Concise, critical reviews of books, exhibitions, and projects in all areas and periods of art history and visual studies
February 21, 2014
Melanie Doderer-Winkler Magnificent Entertainments: Temporary Architecture for Georgian Festivals London: Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art, 2013. 270 pp.; 133 color ills.; 100 b/w ills. Cloth $75.00 (9780300186420)
Thumbnail

By rights, a book about temporary Georgian festival architecture should be the very definition of scholarly navel-gazing. But in our modern era of tablescapes, wall treatments, chalk art, digital holograms, and laser light shows, this illuminating survey of eighteenth-century event planning feels perversely contemporary—as relevant as it is revelatory.

In Georgian England, extravagant decorative and architectural effects were employed for large-scale public displays and elite private entertainments alike. Frequently, these one-off installations celebrated momentous events such as military victories and royal birthdays. “All these decorations were in their time an integral part of a culture rich in visual stimulation, which with great imagination found ways to decorate a festive room from floor to ceiling,” writes Melanie Doderer-Winkler in Magnificent Entertainments: Temporary Architecture for Georgian Festivals (175). But their fugitive materials—sand, sugar, chalk, canvas, plaster—could be swept up or thrown out at the end of the evening.

These effects were no less convincing for their impermanence. At Vauxhall Gardens, the fashionable public pleasure grounds, one disgruntled landscape artist walked off the job, flummoxing his employers by leaving a perfectly rendered painted facsimile of his deserted scaffolding, ladder, paint, and brushes instead of the Arcadian vista he was commissioned to create.

Doderer-Winkler has pulled off a similarly arresting sleight-of-hand, deftly reconstructing events so ephemeral—and, often, so socially exclusive—that material evidence and eyewitness accounts are scarce. The book’s title winks at the way newspapers frequently disguised their lack of information by simply describing these entertainments as “elegant” or “magnificent” beyond words. To get past these generalities, Doderer-Winkler dug into archives, auction catalogues, and country house attics, rescuing artifacts like transparencies and floorcloths from the dustbin of history, sometimes literally.

More than mere launching pads for fireworks, temporary structures were the fantastical backdrops to sophisticated son et lumière performances, uniting cutting-edge technology with the vanguard of the arts. Humble materials like canvas, wood, paint, and plaster imitated marble and stonework. These trompe l’oeil techniques derived from stagecraft, but they were most often executed by successful artist and architects, “almost without exception members of the Royal Academy. . . . A close study of the painters’ biographies reveals that many of them had either received training in scene painting in their youth or had at some point in their lives accepted commissions for stage sets” (4). Canaletto, for example, had organized elaborate open-air festivals in Venice before coming to England. The young Robert Adam designed temporary temples on spec, hoping that a spectacular public event would launch his career and attract clients for more permanent edifices.

For private aristocratic entertainments, “it was only natural that . . . patrons turned to the people who had built and decorated their homes to make the necessary arrangements” (5). Thus, Sir John Soane, Sir William Chambers, Adam, and other eminent architects expended their talents on lavish temporary structures, built and decorated to the same exacting specifications as grand country houses. A pyrotechnics display that would last a few hours, at most, could entail several months of planning. So intensive and time-consuming were the preparations that it seems incredible that Queen Charlotte could surprise her husband with an elaborate musical tableau in the gardens of Buckingham House in honor of his twenty-fifth birthday.

Though they were highly prized (and priced) in their time, few of these ephemeral decorative schemes survive; many of those that do have been separated from their mise-en-scène, accidentally or at auction. Others succumbed to the famously damp English weather, or perished prematurely when stray rockets set assemblages of wood and canvas on fire. Doderer-Winkler reconstructs a few important examples, such as the “painted tapestries” Andien de Clermont created for Elizabeth Percy, Duchess of Northumberland. Appendices include detailed descriptions, budgets, and menus for major entertainments like the Green Park royal fireworks to celebrate the Peace of Aix-la-Chappelle in 1748 and the Grand Jubilee of 1814, to which an entire chapter is devoted.

