Printed Ephemera — 1910-11-29; 1896-07-17
Contract
The Empire of India and Ceylon Exhibition of 1896 referred to on this document was the second exhibition to be held at the 24 acre (c.98,000sq. metre) Earl's Court Exhibition grounds. Built by the impressario Imre Kiralfy the site, a forerunner for Kiralfy's later White City exhibitions, included pavilions built in the Mughal Indian style and opened in 1895 with the Empire of India Exhibition. Controversially, as noted by this contract, the exhibitions also included 'live displays' of ‘native' Indian, Burmese and Sinhalese artisans, performers including jugglers and acrobats and a Burmese football team. The contracts for these exhibition workers were negotiated in India by local agents. The contract specified that all those contracted to travel to London 'by steamer' would receive warm clothing prior to departure and would be required to work 10 hours a day for a monthly salary over the 6 month exhibition season. Workers were ‘supplied lodgings and food including 'live sheep and goats to be killed appropriately for their consumption.' During their time in London they were also taken to visit tourist attractions including Windsor Castle and Hampton Court. It is possible this contract, that includes the date 29th November 1910 was re-issued to inform future contracts with overseas workers when the organisers of White City began planning the Imperial Exhibition that opened in the Spring of 1911.
The 1896 exhibition maintained many of the features of the 1895 India exhibition but also included references to Ceylon (Sri Lanka), Borneo, and Burma (Myanmar). The exhibitions were intended as an uncritical celebration of Indian culture and British colonial rule and had as Patrons four Maharajas and four Rajas, headed by the anglophile Gaekwar of Baroda. One of the highlights for both exhibitions was ‘India: A Grand Historical Spectacle’ performed daily in the site's Empress Theatre with an audience capacity of 6,000. Written and directed by Kiralfy the spectacle recounted a version of the history of India, from 1024 to the 1890s, in dance, mime and songs with grand scenery.
As well as celebrating the riches of Empire, the exhibitions attracted a wide range of visitors through a variety of entertainments and facilities. On arrival visitors entered ‘Elysia’ - a collection of popular entertainment buildings and ‘The Gigantic Wheel’ whose whose forty carriages could each accommodate thirty people. North of here lay formal gardens with fountains, surrounded by refreshment buildings, small entertainment halls, and the ‘Himalayas Gravity Railway’. Visitors could continue south-east through the ‘Indian City’ with Indian bazaars on either side of the ‘Indian Jungle’ and ‘Carpet factory’. The Indian City also contained a small mosque. They would then approach the largest buildings of the site – the Imperial Palace and the Empress Theatre. East of these, towards Earls Court Station, lay the Ducal Hall, pavilions exhibiting the liberal arts, and the Reva and Nirvana Gardens. Throughout the site were 23 refreshment halls.
- Category:
- Printed Ephemera
- Object ID:
- 82.232/19b
- Object name:
- contract
- Object type:
- Artist/Maker:
- —
- Related people:
- Related events:
- Related places:
- Production date:
- 1910-11-29; 1896-07-17
- Material:
paper
- Measurements/duration:
- H 335 mm, W 204 mm (overall)
- Part of:
- —
- On display:
- —
- Record quality:
- 100%
- Part of this object:
- —
- Owner Status & Credit:
Permanent collection
- Copyright holder:
digital image © London Museum
- Image credit:
- —
- Creative commons usage:
- —
- License this image:
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