Rolls-Royce Motor Cars PressClub · Article.
THE SPIRIT OF ECSTASY: A CONSTANT PRESENCE SINCE 1911
Thu Mar 05 13:00:00 CET 2026 Press Kit
This press kit provides an overview of the Spirit of Ecstasy – the enduring emblem of Rolls-Royce Motor Cars since 1911. It traces her origins, evolution and continuing relevance within the marque’s cultural and creative narrative. For information about Phantom, Ghost, Cullinan and Spectre – including Extended and Black Badge variants – and the materials and techniques used in their manufacture, please refer to the specific product press kits.
Press Contact.
Andrew Ball
Rolls-Royce Motor Cars
Tel: +44-1243-384-064
send an e-mail
Author.
Andrew Ball
Rolls-Royce Motor Cars
Downloads.
- One of the most famous, instantly recognisable emblems associated with the marque
- Design first registered as the ‘official’ Rolls-Royce mascot in 1911
- Origins and inspiration still a matter of conjecture, centred around two main theories
- Private Collections have been inspired by and have featured unique incarnations of the Spirit of Ecstasy during the contemporary Goodwood era
- ‘The Whisper’ and other Spirit of Ecstasy figurines are on permanent display at the National Motor Museum, Beaulieu
INTRODUCTION
This press kit provides an overview of the Spirit of Ecstasy –
the enduring emblem of Rolls-Royce Motor Cars since 1911. It traces
her origins, evolution and continuing relevance within the marque’s
cultural and creative narrative. For information about Phantom, Ghost,
Cullinan and Spectre – including Extended and Black Badge variants –
and the materials and techniques used in their manufacture, please
refer to the specific product press kits.
MORE THAN A FIGUREHEAD
The Spirit of Ecstasy mascot has a unique place at the heart of
Rolls-Royce. Her origins are the stuff of legend and myth as well as
recorded fact, with some details still veiled in mystery and intrigue.
She is widely recognised, respected and admired, with a poise and
grace that have secured her enduring recognition. To clients and
enthusiasts around the world, she personifies ambition, achievement,
excellence and success, just as she has since she first took her place
on the prow of a Rolls-Royce motor car more than a century ago.
Like Rolls-Royce and its products, the Spirit of Ecstasy has
changed over time. At various points in her long life, she has adopted
different stances, sometimes stood slightly taller or shorter, and
allowed the wind to sculpt her flowing garments in subtly altered
forms. Yet she is also truly ageless: today, she more closely
resembles the original drawings made in 1911 by her creator, the
illustrator and sculptor Charles
Sykes, than she has ever done.
For Rolls-Royce, she is far more than a mascot or symbol. She
provides a tangible connection to the company’s heritage through her
richly layered story, involving many of the foundational characters in
Rolls-Royce’s own history, including the company’s first managing
director, Claude
Johnson. She inspires greatness; every motor car handmade at
Goodwood has to be worthy of her presence.
Perhaps most of all, since, she is believed to be based on the
vivacious, assertive and complex Eleanor
Thornton, serving as a reminder of the essential human dimension
to what Rolls-Royce is and does. Every Rolls-Royce motor car is
created by hand for an individual customer; a reflection of their
unique personality, and the realisation of their dreams, desires and vision.
ORIGINS OF AN ICON
Today, the ability to commission highly individualised Bespoke
details for their motor car remains central to the marque’s
relationship with its clients. But in fact, this merely continues a
desire for personalisation that emerged in the marque’s very earliest days.
By 1910, just six years after the marque’s formation, it was
already an established custom among owners to decorate their radiator
grilles with specially commissioned mascots. To the chagrin of General
Managing Director, Claude Johnson, these were often in the form of
cartoonish animals or comical characters. He therefore decided to
create an ‘official’ mascot that would protect the company’s products
from what he decried as these ‘unsightly’ additions.
Among Johnson’s wide social circle was the motoring pioneer Lord
Montagu of Beaulieu. As founder and editor of The Car
Illustrated magazine, his lordship employed an illustrator,
Charles Sykes, many of whose wonderful designs for advertisements and
magazine covers are conserved at London’s world-famous Victoria and
Albert Museum (the V&A).
Sykes was also an accomplished sculptor. Around that time – the
precise date remains a mystery – Sykes had produced a mascot for Lord
Montagu’s Rolls-Royce Silver Ghost: an aluminium statuette of a young
woman in fluttering robes, which he named ‘The Whisper’. This original
piece, together with other Spirit of Ecstasy figurines, is now on
permanent display at the National Motor Museum, Beaulieu.
