TABLEAU VIVANT PHOTOGRAPH HENRY (Maurice of Battenberg, 1858-1896, Colonel) and his son ALEXANDER (Marquess of Carisbrooke, 1886-1960)

Exceptional original private tableau vivant cabinet photo showing him in costume with a cloak and hat, holding his apparently sleeping also costumed young son cradled in his arms, 5½" x 3½", no place, no date, dated on the verso May

This photo came from a Royal album and it was done for Queen Victoria. The practice of the Household performing tableau vivants over the New Year was revived some time after the death of the Prince Consort. There were normally several scenes, each representing a letter or word, followed by a final scene depicting the entire word. The Tableau often reproduced paintings - a particularly successful one being 'La Rixe' (The Brawl) after the painting by E. Meissonier which had been given to the Prince Consort in 1856. The scene was a quarrel in a tavern which Queen Victoria considered 'a truthful presentation of the picture'. They were not always so well received - a biblical tableau of Naomi and Ruth in 1888 was described by the Queen as 'not quite so successful as it might have been, owing to the ladies getting the giggles and shaking'. The Tableau Vivant photo is an unusual form of photography, which Queen Victoria had a passion for from the 1850s. This is one of the later ones which are more difficult to find as the majority of them have remained in Royal Collections.
Princesses Helena Victoria and Marie Louise spent much of their year revolved around the Queen, which dates the picture to 1889 as the Princess Marie Louise was married to a German Prince the following year. The marriage did not prove happy and the Queen sent her an open telegram ordering her 'home to me'.


Item Date:  1894

Stock No:  30452      £500

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