For five months
in 2014-2015, the Museum of London
hosted an exhibition about that most famous of all fictional detectives, Sherlock Holmes. Since
the first Sherlock Holmes story appeared in the Strand Magazine in
the early 1890s, the literary creation of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
has been imitated, replicated, adored, borrowed wholesale by other authors, and
filmed and recorded countless times in movies, radio, and television.
And his popularity
endures. Consider Benedict Cumberbatch’s Sherlock, or the television
series Elementary. The Museum of
London’s exhibition, Sherlock
Holmes under the Microscope, was an extraordinarily popular event.
For the
exhibition, the Museum published a companion book, Sherlock
Holmes: The Man Who Never Lived and Will Never Die, a collection of
essays edited and compiled by Alex Werner, head of the museum’s History
Collections. The museum wisely did not tie the book to the exhibition, and
instead brought together six essays (and a considerable number of
illustrations) that will stand the test of time and add to the literature about
the famous detective.
The introductory
essay, “A Case of [Mistaken?] Identity,” is by Sir David Cannadine, Dodge Professor
of History at Princeton University. It is a fine contextual setting piece, placing
Holmes in his historical context of late Victorian London and drawing a
detailed picture of what London was like socially, politically, and culturally
at the time, and how it influenced both Doyle and his detective.
John Stokes, Emeritus
Professor of Modern British Literature at Kings College London, delves into “The
‘Bohemian Habits’ of Sherlock Holmes.” In 1980s London, “Bohemia” was both a
specific place – embracing Covent Garden, the Strand, and Fleet Street – and a
way of life.
In “Sherlock
Holmes, Sidney Paget and the Strand
Magazine,” the museum’s Werner introduces us to Sidney Paget, the illustrator who
has as much to do with our picture of Sherlock Holmes as Doyle himself. It was
Paget who gave Holmes many of his distinguishing features, including the famous
deerstalker cap (which Doyle had never included). Werner also describes the
Strand Magazine and the role it played, and how it achieved the popularity it
did. (The book includes a complete reprint of an article published by the
Strand in 1892, “A Day with Arthur Conan Doyle.”)
Pat Hardy,
Curator of Paintings, Prints and Drawings at the Museum of London and the Sherlock
Holmes exhibition’s curator, examines “The Art of Sherlock Holmes,” the art,
photographs, drawings and prints of the period. He provides ample detail of
those which included London’s famous fog (and includes some beautiful examples
of photographs).
The Museum of London |
Clare Pettet,
Professor of Nineteenth Century Literature and Culture at Kings College London,
looks at “Throwaway Holmes,” a discussion of communication methods in the 1890s
and how new developments were fundamentally changing daily life (and how they
were used in the Holmes stories).
The final essay,
“Silent Sherlocks: Holmes and Early Cinema” by Nathalie Morris, Senior Curator
of the British Film Institute’s National Archives Special Collections, consider
the early forerunners to Benedict Cumberbatch (my words, not hers). American
actor William Gillette essentially set the image of Holmes on screen for his own
and future generations, and John Barrymore also played the detective in an
early film.
The subtitle of
the book, “The Man Who Never Lived and Will Never Die,” is a concise summary of
the world’s fascination with Sherlock Holmes. It’s difficult to think of a
fictional character who has had more of a pull on our imaginations than
Sherlock Holmes. The Museum of London’s Sherlock
Holmes goes a long way to explaining the “why” of that influence.
Note: The
Sherlock Holmes exhibition ended in April of 2015, but the Museum of London is
well worth a visit. Located in the Barbican Centre about three blocks north of
St Paul’s Cathedral, the Museum has outstanding exhibits on pre-Roman and Roman
London (including a view of a piece of the original Roman Wall still standing),
Victorian London, and the Lord Mayor’s gilded coach, among many other exhibits.
Illustration: Dr. Watson and Sherlock
Holmes in “Silver Blaze,” Strand Magazine, December 1892. Drawing by Sidney
Paget.
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