Scene at an English Orange Lodge
Print
1832 (printed)
1832 (printed)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
This caricature is from a satirical journal The Looking Glass or Caricature Annual, which was issued monthly between January 1830 and December 1832. The artist Robert Seymour (1798?-1836) was a popular and prolific illustrator and satirical cartoonist. His political caricatures were published in several London periodicals. This scene in an lodge of the Orange Order is one of a series referring to the Irish political situation.
Seymour went on to supply comic illustrations to stories by Charles Dickens. However, he was sensitive about his status as an artist, and was upset when Dickens, 12 years his junior and not yet an established writer, criticised his drawings and issued him with instructions for revising and improving them. Humiliated and frustrated by this situation, he committed suicide on 20 April 1836.
Seymour went on to supply comic illustrations to stories by Charles Dickens. However, he was sensitive about his status as an artist, and was upset when Dickens, 12 years his junior and not yet an established writer, criticised his drawings and issued him with instructions for revising and improving them. Humiliated and frustrated by this situation, he committed suicide on 20 April 1836.
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Title | Scene at an English Orange Lodge (assigned by artist) |
Materials and techniques | Lithograph on paper |
Brief description | Print, lithograph, 'Scene at an English Orange Lodge', Robert Seymour, UK, 1832 |
Physical description | Print, lithograph, 'Scene at an English Orange Lodge'. |
Dimensions |
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Summary | This caricature is from a satirical journal The Looking Glass or Caricature Annual, which was issued monthly between January 1830 and December 1832. The artist Robert Seymour (1798?-1836) was a popular and prolific illustrator and satirical cartoonist. His political caricatures were published in several London periodicals. This scene in an lodge of the Orange Order is one of a series referring to the Irish political situation. Seymour went on to supply comic illustrations to stories by Charles Dickens. However, he was sensitive about his status as an artist, and was upset when Dickens, 12 years his junior and not yet an established writer, criticised his drawings and issued him with instructions for revising and improving them. Humiliated and frustrated by this situation, he committed suicide on 20 April 1836. |
Collection | |
Accession number | E.5268-1904 |
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Record created | May 9, 2003 |
Record URL |
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