"Portrait of Algernon Percy, Earl of Northumberland, bust in profile to left but looking at the viewer, wearing armour and sash; in an ornamental oval on a pedestal with a small scene showing a seascape; a putto seated next to an anchor and baton below"--British Museum online catalogue
Alternative Title:
Algernon Percy Earl of Northumberland
Description:
Title from text within image. and Text below image: "In the Collection of the Rt. Hon. the Earl of Essex."
Two head-and-shoulder portraits in separate ornamental oval frames of subjects identified in the British Museum catalogue in the original publication as Mrs. Frances Abington and Lord Shelburne, later Marquis of Lansdowne
Alternative Title:
Sentimental lover
Description:
Title from item., Tête-à-tête probably from: The Oxford magazine, May 1792., Reissue of a tête-à-tête published in Town and country magazine, February 1777, (v. ix, p. 9) with different titles and plate numbers. The plate representing "The sentimental lover" was substantially reworked., and Variant state of No. 5411 in the Catalogue of prints and drawings in the British Museum. Division I, political and personal satires, v. 5.
White, George, approximately 1684-1732, printmaker
Published / Created:
[between 1722 and 1740]
Call Number:
Portraits R178 no. 1
Image Count:
1
Resource Type:
still image
Description:
Title from caption below image., Printmaker and date and place of publication from the British Museum online catalogue, registration no.: 1950,0520.24., and Description based on imperfect impression; sheet trimmed within plate mark with loss of printmaker's name.
A caricatured portrait of comedian John Liston, standing before the Theatre Royal. Leaning against a bollard is a placard advertising the play 'Fish out of Water' in which he was starring as 'Sam Savoury'.
Description:
Title etched below image. and Sheet trimmed within plate mark.
Publisher:
Pubd. Novr. 25th, 1823, by G. Humphrey, 24, St. James's Stt. & 74, New-Bond St., London
Subject (Geographic):
England and London.
Subject (Name):
Liston, John, 1776-1846 and Haymarket Theatre (London, England),
Title etched below images., Plates originally issued in: "Histories of the tete-a-tete annexed" in the Town and country magazine, xviii, 401., The two illustrations are numbered "No. XXII" and "No. XXIII in upper left above each oval, respectively., and Mounted to 20.5 x 28 cm., with pages extracted from the Town and country magazine, xviii, 401-402.
"Satire identifying George II with his electorate of Hanover, showing the Hanoverian landscape and his profile head in trompe l'oeil; the king is shown with a moustache in the style typical of a German soldier of the period. The landscape carries numbers referring to a key beneath suggesting that trade in Hanover is in a state of decay: 1. Herrenhausen; 2. Manufacture of Boars Heads (a ruined building); 3. Do. of Hams (a farm); 4. The Town of Hanover; 5. Manufacture of Linnen (a distant village); 6. Do. of Bonporenicole (a fortress; a reference to the lack of provisions for British troops in Germany, see BM Satire 2584); 7. Beggars Cambrick (another village); 8. Hunting House; 9. The (Army) Camp; 10. The River Leyne; 11. The Alder (a lake in the foreground where men are fishing)."--British Museum online catalogue
Alternative Title:
Face of the country whereon Hanover stands, with a view of Herenhauseen and the seats of manufacture
Description:
Title from item., Publisher identified from address., Publication date from British Museum catalogue., Five lines of text, including key to numbered objects within image, below image: Tho' this is not given as [the] most regular, [the] most varied, or [the] most noble prospect in the world ..., and Watermark: countermark IV.
"Satire identifying George II with his electorate of Hanover, showing the Hanoverian landscape and his profile head in trompe l'oeil; the king is shown with a moustache in the style typical of a German soldier of the period. The landscape carries numbers referring to a key beneath suggesting that trade in Hanover is in a state of decay: 1. Herrenhausen; 2. Manufacture of Boars Heads (a ruined building); 3. Do. of Hams (a farm); 4. The Town of Hanover; 5. Manufacture of Linnen (a distant village); 6. Do. of Bonporenicole (a fortress; a reference to the lack of provisions for British troops in Germany, see BM Satire 2584); 7. Beggars Cambrick (another village); 8. Hunting House; 9. The (Army) Camp; 10. The River Leyne; 11. The Alder (a lake in the foreground where men are fishing)."--British Museum online catalogue
Alternative Title:
Face of the country whereon Hanover stands, with a view of Herenhauseen and the seats of manufacture
Description:
Title from item., Publisher identified from address., Publication date from British Museum catalogue., Five lines of text, including key to numbered objects within image, below image: Tho' this is not given as [the] most regular, [the] most varied, or [the] most noble prospect in the world ..., and With spine title: Caricatures anglaise 1740.
"Portrait of broomseller and centenarian John Tait; whole length, standing in profile to right, wearing a patched coat with a bag in the pocket and a broad-brimmed hat, carrying brooms under his left arm, holding a staff in his right hand."--British Museum online catalogue
Description:
Title etched below image., Copy of a print by A. Baillie after a drawing by W. Baillie. See: Catalogue of engraved British portraits preserved in the Department of Prints and Drawings in the British Museum, v. 4, page 242., For a later state with the number "220" etched below lower right corner of image, see: A series of original portraits and caricature etchings by the late John Kay. Edinburgh : Paton, 1877, v. 2, no. 220., Three lines of text etched below title: Old John Tait the besom maker who travelled the country begging and selling besoms till he arrived at the age of one hundred & ten years. Died in Jany. 1772 leaving Young John and 27 other descendants., "From an original print by J.K."--At bottom of plate., and Sheet trimmed within plate mark on top and bottom edges.