Impressed and inspired, Johnson asked Sykes to create a new
mascot for Rolls-Royce. In one version of the story, upon receiving
Johnson’s commission, Sykes subtly reinterpreted ‘The Whisper’ to
create what became known as the Spirit of Ecstasy. An alternative view
is that on a trip to Paris, Johnson had been impressed by the artistry
of the Grecian marble statue of The Winged Victory of
Samothrace, Goddess of Victory, sculpted in 190BC and exhibited
in the Palais du Louvre since 1883. Some authorities have suggested
that it was from this ancient Hellenic masterpiece that Johnson asked
Sykes to draw his inspiration.
The Spirit of Ecstasy’s final form lends credence to both
theories. She appears as an ethereal young woman leaning forward
eagerly, her arms stretched back behind her, with flowing robes
appearing to give her wings. Her serene expression offers no clues to
the mysteries that still surround her.
WHERE MYTH MEETS REALITY
One of the most enduring of those mysteries was whether the
Spirit of Ecstasy was in fact modelled on a real person. It was long
suspected, and has now been confirmed, that Sykes’ inspiration for
‘The Whisper’ was a young woman named Eleanor Thornton, who played a
crucial, complex and somewhat controversial role in the Rolls-Royce
origin story.
Born in 1880, little is known of her early life. She first
appears in the early 20th century as assistant to Claude Johnson, then
in his pre-Rolls-Royce incarnation as General Secretary of the
Automobile Club of Great Britain & Ireland (later the Royal
Automobile Club, or RAC). During this time, she rented rooms in an
artists’ colony in Chelsea, where she acted as an out-of-hours life
model for her fellow residents, one of whom was Charles Sykes. She
became his favourite muse and posed for him on many occasions over the
years that followed.
Their stories became even more closely entwined when Johnson
introduced Thornton to his motoring comrade, and Sykes’ boss, Lord
Montagu, who was instantly captivated by her vivacity, confidence and
beauty. Bonds of friendship notwithstanding, Montagu promptly poached
her as his own assistant, and almost immediately, they embarked on a
long, heartfelt love affair.
It was while Sykes and Thornton were working together for
Montagu at The Car Illustrated magazine that Sykes
produced ‘The Whisper’. Whether the mascot was a token of appreciation
from Sykes to his friend and employer, or made at Thornton’s
instigation as a gift for her lover, is where the mystery lingers.
Whatever the truth, Montagu displayed it on every Rolls-Royce motor
car he owned until his death in 1929. It was, perhaps, the only way he
could acknowledge his sincere and enduring love for Eleanor, who died
in 1915, and which, owing to its potential for scandal, had always
remained a closely guarded secret.
THE MARK OF EXCELLENCE
The design was registered as the company’s intellectual property
in 1911 and became both a defining feature of the Rolls-Royce brand
and one of the most famous and recognisable emblems in the world. In
1920, the Spirit of Ecstasy was entered into L’Auto’s ‘Concours des
Bouchons de Radiateurs’ at the Paris Salon – a contest to identify the
finest motor car mascot of its day. Charles Sykes was awarded Premier
Prix, the gold medal. This recognition helped solidify the sculpture’s
reputation in the early years of automotive culture and elevated both
the artist and the emerging icon internationally.
Even then, however, she was not immediately or universally
accepted. In the 1970s, some countries attempted to ban mascots on
safety grounds. In Switzerland, for example, customers weren’t allowed
to display her at all, and on receiving their motor cars found her
placed in the glove compartment. Rolls-Royce’s typically elegant and
ingenious solution was to mount the mascot on a spring-loaded base,
allowing her to sink into the radiator out of harm’s way at the merest
touch. This retraction mechanism has evolved into a smooth, graceful
movement known as ‘the rise’ and is a feature on every Rolls-Royce
motor car hand-built at Goodwood.
As the marque’s most important and recognisable emblem, the
Spirit of Ecstasy is offered to patrons in carefully selected
finishes: solid silver, 24-carat gold-plated and black carbon fibre.
SPIRIT OF INNOVATION
As they were in the beginning, the Spirit of Ecstasy figurine is
made by ‘lost wax casting’, a practice that dates back over 5,000
years. Amazingly, Charles Sykes himself, assisted by his daughter
Josephine, personally cast, inscribed and finished the Spirit of
Ecstasy mascots right up until 1939.
In preparation for the launch of Phantom VII in 2003,
Rolls-Royce Motor Cars rejuvenated the Spirit of Ecstasy by
introducing the modern investment casting process.
The first step was to digitally ‘map’ the original Spirit of
Ecstasy, manipulating and enhancing individual details to create a
perfect three-dimensional computerised image. To ensure even the
finest details were precisely replicated, the injection mould was
formed by skilled craftsmen using cutters measuring just 0.2 mm in
size. This cast tool was used to produce a highly accurate wax model
of the figurine, which was then coated in ceramic. After this coating
had dried, the wax was melted away, leaving a perfect mould from which
the new cast would be taken.
