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A Beef Eater

Satirical Etching
1792 (etched)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Throughout the eighteenth century masculine styles influenced women's fashions especially when it came to outfits for walking and riding. The jacket worn here, tapering in at the waist, with a large turned back collar and big buttons copies male dress.

A beefeater is the name traditionally given to a warder at the Tower of London. The woman faces the viewer straight on like a soldier on parade and holds her parasol like a weapon. The fact that she is plump and is straining the seams of her clothing plays on the other historic sense of beef eater meaning someone who is well fed.


Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleA Beef Eater (assigned by artist)
Materials and techniques
Etching coloured by hand
Brief description
Satirical print by Williams, from a 'Folio of Caricatures lent out for the Evening' - 'A Beef Eater'
Physical description
Satirical etching
Dimensions
  • Plate height: 31.1cm
  • Plate width: 22.3cm
Credit line
Bequeathed by Frank A. Gibson
Subjects depicted
Summary
Throughout the eighteenth century masculine styles influenced women's fashions especially when it came to outfits for walking and riding. The jacket worn here, tapering in at the waist, with a large turned back collar and big buttons copies male dress.

A beefeater is the name traditionally given to a warder at the Tower of London. The woman faces the viewer straight on like a soldier on parade and holds her parasol like a weapon. The fact that she is plump and is straining the seams of her clothing plays on the other historic sense of beef eater meaning someone who is well fed.
Collection
Accession number
E.1155-1990

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Record createdJune 6, 2007
Record URL
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