Not currently on display at the V&A

The House That Jack Built

Print
September 1809 (published)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Print entitled The House that Jack Built. Published in London by Walker in September 1809.

After the destruction of the Covent Garden Theatre by fire in December 1808 and its rebuilding in 1809, John Philip Kemble, the manager of the theatre, raised the price of tickets to compensate for the cost of the theatre's reconstruction. This and the creation of privately hired theatre boxes caused riots, known as the Old Price Riots, that lasted three months and ultimately forced Kemble to reduce the number of private boxes and restore the 'old prices'. This print, parodying the nursery rhyme This is the House that Jack Built, is a satire on the riots. The Cat is Italian soprano Angelica Catalani who had been engaged for a substantal fee, leading to complaints that prices had been increased in order to pay for her.


Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleThe House That Jack Built (assigned by artist)
Materials and techniques
Hand coloured etching, ink and wash on paper
Brief description
Print entitled 'The House that Jack Built'. Published in London by Walker in September 1809
Physical description
Etched and hand coloured print entitled 'The House that Jack Built', showing seven images in two rows, three in the upper row, four in the lower, each with a parody of the nursery rhyme 'This is the house that Jack built. Top, from left, the front of Covent Garden Theatre, the theatre boxes for the 'great', and the 'Pigeon holes made for the poor'; and bottom, from left,' the Cat' (Angelica Catalani), 'John Bull' (representing the outraged British public), the 'Thief taker' (Constable Townsend) , and the Manager (John Philip Kemble). An ink annotation on the line above Catalani has been crossed out. Mounted.
Dimensions
  • Print height: 23cm
  • Print width: 33cm
  • Mount height: 38cm
  • Mount width: 53cm
Credit line
Gabrielle Enthoven Collection
Subjects depicted
Summary
Print entitled The House that Jack Built. Published in London by Walker in September 1809.

After the destruction of the Covent Garden Theatre by fire in December 1808 and its rebuilding in 1809, John Philip Kemble, the manager of the theatre, raised the price of tickets to compensate for the cost of the theatre's reconstruction. This and the creation of privately hired theatre boxes caused riots, known as the Old Price Riots, that lasted three months and ultimately forced Kemble to reduce the number of private boxes and restore the 'old prices'. This print, parodying the nursery rhyme This is the House that Jack Built, is a satire on the riots. The Cat is Italian soprano Angelica Catalani who had been engaged for a substantal fee, leading to complaints that prices had been increased in order to pay for her.
Associated objects
Collection
Accession number
S.45-1987

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Record createdJune 30, 2016
Record URL
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