Each figurine is made by filling the mould with molten stainless
steel, at a temperature of 1,600°C. Once the steel has cooled, the
mould is opened to reveal the Spirit of Ecstasy in its finished form.
The final transformation takes place in the Finishing Department,
using a process called peening. The casting is blasted by millions of
stainless-steel balls, just 0.04 mm in diameter, which help to polish
the surface without being abrasive. After machining, a final mirror
polish and stringent quality assurance checks, the completed figurine
takes her rightful place above the iconic Rolls-Royce grille.
LOOKING INTO THE FUTURE
In 2020, as part of a wider update of the Rolls-Royce Motor Cars
brand identity, a new abstract graphic element informed by the Spirit
of Ecstasy was developed. Known as ‘The Expression’, this
two-dimensional interpretation encapsulates the qualities of the
Spirit of Ecstasy in a contemporary visual form for use across the
marque’s corporate identity and reflects the company’s vision as a
modern House of Luxury.
Rolls-Royce reimagined
its iconic Spirit of Ecstasy figurine in 2022, to grace the
bonnet of its first all-electric motor car, Spectre, 111 years to the
day since the Spirit of Ecstasy was first registered as intellectual
property of Rolls-Royce on 6 February 1911.
The figurine was remodelled to feature a lower, more dynamic
stance that brought her much closer to the drawings made by her
original creator, Charles Sykes, in the early years of the 20th century.
This version of the Spirit of Ecstasy stands 8.27cm tall,
compared to the previous 9.5cm. Her robes, which flow behind her in
the slipstream – often but erroneously characterised as ‘wings’ – are
subtly reshaped to make them more aerodynamic and realistic. Rather
than standing with her feet together and tilting at the waist, she is
braced for the wind, one leg forward, body tucked low, her eyes
focused eagerly ahead. These changes have both practical and stylistic
benefits, contributing to Spectre’s remarkable performance as the most
aerodynamic Rolls-Royce ever created, with a drag coefficient of just
0.25 cd.
CELEBRATING IN STYLE
In the modern era, Rolls-Royce Motor Cars has celebrated
landmarks in both its own history and that of the Spirit of Ecstasy
through Private Collections, events and unique editions of the
figurine itself. Notable expressions include:
-
Phantom Centenary Private
Collection (2025): Marking the 100th anniversary of
its pinnacle product, Phantom, the Private Collection is the most
intricate and technologically ambitious ever undertaken by the
designers, engineers, production specialists and craftspeople of the
marque’s Bespoke Collective. Each motor car is crowned with a unique
reimagining of the Spirit of Ecstasy, based on the first figurine
ever fitted to a Phantom. Cast in solid 18-carat gold for strength,
then plated in 24-carat gold for a flawless, tarnish-resistant
finish, the piece was tested by the London Assay Office and awarded
a full UK hallmark together with a specially developed ‘Phantom
Centenary’ mark. The base of the figurine is finished with
hand-poured white vitreous enamel delicately inscribed with the
collection’s name.
-
Phantom Scintilla Private
Collection (2024): Inspired by the
Spirit of Ecstasy’s grace, dynamism and ethereal beauty, and limited
to just 10 models, the interior of each motor car is filled with
design elements, textures and a continuous graphic inspired by the
Spirit of Ecstasy’s expressive, dynamic form. Claude Johnson’s
original brief for a Rolls-Royce mascot is displayed on an embossed
plate concealed in the glove compartment. These words, written in
1910, also capture the essence of Phantom Scintilla: ‘Speed with
silence, the absence of vibration, the mysterious harnessing of
great energy, and a beautiful living organism of superb grace’. For
Scintilla, the Spirit of Ecstasy figurine is also rendered in a
ceramic finish – alluding to the figurine’s origins and the
aforementioned Classical Grecian sculpture, The Winged Victory
of Samothrace.
- The Spirit of Ecstasy Centenary Private Collection (2011): Celebrating the mascot’s 100th anniversary and limited to just 100 Bespoke Phantom models, the Private Collection featured exclusive body colours, leather combinations, wood veneers and interior details. Each motor car features a specially commissioned Spirit of Ecstasy in solid silver, with six hallmarks (including two designed specifically for Rolls-Royce Motor Cars) on a black-gold-plated illuminated base.
A CONTINUING LEGACY
Today, the Spirit of Ecstasy remains the marque’s defining
symbol, advancing with each new chapter while preserving the quiet
authority that has distinguished her since 1911. As tastes,
technologies and cultures continue to evolve, she endures as a
constant expression of the marque’s values – a steady presence that
guides the future while remaining true to the heritage that shaped her.