Entering the Museum of London to see the Sherlock Holmes exhibition.
The first exhibition in London about Sherlock Holmes for
over sixty years is at the Museum of London. It began last year
on the 17th October and is due to finish on the 12th
April 2015, this year. Marilyn, Abi and myself went to see it on Saturday 22nd
of February.
This exhibition has been inspired by the continued interest in Sherlock Holmes and what he represents. The recent BBC’s
series, Sherlock, starring Benedict Cumberbatch as Sherlock and Martin Freeman
as Dr Watson has given a modern twist to Conan Doyle’s original
detective stories. However in recent years Hollywood has been fascinated by the
exploits of the Victorian sleuth too. Robert Doherty in the modern day TV
series, Elementary, set in New York and which relies on the concept of Sherlock
Holmes, is one example. “Sherlock Holmes,”
the 2009 film, directed by Guy Ritchie and starring Jude Law as Watson and
Robert Downey Junior as Sherlock was a smash hit at the box office worldwide. It
was the 8th highest grossing film of 2009.
This exhibition covers not just the filmic and stage history
of Sherlock Holmes. The London of Sherlock Holmes features in an inspirational way if not totally as a physical entity and
includes the scientific and technological innovations of the time that Holmes
employed in his search for answers. The city itself , its enormity, its mix of
population, its extremes of poverty and wealth, its maze like structure, its
smoke and dense fogs, its play on the dreams, real and imaginary, of the people of
the time who were horrified almost equally by the fiction of Jekyll and Hyde
and the reality of the Jack the Ripper murders. All this created a climate of
possibilities in which Conan Doyle could set his great character to work.
Benedict Cumberbatch playing Sherlock.
The origins of Holmes is also explored. Where did the
concept of a super sleuth come from? A man who could use minute analysis in any
situation to solve a mystery? Arthur Conan Doyle was a physician who had
studied at the University of Edinburgh Medical School from 1876 to 1881. His
tutor was a Dr Joseph Bell. Doyle worked for Bell as his assistant during this
time. Dr Joseph Bell was renowned for his use of close observation. Bell had a
theory that a person’s personality could be deduced from studying his face. Dr Bell,
physically was tall and thin and had a hooked nose. Conan Doyle used Dr Bell
not only for the appearance of Sherlock Holmes but also for his approach to
forensic analysis.
The exhibition is advertised on a poster that shows a side
view of Sherlock Holmes’s head wearing a deer stalker and smoking his pipe. It
is an x-ray picture which reveals the brain inside his skull. The brain is
diagrammatically drawn. It labels the functions of the various parts of the
brain. This diagram is tailored to what we know about Sherlock Holmes. These
brain diagrams really reveal the thoughts and ideas of the illustrator of the
diagram rather than what the brain actually does. For instance you can find
diagrams depicting the brain of a Labour party supporter let’s say or the brain
of a Southampton football fan for instance. They are a joke nowadays.These brain diagrams can be taken
to ridiculous lengths.The Victorians took this all much more seriously. Doctors believed in a system of understanding the brain called phrenology. This has been disproved nowadays. In The Hound of The Baskervilles Holmes's skull surprises Dr Mortimer who remarks,
"I had hardly expected so dolichocephalic a skull or such well marked supra orbital development."
So for this exhibition we have the brain diagram of Sherlock Holmes. Some of the main areas show, reflectiveness and perceptiveness written large at the front of the brain. Traits such as domestic and aspiring come large at the back of the brain. Cautiousness and mirthfulness are written in small type, lost within the brains mass, amongst many other traits either written smaller or larger depending on the strength or weakness in the character of Sherlock Holmes. This has all been deduced analytically from the stories no doubt.
"I had hardly expected so dolichocephalic a skull or such well marked supra orbital development."
