Thomas Rowlandson was so prolific they could have papered the walls of China with his work. So ran one obituary when he died in 1827 in the same spot where he had lived for the whole of his 70 years, ...
I’m looking at a drawing called “Doctor Convex and Lady Concave” (below). It portrays a comically mismatched couple drawn in profile: the gross mound of the Doctor’s belly juts into the hollow curve ...
Thomas Rowlandson was a British artist born in 1756 and passed away in 1827. He was a prominent caricaturist, painter, and printmaker known for his humorous depictions of contemporary society, ...
On January 1, 1799, Rudolph Ackermann (1764-1834) published the first of eight plates designed by Thomas Rowlandson (1756-1827) of the Cries of London. Rowlandson’s ink drawings were etching and ...
Thomas Rowlandson was one of several prolific artists who sold satirical designs to the London publisher Thomas Tegg (176-1846). Tegg's bookshop was well-placed at 111 Cheapside--known for its cheap ...
Dr. Johnson's enthusiastic survey of the Rowlandson collection pays fitting tribute to another symbol of the way in which the collecting zeal of a loyal Friend and alumnus has added to the riches of ...
Works of popular caricaturist Thomas Rowlandson set to go on display at Queen's Gallery in Edinburgh
A NEW exhibition of work by one of the most popular caricaturists of Georgian Britain will open to the public tomorrow. More than 90 prints by Thomas Rowlandson, many of which have not been shown in ...
High Spirits: The Comic Art of Thomas Rowlandson, Royal Collection Critical of the Prince of Wales and his suitability to rule, this shows him being guided to a cracked, damaged throne by a ...
“..Rowlandson excelled at capturing the follies and foibles on display in the public and private gathering spaces and events of his native city during a time of ...
Political and topical ‘cartoons’ are ever popular, and an exhibition of Thomas Rowlandson’s caricatures shows why, says Duncan Macmillan Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you ...
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