L'arrivée un Anglais attaqué du spleen, vient se faire traiter en France / [graphic]
Found In:
Lewis Walpole Library > L'arrivée un Anglais attaqué du spleen, vient se faire traiter en France / [graphic]
Description
- Title
- L'arrivée un Anglais attaqué du spleen, vient se faire traiter en France / [graphic]
- Creator
- Godissart de Cari, 1774-1848, printmaker
- Contributor
- Martinet, Aaron, 1762-1841, publisher.
- Published / Created
- [1 February 1815]
- Publication Place
- Paris
- Publisher
- Chez Martinet
- Abstract
-
A companion plate to Le Départ (British Museum satire no. 12362), satirizing the haste of the English to visit France in 1814 and their gluttony and bad dressing. The Frenchman who cooks a cat is a subject of English caricatures on the favourite theme of the beggarly Frenchman and well-fed Englishman. In this print. "A lean Englishman strides on to the quayside from an (invisible) gangway leading to the deck of a packet, which is seen below (right), covered with the heads of passengers, looking eagerly upwards. The furled sails and rigging are on the extreme right; a dove holding an olive-branch sits on a spar. A jovial French cook leads the Englishman, who grasps his left wrist; he points to a doorway on the extreme left, below the sign 'Au Bien Venu'. He holds the white cotton night-cap which was the cap of the French cook, but is not foppish as in English caricature, but manly and sturdy. The traveller is a grotesque figure wearing a hat shaped like a flower-pot, [this hat appears in almost all satires on English costumes in Paris, c. 1814; it is worn by a man dressed à l'Anglais in No. 53 of the 'Bon Genre Series' (? 1813): 'Cheveux à Cherubin. Chapeau en pot à fleurs. Redingote en Robe de Chambre'; cf. J.-P. de Bérenger, 'Les Boxeurs', 1814: Quoique leurs chapeaux sont bien laids / Goddam! moi j'aime les Anglais] long tail-coat, wrinkled breeches, and long ill-fitting gaiters on very thin legs. His profile has an absurdly heavy chin (cf. British Museum no. 12364), and he registers eager expectation. On a flap projecting from a window beside the door are peaches, grapes, pears, &c. Within a courtyard a second cook leans from an attic window, knife in hand, to catch a cat by the tail, one of several scampering from the ridge-pole."--British Museum online catalogue
- Description
-
Title from caption below image.
Description from impression in the British Museum catalogue.
Lettered "Déposé" below image left.
Attributed to printmaker Godisart de Cari and publisher Martinet. See British Museum catalogue.
This plate was deposited by Martinet on 1 February 1815, although his name is not actually lettered on the plate. It is a pair to 'Le départ' (British Museum number 1868,0822.7249).
Sheet trimmed within plate mark, with loss of text at lower left and portions of the image at the corners: irregular sheet 18.8 x 23 cm. - Provenance
- Sold at Forum Auctions, 16 March 2017, lot 80. Purchased through Jarndyce; March 2017.
- Extent
- 1 print : sheet 20.3 x 26.5
- Language
-
French
Collection Information
- Repository
- Lewis Walpole Library
- Call Number
- 815.02.01.02
Subjects, Formats, And Genres
- Genre
-
Caricatures and cartoons
Etchings France Paris 1815
Satires (Visual works) France 1815 - Material
- etching ; and hand-colored.
- Resource Type
- still image
- Subject (Geographic)
-
France
France. - Subject (Topic)
-
History
Foreign public opinion
National characteristics, English
National characteristics, French
Cats
Cooks
Doves
Eating & drinking
Ethnic stereotypes
Gluttony
Mail steamers - Subjects
-
France > History > 1789-1815 > Foreign public opinion
National characteristics, English > Caricatures and cartoons
National characteristics, French > Caricatures and cartoons
Cats
Cooks
Doves
Eating & drinking > France
Ethnic stereotypes
Gluttony
Mail steamers
France > Paris > 1815
France > 1815
Access And Usage Rights
- Access
- Public
- Rights
- The use of this image may be subject to the copyright law of the United States (Title 17, United States Code) or to site license or other rights management terms and conditions. The person using the image is liable for any infringement.
Identifiers
- Orbis Record
- 13296731
- Object ID (OID)
- 16227176