A sailor sitting for his minature
Print
ca. 1817 (printed and published)
ca. 1817 (printed and published)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
Woodward was a prolific caricaturist whose forte was social humour. He tended to choose his subjects from the middle and lower classes, and had a particular fondness for featuring sailors. Here we see a sailor having his portrait painted by a miniaturist. Woodward contrasts the effeminate and fashionably dressed artist with the red-faced, brutish sailor. He offers the artist £10 (a representative price for a miniature portrait by a mid-range artist at the time) if he will finish the miniature in 10 mins, but only £5 if he is slower. He mentions his sweetheart - 'Poll' - to whom he will presumably give the portrait as a keepsake to remember him by while he is away. Much of the humour here stems from his puzzlement that there should be enough room for his 'hulk, head and stern' (all naval terms) on 'that there little bit of ivory'.
This caricature was first published in 1807, but was reissued (probably because it was popular and not limited by featuring a topical subject) around 1817.
This caricature was first published in 1807, but was reissued (probably because it was popular and not limited by featuring a topical subject) around 1817.
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Title | A sailor sitting for his minature (assigned by artist) |
Materials and techniques | Etching, coloured by hand |
Brief description | 'A Sailor sitting for his miniature' hand-coloured etching by P. Roberts after G. M. Woodward, ca. 1817 |
Physical description | An artist sits at his drawing desk by a window, wearing stockings and a flowered dressing gown. His is painting a miniature portrait of a red faced truculent sailor who sits with arms akimbo on a small stool on the right. |
Dimensions |
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Marks and inscriptions |
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Subjects depicted | |
Summary | Woodward was a prolific caricaturist whose forte was social humour. He tended to choose his subjects from the middle and lower classes, and had a particular fondness for featuring sailors. Here we see a sailor having his portrait painted by a miniaturist. Woodward contrasts the effeminate and fashionably dressed artist with the red-faced, brutish sailor. He offers the artist £10 (a representative price for a miniature portrait by a mid-range artist at the time) if he will finish the miniature in 10 mins, but only £5 if he is slower. He mentions his sweetheart - 'Poll' - to whom he will presumably give the portrait as a keepsake to remember him by while he is away. Much of the humour here stems from his puzzlement that there should be enough room for his 'hulk, head and stern' (all naval terms) on 'that there little bit of ivory'. This caricature was first published in 1807, but was reissued (probably because it was popular and not limited by featuring a topical subject) around 1817. |
Collection | |
Accession number | E.656-2007 |
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Record created | June 30, 2009 |
Record URL |
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