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What is wanted in Darkest Africa is the Electric Light

Print
1890-1893 (made), 1880-1910 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This trading card was produced for the electricity and engineering company, Woodhouse and Rawson in London between 1890 and 1893. It was designed by engraver Arthur Bartram Snell. Snell’s brother Charles had worked on engineering patents with the company since 1982. Little is known of Arthur Snell, who was evidently a skilled wood engraver; he appears in London post office directories for the 1890s.

The print is in an imperial kitsch style that became popular at the end of the nineteenth century. Victorian advertisers regularly used the image of H. M. Stanley, a Welsh explorer, on their products. Stanley is best known for the Emin Pasha Relief Expedition through modern day Egypt, Kenya and Uganda. Even though the expedition came to an end in 1890, Stanley’s image remained popular throughout the 1890s.

To commemorate Stanley’s return to Britain, The Illustrated London News printed a special edition on the 10th May 1890. The edition described the different stages of Stanley’s expedition, illustrated in this trade card. The image in the top left corner is a representation of the medal given to Stanley by the Royal Geographical Society in 1890.

Woodhouse and Rawson were one of the earliest suppliers of electric light and their advertisement reflects the days of the Empire, with its punning references to 'Darkest' Africa, a term coined in the nineteenth century. It was used to describe the explorations of the British Sir Henry Stanley (1841-1904) and Dr Livingstone (1813-73) into uncharted areas, as well as the work of white missionaries bringing Christianity, or 'the Light of the World', to Africa.



Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleWhat is wanted in Darkest Africa is the Electric Light (assigned by artist)
Materials and techniques
Wood engraving on card
Brief description
'What is wanted in Darkest Africa is the Electric Light'; Advertisement for Woodhouse and Rawson United Ltd. Electrical Engineers and Manufacturers, London 1890-4; engraved by Arthur Snell; colour wood engraving
Physical description
Sir H. M. Stanley-related ephemera, or ‘imperial kitsch’, typical of the late nineteenth century. Blue and red ink printed trading card. Features six boxed off scenes of colonial visions of Africa including the pyramids, a tunnelled out jungle lit by an electric light bulb dangling over the heads of colonists and native inhabitants, and a heraldic image of Sir Henry Morton Stanley in the top left corner. The text, ‘What is Wanted in Darkest Africa is the Electric Light’ floats on a banner across the centre of the print. Company name printed in red ink at the bottom of the card. Card is made from thick paper.
Dimensions
  • Image height: 132mm
  • Image width: 167mm
  • Sheet height: 145mm
  • Sheet width: 180mm
Production typeMass produced
Marks and inscriptions
What is wanted in Darkest Africa is the Electric Light
Gallery label
Arthur SNELL (working 1890-1900) What is wanted in Darkest Africa is the Electric Light. Advertisement for Woodhouse and Rawson United Ltd. Electrical Engineers and Manufacturers, London. 1890-4 Colour wood engraving E.1519-1919 Woodhouse and Rawson were one of the earliest suppliers of electric light and their advertisement reflects the days of the Empire, with its punning references to 'Darkest' Africa, a term coined in the nineteenth century. It was used to describe the explorations of the British Sir Henry Stanley (1841-1904) and Dr Livingstone (1813-73) into unchartered areas, as well as the work of white missionaries bringing Christianity, or 'the Light of the World', to Africa. Little is known of Arthur Snell who was evidently a skilled wood engraver and appears in London post office directories for the 1890s.
Object history
A similar engraving to this was produced by Arthur Snell for Woodhouse and Rawson and is currently held in the John Johnson Archive at the University of Oxford. This print is similar to the V&A’s in that it uses comparable graphic elements, such as banners, borders and multiple fonts as well as a light bulb dangling in the centre. The difference is that where the V&A’s trade card depicts the African colony, the John Johnson Archive’s print features electrical lighting illuminating Woodhouse and Rawson’s workshop in the metropole. It seems likely that both this and the Darkest Africa print were part of a series, or a pair commissioned by Woodhouse and Rawson during the early 1890s.

The V&A’s Nominal Acquisition File for the print notes that it was acquired as part of a collection of 897 pictorial advertisements on the 10th April 1919. The records contain correspondence for the V&A’s purchase of the collection from an F.T. Corrie as early as April 1915.

In a letter written to the Director of the Museum by curator of the Prints and Drawings Room, Martin Hardie, on the 15th April 1919, he notes that although the purchase of the collection had been approved in 1915, it ‘had to be postponed due to no funds being available’. The whole collection of 897 pictorial advertisements was subsequently purchased for seven pounds and seven shillings in 1919.

The collection comprised of advertisements from artists including Walter Crane, Dana Gibson, Bernard Partridge and Aubrey Beardsley. However, curator Martin Hardie wrote in a letter to the museum director in 1915 that on average, ‘the prints are not of high merit, though individual examples of some artists works are most interesting, but collectively they offer most useful material for the designers of posters, advertisements, etc.’. Nowhere in the acquisition file is the Darkest Africa print mentioned, suggesting that it was not considered of high cultural or monetary value.

The Nominal Acquisition File also contains a report on the acquisition of a pencil sketch of the site of the Natural History Museum from Corrie, purchased for two pounds and 2 shillings on the 10th February 1904.

Little else is known of collector F. T. Corrie, other than that in 1914 he was living at 32 Connaught Road, Harlesden, N. W. As such, the previous provenance of the Darkest African Print remains unknown.

Place depicted
Association
Summary
This trading card was produced for the electricity and engineering company, Woodhouse and Rawson in London between 1890 and 1893. It was designed by engraver Arthur Bartram Snell. Snell’s brother Charles had worked on engineering patents with the company since 1982. Little is known of Arthur Snell, who was evidently a skilled wood engraver; he appears in London post office directories for the 1890s.

The print is in an imperial kitsch style that became popular at the end of the nineteenth century. Victorian advertisers regularly used the image of H. M. Stanley, a Welsh explorer, on their products. Stanley is best known for the Emin Pasha Relief Expedition through modern day Egypt, Kenya and Uganda. Even though the expedition came to an end in 1890, Stanley’s image remained popular throughout the 1890s.

To commemorate Stanley’s return to Britain, The Illustrated London News printed a special edition on the 10th May 1890. The edition described the different stages of Stanley’s expedition, illustrated in this trade card. The image in the top left corner is a representation of the medal given to Stanley by the Royal Geographical Society in 1890.

Woodhouse and Rawson were one of the earliest suppliers of electric light and their advertisement reflects the days of the Empire, with its punning references to 'Darkest' Africa, a term coined in the nineteenth century. It was used to describe the explorations of the British Sir Henry Stanley (1841-1904) and Dr Livingstone (1813-73) into uncharted areas, as well as the work of white missionaries bringing Christianity, or 'the Light of the World', to Africa.

Bibliographic reference
Victoria & Albert Museum, Department of Engraving, Illlustration and Design & Department of Paintings, Accessions 1919, London: His Majesty's Stationery Office, 1921. Vann, Katharine, ‘Illuminating Africa: A Late Nineteenth Century British Trade Card’ (Unpublished Master’s Degree Second Term Essay, Royal College of Art/Victoria and Albert Museum, 2016)
Collection
Accession number
E.1519-1919

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Record createdJune 30, 2009
Record URL
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