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Title:
Der Tunnel
Object name(s):
Paper peepshow
Brief description:
Accordion-style paper peepshow of the Thames Tunnel as it would appear when completed. 5 cut-out panels. 1 peep-hole. Hand-coloured lithograph. In a slipcase. Expands to approximately 64 cm. Slipcase: Rainbow background. A label in the centre, and title at the top. Beneath the title is a print of the longitudinal view of the tunnellers at the working face and tunnelling shield. Front-face: Plain pink label with several layers of borders. The peep-hole consists of a single large oval opening in the centre. Inside the peep-hole is a double-shutter. The upper half shows the Thames while the lower half shows the Tunnel archways. Panel 1: a man descending the stairs on the left, two men in the right archway. Panel 2: in the left archway, a carriage with three passengers heading away from us, and a man; a man who appears to be wheeling a barrow in the right archway. Panel 3: an equestrian in the left archway heading away from us; a single pedestrian in the right archway, and an open-carriage with three passengers heading towards us. Panel 4: a man in the left archway; a man and two equestrians in the right archway. Panel 5: a man accompanying a loaded cart in the left archway; a man in uniform in the right archway. Back panel: pedestrians and a coach and a wagon in the Tunnel archways. The reverse side is pasted with a decorative pink paper label.
Collection:
Victoria and Albert Museum
Associated concept:
National Art Library
Associated concept:
Optical toys
Associated concept:
Paper Peepshow
Associated concept:
Thames Tunnel
Credit line:
Accepted under the Cultural Gifts Scheme by HM Government from the collections of Jacqueline and Jonathan Gestetner and allocated to the Victoria and Albert Museum, 2016.
Dimension:
Height
Dimension measurement unit:
cm
Dimension value:
11.9
Dimension:
Width
Dimension measurement unit:
cm
Dimension value:
14.6
Dimension:
Length
Dimension measured part:
fully extended
Dimension measurement unit:
cm
Dimension value:
64
Material:
paper
Object history note:
Part of the Jacqueline and Jonathan Gestetner Collection, collected over 30 years and given to the V&A Museum through the government's Cultural Gift Scheme, 2016.
Object name:
Paper peepshow
Object number:
Gestetner 152
Object production date:
pre-1843
Date - association:
published
Date - earliest / single:
1843-01-01
Date - latest:
1843-12-31
Object production person:
JMB
Person's association:
publisher
Object production place:
Germany
Other number:
38041016035479
Other number type:
NAL barcode
Physical description:
Accordion-style paper peepshow of the Thames Tunnel as it would appear when completed. 5 cut-out panels. 1 peep-hole. Hand-coloured lithograph. In a slipcase. Expands to approximately 64 cm. Slipcase: Rainbow background. A label in the centre, and title at the top. Beneath the title is a print of the longitudinal view of the tunnellers at the working face and tunnelling shield. Front-face: Plain pink label with several layers of borders. The peep-hole consists of a single large oval opening in the centre. Inside the peep-hole is a double-shutter. The upper half shows the Thames while the lower half shows the Tunnel archways. Panel 1: a man descending the stairs on the left, two men in the right archway. Panel 2: in the left archway, a carriage with three passengers heading away from us, and a man; a man who appears to be wheeling a barrow in the right archway. Panel 3: an equestrian in the left archway heading away from us; a single pedestrian in the right archway, and an open-carriage with three passengers heading towards us. Panel 4: a man in the left archway; a man and two equestrians in the right archway. Panel 5: a man accompanying a loaded cart in the left archway; a man in uniform in the right archway. Back panel: pedestrians and a coach and a wagon in the Tunnel archways. The reverse side is pasted with a decorative pink paper label.
Responsible department/section:
NAL
Text reason:
Collections online record
Text:
The Thames Tunnel was an engineering project that spurred great public excitement both in Great Britain and abroad, and the paper peepshow belongs to the wide range of souvenirs produced to cater for the public’s interest. The construction of the Thames Tunnel connecting Wapping on the north with Rotherhithe on the south began on the Rotherhithe shaft in March 1825. The first Thames Tunnel paper peepshow appeared as early as 16 June of the same year in London, showing how the finished work would look. Outside of Great Britain, a substantial amount of Thames Tunnel paper peepshows was produced in Germany. Many of these works took inspiration from British examples: here, for instance, the first panel and the depiction of the arches clearly derive from a peepshows such as Gestetner 195, while the rest of the figures are new. Importantly, the publisher included the image of workers underground and the tunnelling shield. The shield was the piece of machinery designed by the principal engineer Marc Isambard Brunel to dig and construct the Tunnel. The view derives from Plate 3 from Zeichnungen und Notizen von den Arbeiten an dem Gange unter der Themse von Rotherhithe nach Wapping, London (Drawings and Notes from the Work on the Passage under the Thames from Rotherhithe to Wapping, London) published in 1827. This image highlights the engineering ingenuity of the Tunnel, which was also one of the important factors that attracted people’s interest in this project. Although a German work, it has an English title, and was probably intended for the British market. Typical of Thames Tunnel paper peepshows produced before the completion of the actual Tunnel, this work presents a projected rather than realistic view. The coaches and horses shown in the paper peepshow, for instance, were never able to enter the Tunnel in reality, as a ramp was never built. Although the exterior appearance of this peepshow is different from that of Gestetner 81, the inside is essentially a reverse copy of it. Apart from the difference in the font of the title and the slipcase image, this work is essentially a duplicate of Gestetner 116. It was also used for a two-level paper peepshow (Gestetner 118).
Text reason:
Summary description
User's reference:
Reference:
R. Hyde, Paper Peepshows. The Jacqueline and Jonathan Gestetner Collection (Woodbridge: The Antique Collectors' Club, 2015), cat. 152.
User's reference:
Reference:
Outside of Great Britain, a substantial amount of Thames Tunnel paper peepshows were also produced in Germany. While many of these works took inspiration from British examples (for example in Gestetner 195): http://web.archive.org/web/20230120110000/ http://collections.vam.ac.uk/item/O1418257/the- tunnel-paper-peepshow-brown-t/
User's reference:
Reference:
The view derives from Plate 3 from Zeichnungen und Notizen von den Arbeiten an dem Gange unter der Themse von Rotherhithe nach Wapping, London (Drawings and Notes from the Work on the Passage under the Thames from Rotherhithe to Wapping, London) published in 1827.

Persistent shareable link for this record: https://museumdata.uk/objects/e723d097-e678-3c77-bba9-451a17ba1d8b

Use licence for this record: CC BY-NC

Attribution for this record: https://museumdata.uk/objects/e723d097-e678-3c77-bba9-451a17ba1d8b, Victoria and Albert Museum, CC BY-NC

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