31. George Cruikshank
(1792-1878)

“Charing Cross?”

(click on image to print)
Cruikshank, “Charing Cross?”

“Charing Cross?”

Original drawing in pencil, pen and ink and touches of watercolor on thin card, extravagantly signed and dated June 3rd, 1832 in ink, 320 x 250 mm. Cruikshank, an immensely prolific artist, inherited the mantel of Hogarth and Gillray as a biting satirist of British politics and public events as well as the pictorial enemy of his country’s foes, whoever they might be. He was also, a bit later on, more convivial as an illustrator of books by Dickens, Pierce Egan and others and, finally, a fierce crusader for temperance and anti-smoking. This delightful sketch of a London cab driver falls into the convivial period, and it is less “sketchy” than it at first seems, subtly shaded and highlighted and with a carefully lettered “Greenwich” in a banner on the driver’s seat.

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