So for this exhibition we have the brain diagram of Sherlock Holmes. Some of the main areas show, reflectiveness and perceptiveness written large at the front of the brain. Traits such as domestic and aspiring come large at the back of the brain. Cautiousness and mirthfulness are written in small type, lost within the brains mass, amongst many other traits either written smaller or larger depending on the strength or weakness in the character of Sherlock Holmes. This has all been deduced analytically from the stories no doubt.
The brain of Sherlock Holmes.
We entered the exhibition through a bookcase. A melodramatic
way to enter. The lady at the entrance, directing people to the
exhibition, suggested the best way to take a dramatic photograph. She has
obviously has had a lot of experience at directing exhibition goers so. She
opened the door in the bookcase ajar for us. Marilyn stood with her left arm
raised and hand against the panel looking back at me. And so we entered the
exhibition.
Marilyn entering the mysterious world of Sherlock Holmes!!!!
The first things that confront us are theatre and film
posters for the likes of the TV series in which Jeremy Brett starred, and early
film versions with Basil Rathbone, Arthur Wontner, John Barrymore and Ellie
Norwood. The quintessential early Sherlock Holmes was played by William
Gillette on stage primarily but he also starred in the first film of Sherlock
Holmes. Gillettes physique, looks and manner became the publics, illustrators
and dramatists personification of Sherlock Holmes. You immediately realise that
Holmes is more than a character in a book devised by Conan Doyle. He has taken
on a life of his own and is reinvented for each generation, hence the more
recent adaptations I mentioned at the start of this article. We know that Conan
Doyle attempted to kill off his character in a story, The Final Problem,
published in The Strand Magazine in December 1893. Professor Moriarty and
Sherlock Holmes plunge to their deaths at the Reichenbach Falls in Switzerland.
However, with strong popular demand from both English and American readers,
Conan Doyle had to bring his character back. In 1901, Eight years after, The
Final Problem, Doyle wrote The Hound of The Baskervilles. To get round the fact
that he had killed Holmes off Doyle set the story in a time before the
Reichenbach episode. However there were calls for Sherlock Holmes to be
reincarnated. Conan Doyle had to bring him back in real time. Miraculously
Holmes Conan Doyle ,"arranged," that he had survived his fall into the Reichenbach Falls. He had not in fact fallen over with Moriarty but had overcome his opponent using a Japanese martial arts technique called bartitsu. He was able to hide his tracks thereafter.
The death of Sherlock Holmes illustrated by Sidney Paget, Paget was Holmes's most famous illustrator creating some the most iconic images of Sherlock Holmes.
There are few other characters that have this sort of power
in literature and fiction. In recent years I can only think of Dr Who and
perhaps James Bond and maybe characters like Superman and Frankenstein that have
this life which is indestructible. They live beyond their authors and even the
demands of readers and fans. They exist in themselves in our consciousness.
Maybe you can think of others yourself.
The next part of the exhibition displayed maps of London,
both road and rail and many original Victorian and Edwardian photographs
depicting the London of Sherlock Holmes. The great rail stations, of Waterloo,
Paddington and Kings Cross, feature. The
Grand hotels such as, The Langham, The Savoy, The Cecil, The Hyde Park Hotel
and The Russell, in Russell Square are portrayed. These were the locations of
some of Holmes’s mysteries.
A railway map of London in the exhibition.
The development of technology that was happening at the
time, the telephone, the typewriter and the proliferation of steam trains as
well as horse drawn hackney cabs are all displayed, some as objects, the telephone
and typewriter and some as old photographs, the stations, the trains and
hackney cabs. These forms of transport and the millions of inhabitants filled
the bustling streets and stations of the metropolis. The new technologies were
things that helped Sherlock Holmes in solving his crimes.
An interesting point
is made that Conan Doyle was not a Londoner in the way perhaps Dickens
was. When you read the Conan Doyle stories it becomes evident that although he
lists places in London that Watson and Holmes pass on their way to some station
or grand hotel, a list of places and streets is all he relates. There are no detailed descriptions and sense
of place. He doesn’t have a feel for London as such. A lot of his stories may
start in a room at 221B Baker Street, which incidentally, Conan Doyle asserted
that he never visited and never travelled along, then the stories move invariably
to some rural location outside of London, mostly to places in the South of
England which Conan Doyle did know well.
