakly attempted to dispel as follows:
‘Considerable misapprehensions existed about the objects of the Exhibition. Reports were about that the object of the Exhibition was the exploitation of Indian resources for the benefit of foreign manufacturers and capitalists, that India was being already exploited, and that…as a result of the Exhibition, that there was a still more intensive exploitation. There was a general trade depression which lent colour to this sinister suggestion.’
Bibliographic reference
Summary Catalogue of British Posters to 1988 in the Victoria & Albert Museum in the Department of Design, Prints & Drawing. Emmett Publishing, 1990. 129 p. ISBN: 1 869934 12 1
Other number
18/G5 - V&A microfiche
Collection
Accession number
E.4098-1923

About this object record

Explore the Collections contains over a million catalogue records, and over half a million images. It is a working database that includes information compiled over the life of the museum. Some of our records may contain offensive and discriminatory language, or reflect outdated ideas, practice and analysis. We are committed to addressing these issues, and to review and update our records accordingly.

You can write to us to suggest improvements to the record.

Suggest feedback

Record createdJune 30, 2009
Record URL
Download as: JSON