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Topics

Theatrical and fancy costume

  • Summary
Dressing for the Masquerade
Image credit: Sheffield Museums

Dressing for the Masquerade

Eugene de Blaas (1843–1931)

Sheffield Museums

As well as its use on stage, fancy dress has always been a feature of balls, masquerades and parties. Public pleasure gardens like Ranelagh and Vauxhall Gardens hosted infamous masquerades in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, allowing experiments with risqué and exotic costumes. French aristocratic society was notorious for its extravagant costume balls.


These costumes can mislead us in portraits.

Read more
Sitters in mid-eighteenth-century British portraits often wear so-called ‘Van Dyck’ costume, in the style of the previous century’s most fashionable portrait painter. Classical, Turkish and Indian dress became fashionable later, worn by learned or well-travelled sitters. All portraits provide an opportunity for sitters to dress up: for fun, to reflect their interests or to promote a certain image.

Artworks

  • Turkish Men and Women: 'Derviche qui donne l’eau par charité'
    Turkish Men and Women: 'Derviche qui donne l’eau par charité' Jean-Baptiste Vanmour (1671–1737) (after)
    National Trust, Sissinghurst Castle
  • Turkish Men and Women: 'Persan'
    Turkish Men and Women: 'Persan' Jean-Baptiste Vanmour (1671–1737) (after)
    National Trust, Sissinghurst Castle
  • Turkish Men and Women: 'Fille Armenienne, que l'on conduit à l'Eglise pour la marier'
    Turkish Men and Women: 'Fille Armenienne, que l'on conduit à l'Eglise pour la marier' Jean-Baptiste Vanmour (1671–1737) (after)
    National Trust, Sissinghurst Castle
  • Turkish Men and Women: 'Capidgi Bachi ou maître des cérémonies'
    Turkish Men and Women: 'Capidgi Bachi ou maître des cérémonies' Jean-Baptiste Vanmour (1671–1737) (after)
    National Trust, Sissinghurst Castle
  • Turkish Men and Women: 'Janissaire en habit de cérémonie'
    Turkish Men and Women: 'Janissaire en habit de cérémonie' Jean-Baptiste Vanmour (1671–1737) (after)
    National Trust, Sissinghurst Castle
  • Turkish Men and Women: 'Femme Turque filant au tambour'
    Turkish Men and Women: 'Femme Turque filant au tambour' Jean-Baptiste Vanmour (1671–1737) (after)
    National Trust, Sissinghurst Castle
  • Turkish Men and Women: 'Fille de Bulgarie'
    Turkish Men and Women: 'Fille de Bulgarie' Jean-Baptiste Vanmour (1671–1737) (after)
    National Trust, Sissinghurst Castle
  • 586 more

Stories

  • Dressing up: the popularity of 'Vandyke' clothing in the eighteenth century

    Rebecca Unsworth

  • 1919, photograph by Adolf de Meyer (1868–1946)
    The marvellous Marchesa Casati: a living work of art

    Chloe Esslemont

  • Art Matters podcast: an introduction to the camp aesthetic

    Ferren Gipson

  • Hamming it up? A closer look at the genre of theatrical portraits

    Jon Sleigh

  • Costume drama: goddess cosplay in the eighteenth century

    Candy Bedworth

  • Divine inspiration: who were the nine Muses of Greek mythology?

    Louisa McKenzie

  • In disguise: masquerades, masks and race in the eighteenth century

    Janet Couloute

Learning resources

  • sulter-preview-1.jpg
    Lesson plan
    Maud Sulter and the subversive portrait
    • KS4 (ENG)
      KS5 (ENG)
      KS4 (NI)
      KS5 (NI)
      CfE L4 (SCO)
      CfE Sen. (SCO)
      KS4 (WAL)
      KS5 (WAL)
  • ngs-ngs-gma-2132-001-1.jpg
    Exam support
    Art and Design A-level, AS and A2-level exam support: 2025 themes
    • KS5 (ENG)
      KS5 (NI)
  • rachel-kandlhofer-2021-49-1-thumbnail-1.jpg
    Lesson plan
    Rachel Maclean: modern life, make-believe and monsters
    • KS4 (ENG)
      KS5 (ENG)
      KS4 (NI)
      KS5 (NI)
      CfE L4 (SCO)
      CfE Sen. (SCO)
      KS4 (WAL)
      KS5 (WAL)
  • LSE_HOM_1998_404-001.jpg
    Lesson plan
    Afrikan-Caribbean Masquerade
    • KS2 (ENG)
      KS2 (NI)
      CfE L2 (SCO)
      PS3 (WAL)
      KS3 (ENG)
      KS3 (NI)
      CfE L3 (SCO)
      KS3 (WAL)

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® is a registered trade mark of the Public Catalogue Foundation.
Art UK is the operating name of the Public Catalogue Foundation, a charity registered in England and Wales (1096185) and Scotland (SC048601).