However, the exhibition shows us that Conan Doyle does use
London in one particular way. The fog creates an atmosphere. The massive void
between rich and poor is a source of tensions. London as a world centre with
embassies and foreign dignitaries from all over the world create situations
where individuals are compromised. He uses London in what it does
to people. The crimes and mysteries in Conan Doyle’s stories are those of
individual human beings and their tragedies are brought about in a place where
literally millions of people are thrown together.
Theatrical make up for creating disguises.
Sherlock Holmes in his quest for enlightenment and
understanding resorts to all sorts of strategies. He calms his mind by playing
the violin and of course his violin is displayed He smokes a pipe. He experiments with cocaine and morphine. As a
personality he shows many traits of the addict. His behaviour is erratic. He
has mood swings. He doesn't eat for long periods of time. Starvation can create
a heightening of the senses. Some say that they detect elements of what we term
now as autism in his personality. He had few friends and acquaintances beyond
Dr Watson and Mrs Hudson who more often than not suffer his behaviour. In his
quest to find answers and to aid his observation he often dresses up in various
guises as vagrants, old ladies, clergymen and in fact whatever guise might help
him melt unnoticed into his surroundings, to watch and observe unnoticed. This
strong bohemian free thinking aspect to Holmes is important to who he is and creates a sort of frisson which was and is appealing.
One display shows all the equipment needed to create a disguise,
wigs, make up and costumes. All the requirements of a Victorian theatre
dressing room. Holmes was a consummate actor in the stories being able to trick
even those close to him. Another shows all the accoutrements of the smoker, pipes,
tobacco, match boxes and various contemporary adverts for smoking. One display
shows a hypodermic syringe and glass files that contained morphine
for Holmes’s use.
Then there are the display cases with the iconic clothing associated
with Sherlock Holmes; an evening dress for the theatre, a tweed cape and deerstalker
for the moors and an elaborate dressing gown for sitting in front of the coal
fire upstairs at 221B Baker Street. In one case is displayed Benedict Cumberbatch’s, Holmes, overcoat. It is displayed on a dummy. It easy to
imagine Benedict Cumberbatch himself filling the void inside that coat.
Unfortunately, for his numerous fans, he is not filling the inner space created
by the coat but he does appear on the many video loops alongside all the other
incarnations of Sherlock Holmes, acting out their part on screens set around the
exhibition.
Eventually, long after having entered by the bookcase and
been mesmerised throughout by the master himself we arrive at the final
denouement. There we are with Professor Moriarty and Sherlock Holmes, perched
at the top of the Reichenbach Falls. We enter the final room and find we too have
jumped into the boiling surging waters of that waterfall too.We are surrounded
by a floor to wall screen showing the spray and tumbling water of a large
waterfall. We are immersed in it and enveloped by it. Will we survive
miraculously too just as Sherlock Holmes does? Were we able to use bartitsu, a
form of Japanese judo, to throw off our opponent as Holmes threw Moriarty to
his death and escape into apparent oblivion? Let us use Holmes methods to
ascertain a conclusion. The process of deduction Sherlock Holmes used was
called abductive reasoning which is logical inference. You observe, Marilyn,
Abi and I were at the top of the Reichenbach Falls. I am here writing this. The
hypothesis must be that we live. Oh
well, something like that. It is all based on the strongest inference amongst
other inferences.
Right at the end we too were confronted by the Reichenbach Falls.
Here is Sherlock Holmes explaining it all himself in,” The Mystery
of The Dancing Men,”
"You see, my dear
Watson" -- he propped his test-tube in the rack, and began to lecture with
the air of a professor addressing his class --"it is not really difficult
to construct a series of inferences, each dependent upon its predecessor and
each simple in itself. If, after doing so, one simply knocks out all the
central inferences and presents one's audience with the starting-point and the
conclusion, one may produce a startling, though possibly a meretricious,
effect.”
