Untold Lives exhibition to open at Kensington Palace

Untold Lives A Palace at Work Exhibition
Untold Lives A Palace at Work Exhibition

A new exhibition, Untold Lives: A Palace at Work, is set to open at Kensington Palace on 14 March 2024. The exhibition will shine a spotlight on the overlooked people from all walks of life who worked tirelessly – often behind-the-scenes – to maintain, protect and promote the monarch and the royal palaces.

The exhibition will reveal the breadth and diversity of the roles required to keep the palaces running. One such role was the ‘Keeper of Ice and Snow’, and one of its occupiers was a woman, Frances Talbot, whose story will be revealed for the first time. Talbot managed the royal icehouse at Hampton Court Palace in the 1770s, performing a physically demanding job, cutting ice so that that palace guests could enjoy cold beverages, iced desserts and drinks all year round. Her role will be remembered with the first display of an ice saw in an exhibition at Kensington Palace. The vital security role palace workers performed will also be explored: on three separate occasions, servants and staff saved Kensington Palace from fire. Seemingly ordinary items including a fire bucket and an oil lantern will be on display, telling dramatic stories of salvage, and highlighting the people power that ensured the palace’s safety and survival.

The servants and palace staff who worked at court came from a range of backgrounds and brought a huge variety of experience to the palaces. Some, like the Waterman William Timms, who served four monarchs over 46 years, chose to dedicate their lives to royal service. However, the exhibition will also expose the hierarchies and inequalities within the palaces of the time. For example, a young boy called Peter, found living alone in German woods was brought to Kensington Palace, and became famous as the subject of intense scientific and public interest, before being sent away. Peter’s image survives, in a mural on the King’s Staircase, but many other people were forgotten and overlooked, with only brief details of their lives preserved in the royal accounts. By necessity, the exhibition team have had to find other ways to explore their contributions, working with contemporary artists such as Peter Brathwaite and Matt Smith to bring some of these forgotten stories into the spotlight and ensure that their legacy at the palaces lives on.

Untold Lives: A Palace at Work will also focus on the unexpected origins and identities of some of these people, which have been uncovered by its curators during their research. In an age of great change in the form of colonial expansion, religious wars and a fledgling constitutional monarchy, new figures arrived at court from all over the world. A range of portraits and objects will explore the presence of Black and Asian royal servants and attendants at court. Among these figures was Abdullah, a wild cat keeper from India, and Mehmet von Könsigstreu, Keeper of the Privy Purse for King George I. Mehmet and his wife Marie Hedwig are believed to be one of the first interracial married couples at the Hanoverian Court. As a trusted servant of King George I, with intimate access to the monarch, Mehmet was an influential, and sometimes, controversial figure. His portrait is also featured on the King’s Staircase, but now, for the first time, his fascinating story will be brought to the fore, alongside his fellow Turkish valet, Ernst August Mustapha von Misitri, (more commonly known as Mustapha) in a portrait by Godfrey Kneller – on loan from the Ömer Koç Collection – never exhibited before in the UK.

Sebastian Edwards, Co-Exhibition Curator at Historic Royal Palaces said, “For centuries the palaces have been kept running by a host of people working behind the scenes. While their work has been crucial, their stories remain largely untold, and through our new exhibition we hope to shine a spotlight on some of these fascinating individuals from across the past. In recognising the contribution they made, we hope that all our visitors find new connections with the Palace and their stories, celebrating the lasting legacy which their roles have contributed to these amazing historic places.”

Click here to find out more about Untold Lives: A Palace at Work at Kensington Palace.

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