The book’s scope extends well beyond architecture, considering wall hangings, table settings, floor coverings, and “illuminations,” which Doderer-Winkler defines as “any façade decoration or outdoor installation using a combination of variegated lamps and transparencies” (2). “Illumination nights”—during which the facades of private houses as well as public buildings like the Bank of England were illuminated—celebrated events of national importance, particularly during the early 1770s. To a certain extent, these were command performances. “Alcohol ran freely and spirits were high on these nights, leading to a tendency for the mob to attack any house where the owner had failed to put at least a few candles in its windows” (119).

The multicolored lights illuminating the public pleasure grounds of Vauxhall Gardens “never failed to impress the first-time visitor in an era when artificial light sources were precious and sparingly used” (113). Thousands of lamps could be lit at once thanks to innovative systems of fuses and sulfur, using just a small number of strategically placed lamplighters.

Vauxhall’s influence was felt on a smaller scale in the private sphere. “Throughout the eighteenth century the most popular table decoration was the re-creation of miniature garden scenes consisting of architectural elements set within symmetrically arranged parterres, boxed hedges and graveled walks populated by figures of gods and swains alike” (150). In 1750, the Duke of Newhall staged a “baby Vauxhall” on his dessert table, complete with the famous colored lights. Decades later, the Prince Regent presided over a tabletop canal stocked with live fish. (Doderer-Winkler credits professional impresario Teresa Cornelys as “the most likely person to have introduced aquatic life to the English dining table” (157).)

Sugar sculptures—eventually replaced by a more permanent doppelganger, biscuit Sèvres porcelain—formed part of elaborate, edible dessert services. In truth, few of these displays were actually consumed. “Nevertheless, the majority of ornaments, though safe from being eaten, did not survive the evening and had to be laboriously re-made each time they were required” (151). Tabletop sand pictures—a favorite of the supposedly ascetic George III—used colored sugar, sand, marble dust, and ground glass to create patterns and figures. “Although now almost unheard of, this practice was in great demand in grand households throughout Europe from the mid-eighteenth century to the early decades of the nineteenth” (158). These Technicolor tablescapes were created by a specially trained confectioner called a “strewer.” Similar patterns also appeared on floors, rendered in colored chalk. When a room’s carpets were rolled up for dancing, unsightly bare floorboards became visible. Chalking the floors continued a room’s decor underfoot, while also preventing the dancers from slipping. The practice was first recorded in 1800, following the introduction of industrially made colored chalk in the late eighteenth century.

Given the huge popularity of chalked floors, “many more visual artefacts should exist,” Doderer-Winkler points out. “Presumably the drawn or printed ornamental designs for chalked floors have remained ‘invisible’ to the unaware twenty-first-century eye and are often likely to be mistaken for carpet patterns” (172). As evidence, she offers a George Cruickshank caricature of a ball featuring a patterned and brightly colored floor that appears to be carpeted at first glance, but is almost certainly chalked. Art historians would be wise to regard eighteenth-century images of carpets and tablecloths with newfound suspicion.

While the book captures the dazzling variety of Georgian entertainments, it is not comprehensive; Doderer-Winkler is concerned with the broad spectrum of temporary buildings and effects rather than cataloguing specific celebrations and types of occasions. Nevertheless, the book sometimes reads like a string of fascinating sidebars, without a strong narrative or conclusion. However, Doderer-Winkler is to be commended for attempting—and achieving—the seemingly impossible, marshaling a plethora of obscure texts and images to form a detailed and lasting impression of structures and spectacles that were never meant to last. One hopes that Magnificent Entertainments will inspire scholars to reconsider not only these temporary party pavilions, but other ephemeral objects and events heretofore considered lost to history.

Kimberly Chrisman Campbell
independent scholar