You see. It’s
simple!!!!!
I suppose I could
have used the dancing men code itself to explain what happened to us. Here is
the alphabet. Try constructing your own messages.
Conan Doyle explained Sherlock Holmes missing years by
telling us that he travelled in the Far East. He was probably sharpening up his
bartitsu skills no doubt.
One of the main points that this exhibition reveals and
perhaps helps us understand is Sherlock Holmes’s continuing appeal to every generation.
He has an ability to be incredibly adaptable. He looks for the unexpected. He
uses forensic analysis. He acts quickly. The problems in this world with ISIS,
Russian brinkmanship and the Arab unrest would be fertile ground for Conan
Doyle’s creative imagination and Sherlock Holmes’s talents. So I think what
this exhibition shows us is that Sherlock Holmes, “the man who was never born,
will never die.”
On the upper floor of The Sherlock Holmes pub next to Charing Cross station there is a reconstruction of Sherlock Holmes study in 221B Baker Street. The descriptions of the room in Conan Doyles stories and novels were used to recreate it.
Sherlock Holmes study at 221B Baker Street (The Sherlock Holmes pub)
Interesting post, Tony. I think the Jeremy Brett TV serialisations of the Sherlock Holmes stories (primarily in the 80s) were the best dramatisations.
ReplyDeleteWhen we were in Switzerland two summers ago, we past Reichenbach Falls. We were travelling by train from Interlaken to Lucerne. Unfortunately we couldn't see the Falls; they are set back about one kilometre from the train tracks, which follow the River Aare.
I was given a copy of "The Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes" as a school prize in the mid-60s. It was the second of the collected volumes of the short stories. All of the stories had been previously published in "The Strand" magazine from 1892-1893. The last story in "The Memoirs ..." is called "The Final Bow"; it is the account of Holmes's demise in his struggle with Moriarty.
Three more volumes were to follow, though - Arthur Conan Doyle wrote further Holmes' stories up until 1927.
Tony, I haven't seen the movie with Robert Downey Jr, but will do so now. Though Benedict Cumberbatch is good, I'm not keen on modern-day Sherlocks. Must agree with Clive, the Jeremy Brett series was the best. Liked Basil Rathbone, but Jeremy Brett *was* Sherlock. Love the photo of Marilyn at the secret door (love secret doors!).
ReplyDeleteHi Clive I have checked out the stories.It gets complicated because Conan Doyle was persuaded to bring Holmes back to life after his apparent death at The Reichenbach Falls. Moriarty and Holmes fall to their deaths in a story called The Adventure of The Final Problem which is set in 1893. Then Doyle brought Holmes back into existance, retrospectively, with a full length novel,The Hound of The Baskervilles set in 1889, .After that Doyle started thirteen adventures under the title The Return of Sherlock Holmes. He then went to write a further eight stories under the title The Last Bow culminating in the final story called The Last Bow. Conan Doyle also wrote a further twelve stories under the title, The Casebook of Sherlock Holmes set at earlier or similar dates to The Last Bow stories but published in the 1920's. He wrote four full length novels in all, A Study In Scarlet, The Sign of The Four, The Hound of The Baskervilles and The Valley of Fear.
ReplyDeleteSpeaking for myself, Jeremy Brett was the finest Holmes (We shared a Tobacconist for a while, his earlier works being the best. Towards the end, his health had let him down and he suffered appallingly whilst struggling to keep going. The films are usually remotely based on anything Arthur Doyle wrote and I won't bother with Television's recent incarnations. However, for fun, Basil Rathbone's ludicrous-yet-charming outings work for me, Robert Downey, Junior's offerings are great fun, if hopelessly divorced from the literary works and if you haven't seen The private life of Sherlock Holmes or The Seven Percent Solution, you have my pity. Finally, Young Sherlock Holmes is enormous fun for all ages and a Spielberg production at that.
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